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MM- Beyond the Garden

by Action Advisor on September 4, 2011

If you admire great explorers for their spirit of adventure or wealth of unique insight and experiences, following in their footsteps is easier than you might think. Shift perspective by deriving inspiration from curiosity, starting with a closer look at nature in your own neighbourhood.

Neither, time or travel need impair your mission to explore nature for beyond the garden flourishes an array of urban wildlife and undiscovered ecosystems. Besides the obvious community park, life musters in a myriad of places from puddles to paddocks, alleys and vacant lots, after dark the night skies illuminate natural wonders all worth investigating. (Precaution: always abide trespassing laws and young children should be accompanied by an adult).

The experience of exploring nature offers a chance for family outings and counteracts the stresses of everyday life — as you indulge your imagination, sharpen your skills of observation and enjoy the magic all around you.

Objectives: Use the great outdoors as a natural classroom. Explore nature to unwind and connect with your family. Rediscover your curiosity for life starting with a suburban safari.

Methods: Give each outing a different theme or challenge adding an element of difficulty, excitement and diversity to expand your knowledge and appreciation of nature. For example, try taking a sensory safari with one person blindfolded and see how many plants you can identify by smell and touch. You might also take on the role of a wildlife explorer, turning your stroll into a study of bird behaviour, the options are endless…

Resources: Exploring Nature - facts and fun activities to draw inspiration from. Backyard Buddies- Tips, tricks, stories and other resources for native plants and animals within Australia. Nature Play - ideas for parents on how to get your children more involved in outdoor activities (a reference for Western Australia with useful resources applicable anywhere). Nature Explore- is a collaborative program of the Arbor Day Foundation and Dimensions Educational Research Foundation with research-based workshops and educational materials.

So, what are you waiting for? Start exploring nature — beyond the garden, today!

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MM- Freedom to Think

by Action Advisor on August 2, 2011

The challenge this month is to unleash your inner genius—improving productivity and creativity by outsourcing your brain like the maestro Leonardo da Vinci.

Leonardo da Vinci both artisan and engineer is revered for his creative mind and inspired genius. The renaissance man influencing generations long after his passing with iconic paintings and literature divulging the mans thoughts, aspirations and creations. Never without notebook, the maestro found that expression affords a person with the freedom to think. The sketches of thought expanding new horizons of creative energy, intuition and awareness.

Today, this principle is transformed through digital means and interpreted best via David Allen’s ‘Getting Things Done’ (GTD) method. Elevating productivity on any level is of great advantage in our frenetically paced society but feeling overwhelmed can stifle motivation and stall progress. Enter the GTD method of clearing your mind to think freely which relates closely to Leonardo’s practice of capturing and storing thoughts outside his mind.

Having a capture tool that is easily accessible and uncomplicated will liberate your mind enabling you to leverage thoughts constructively as an aid to creativity and reference of focus. If you know what you have to do you can decide your next actions prioritising with new perspective and identifying opportunities to expand on existing ideas.

Whilst, Leonardo referenced his thoughts on paper the technologies of this century afford greater flexibility. There are various digital capture tools to outsource your brain and of these several are particularly synergistic with the GTD methodology.

Following, is a list of capture tools to try and resources exploring the subject in greater detail.

Capture Tools

PersonalBrain: A personal favourite of David Allen founder of the GTD method, a lite version of this intuitive software is free to download. With PersonalBrain you’re never more than a few seconds away from any piece of digital information. Web pages, documents, images, notes… From people and projects to ideas and task lists, it’s all there in an instant. Take control by visualising all your open loops, tasks, and ideas in your PersonalBrain. Syncs makes your ideas and to dos available from your desktop, web browser, or mobile device anytime.

Life Manager Pro: This software is based upon the GTD method allowing you to move to do thoughts out of your head and into an effective system that makes it easy to keep on top of things. Life Manager Pro system focusses on just those actions that need your attention right now. This prevents you from feeling overwhelmed by the sheer volume of things on your to do list. Once again a lite version of this software is also free to download.

OmniFocus: An effective personal task manager OmniFocus is designed to quickly capture your thoughts and allow you to store, manage, and process them into actionable to-do items. Syncs with OmniFocus for iPhone and OmniFocus for iPad (sold separately).

How to Think like Leonardo de Vinci Workbook by Michael J. Gleb: is an activity based notebook/capture tool which encourages a deeper analysis of your thoughts and inspires the exploration of new ideas. If you wish to experience the maestro’s mind in authentic style this option offers a beautiful recapturing of the renaissance.

Resources

GTD Times: The Official blog for David Allen’s Getting Things Done.

TheBrain Blog: Indispensable educational reference with articles, webinars and ideas for integrating your digital brain to maximise creative energy and productivity.

Michael J. Gleb’s Website: Be inspired by articles, products and Michael’s own notebook to think creatively and lead innovation.

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MM- Creative Conservation

by Action Advisor on July 5, 2011

Inspired to create for conservation, people around the world are using their passion to power preservation. With a spirit for adventure and the desire to explore, embrace and express earth’s beauty they resonate a powerful message of respect and urgency to protect natures endangered treasures.

Coinciding with the release of Bare Essentials twentieth issue and ‘Expedition Special’, this month the mission celebrates creative conservation initiatives including artist adventures and expeditions of noble quest.

Mission: Use your Passion to Creatively Campaign for Conservation.

Objective: Raise awareness and funds for a cause that inspires you.

Modus Operandi: Draw inspiration from the creative conservation campaigns of photographers, painters, authors, athletes and those compelled by curiosity and motivated by a cause.

Your Inspiration…
The following individuals combine adventure with conservation submerging themselves in foreign cultures and discovering first-hand the challenges facing people and wildlife the around the world. Each with a particular talent and all with a passion for preservation—their goal to make a difference.

Florian Schulz is a conservationist, speaker and author best known for his visual conservation projects Freedom to Roam Y2Y and B2B. Florian and his partner Emil Herrera-Schulz transfix audiences around the world with powerful visions of the wild. Through public exhibit and presentations, Florian relates the importance of wildlife corridors and the vital but fragile existence of ecosystems. Learn more at www.visionsofthewild.com

Nick Garbutt is an award-winning wildlife photographer and author who has a passionate concern for biodiversity and the fragile environment we inhabit. While his background is in zoology, he realised early in his academic career that it was too constraining and he subsequently found the avenues of photography and popular natural history writing provided the freedom he wanted to indulge in and express his interests in the natural world. Sharing experience and knowledge through books, presentations, photography and photo tours.

Pollyanna Pickering and daughter Anna-Louise relate a love of animals via different mediums. Pollyanna is an acclaimed wildlife artist with paintings of exceptional authenticity whilst her daughter Anna-Louise an accomplished photographer documents the duo’s fantastic expeditions. Both are devoted to conservation and through the Pollyanna Pickering Foundation raise funds and awareness for wildlife. Traveling the globe to remote locations in search of threatened species for which their work including books, fine art and collectables helps promote and preserve.

Harry Kikstra is a climber/expedition leader/ photographer/ filmmaker/ producer/ writer/ public speaker/ cycler and many other things that have to do with sharing the beauty of the outdoors. He has climbed the 7 continental highpoints and currently is cycling from Alaska to Ushuaia, Argentina relating his journeys through words and vision. His expeditions of noble quest are all embarked upon with intent to learn from and leave behind a positive influence on the people and places he visits. You can support his work by buying prints or cards of his exquisite photos many of which have been received awards and been published in the likes of National Geographic. Harry’s Illumination HQ project provides solar-powered lights to villages in place of kerosene lamps an expensive proposition for the people and the planet.

Your Support…
Invigorated with the above inspiration, connect with your own passion and cause. If you share a love wildlife then visit Wildlife Warriors an Initiative which supports creative conservation and promotes ‘People Powering Preservation’. Offering resources and media exposure for personal challenges and events which raise funds and awareness for wildlife.

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MM- Moment Meditate

by Action Advisor on May 31, 2011

Old age secrets of the Okinawan’s impart the virtues of managing stress and focusing on the magic in every moment. Their weapon against decline an ability to ‘redefine’ their experience of reality.

Employing a state of mindfulness for the everyday duties, encounters, obstacles, blessings and achievements then filtering the content of your thoughts to highlight the positive aspects of each is not only a means to preserve good health of both mind and body but to transform your reality.

Recognising an abundance of things to be grateful for elevates mood, reinforces optimism and resolve all vital traits in people who live long and well, but mastering meditation or detailed contemplation of a moment is a challenging prospect when you are used to an over stimulated state of being.

The notion that frenetic environments place people at a disadvantage to seize control over circumstance and stress compared with those who live closer to nature―where meditation can be practised unencumbered in settings we already consider serene, is simply not so.

Firstly, nature although inherently restorative presents her own challenges, many of which can be unrelenting, unassailable and unpredictable. These hardships could easily rival happiness in the most positive of people, yet creases of joy evident on the faces of Mongolian nomads who face some of the harshest conditions suggest the key to true happiness lies in how we perceive life―constantly evolving and filled with opportunity.

Just as courage is cultivated not from the absence of fear but rather the knowledge that something is more important, so too happiness comes not from the absence of hardship but the knowledge that something is more important. Redefine your objectives to reflect a grander picture―how unfortunate are you in relation to someone starving? How permanent is this problem and is it actually a problem or an unexpected detour, designed to inspire new attitudes, actions and adventures?

Secondly, urban settings make great places for meditation. It may seem illogical to suggest the confused noise of persistent and demanding stimulus as present in city environments could leave any room for meditation but free-runners have found a way to work with these obstacles to do just that.

Clearing a Path to Patience and Peace through Parkour.

Moving the body intuitively around, through, over and under physical obstacles these athletes have discovered a stress-busting activity that redefines reality. Focusing on the most fluid path of least resistance all movements are in themselves a meditation of the moment. Not trying to foresee the future or retrace the past only to be present in the moment―aware of the space around them, their bodies rythm and energy.

Alternative practices in ‘Moment Meditation’.

Leveraging the powerful psychological and physical benefits of meditation does not require you to share tent with Mongolian nomads in search of happiness or to leap off lampposts seeking peace of mind or to learn patience. Where ever you are, whoever you are, what ever you are doing―we can all moment meditate, here’s how…

Meditation takes many forms and sitting cross-legged with eyes closed is but one. The important part of meditation is redirect your thoughts to focus on the detail of what you are doing searching for the beauty in the moment. For example whilst doing the dishes you could delight in the warmth of the water, bemuse on the magical properties of the bubbles and by doing so make an otherwise mundane or arduous chore enjoyable.

Deploy your perspective shifter more frequently to harness longterm benefits and make optimism and resilience to lifes little hurdles a habit.

Practising moment meditation is less demanding than attempting lengthy meditations like those mastered by Buddhist monks who can spend hours deflecting abstract thoughts and observing a quiet stillness of the mind. Because moments are brief holding your thoughts captive to induce calm can be mastered more easily and therefor used to fend off impulsive emotions like anger, greed, depression, fear and the like.

Put it to practise as you idle in line on the freeway home from a long day at work. In this case directing the mind inward to focus on your breath or process the mechanical marvel you have command over.

To explore this topic further I recommend reading ‘Hurry Up and Meditate’ by David Michie author of several titles on mindfulness all of which translate the detailed philosophies of the Dharma into digestible lessons easy to apply. Another title by Michie ‘Enlightenment to Go’ is great for expanding your horizons and offers a glimpse of a radiantly different reality.

To learn more about the Centenarian Secrets of the Okinawan people download the Okinawan’s Guide to Longevity

Finally for some Parkour inspiration visit Sebastian Foucan’s site the official founder of free-running.

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MM- Ingenuity vs Impact

by Action Advisor on April 30, 2011

Zero Waste Living as popularised by Colin Beavan and epitomised in his real life documentary ‘No Impact Man’ has sparked a sustainable plight and encouraged crafty and cleaver, conservation-conscious families to create from what they have.

In the following example the Johnson Family show how old fashioned ingenuity can reduce human impact to challenge climate change.

YouTube Preview Image

Five years ago, the Johnson family decided to move into a smaller home. Not only did they downsize their belongings but they took on a zero-waste style of living. Along the way, this family has found a balance, a way to maintain the lifestyle they enjoy, while drastically cutting down on waste.

Scott Johnson, was initially skeptical of the project, confessing, “I was just afraid that I’d be eating a bunch of granola or something all the time.” Instead, the family has focused on reducing the number of items in their home, without compromising their needs.

Inspiration on repurposing, recycling and reviving old fashioned human ingenuity and labor is liberating families from convenient-heavy lifestyle’s and the appeal is not just economics or environment but mental and physical health as well.

As we do more for ourselves the physical return is obvious in fitness, mobility and strength but mentally learning to resolve issues creatively as showcased by ‘mum turned Macgyver’ Mrs. Johnson, challenges the mind leaving you with a sense of satisfaction and accomplishment.

Although the phrase is Zero Waste Living, I prefer to think of it as Nature Conscious Living— in that some waste is inevitable but the amount and how we off-set or indeed use our ‘biodegradable fertiliser’ is up to us.

The Mission this month will focus on Nature Conscious Living with the objective to ‘create more and make less’ (waste that is).

Resources
The Johnson’s offer inspiration for families living in residential areas, utilising their resources as applicable to their surroundings.

Should your lifestyle be part of a rural setting, I imagine your macgyver instincts are already in full swing. But just in case creativity is lacking consider renting the BBC series The Good Life. Characters in this charming comedy spend their days inventing contraptions and concocting self sufficient schemes which for the most part have potential to provide profit or increase work efficiency.

Another excellent BBC series to give you good green thoughts is The Edible Garden from Gardeners’ World regular Alys Fowler who’s recreating the self-sufficient Good Life in her Birmingham backyard. Or you could simply Google ‘Zero Waste’ and the web returns a wealth of renewable resources.

Despite location residential or rural this month is about mucking in and making the most of what we have so we…

Automatically reduce our expense — build it don’t buy it!

Create less waste — reuse, recycle and reinvent don’t reinvest in consumables!

Profit physically — do it yourself don’t drive, have it delivered or done for you!

Increase innovative and inspired thinking — solve it don’t stress about it! (the more you learn to rely on your creative genius the less dependant you become on mod CON’s.)

Creativity before convenience uses ingenuity to reduce impact and by default families are rewarded with confidence in themselves and the future of this earth.

As incentive for our Mum Macgyver’s and DIY Dad’s we are offering ten double-passes to the Eco Xpo happening from 6th to 8th May at the Entertainment Quarter, Moore Park, NSW.

For your chance to win email us a description of an ingenious idea or invention (subject title- My Great Idea).  The best 10 will feature in our magazine and enjoy eco utopia exploring the smart and sustainable showcase at Eco Xpo 2011.

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