Get the real stories of how entrepreneurs, artists, heretics, authors, liberators, athletes, and innovators pursue their ideas and aspirations.
From TED speakers, national broadcasters, New York Times best selling authors to Ultra-marathon runners and start-up CEO’s you’re guaranteed to be encouraged to swing for the fence in your own pursuits.
Accept my invitation to:
Do your best work
Live the life you want to live
Play a lot more
Destroying the programs that do not serve us to pursue purpose and happiness.
A mindset of abundance isn't so easy to find.
A navigation lesson recorded in the Colorado wilderness featuring renowned guide "Pathfinder" Dave Eitemiller. A video of this experience is here.
A state or a phase of transition, on the threshold of something new.
Rilke says, "Live the questions now. Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, live along some distant day into the answer."
On the road to impossible, how to sustain our ability to create impact and performance.
Inspired from George Ella Lyon's "How to write a poem" exploring the question, where am I from?
Finding ecstatic joy in life's adventures.
Updates on the thorns, buds, and roses of life.
Creekside thoughts about endings and new beginnings in corporate and personal life - inspired by Dr. Henry Cloud's book "Necessary Endings." Intentionally saying goodbye or hello to metabolize an end…
An invitation into spacious places of friendship.
A life principle learned in the field. We had to choose between insisting the trail still existed and following our original plan, or admitting that our maps and the terrain were inaccurate.
I reflect on a cherished memory of a dear friend and the moving farewell during his funeral as bagpipes played Amazing Grace.
Inspired by Wendell Berry's Sabbath series, this is my take on a Sabbath Poem with reflections, outdoor exploration, and meaningful connection.
I’m built for a monastic life but navigate the corporate world, a challenging balance to thrive in.
Becoming Super Better while I'm kind to myself in my corporate life.
Warren Bennis said, "Becoming a leader is synonymous with becoming yourself. It is precisely that simple and it is also that difficult."
How do we keep our heart forward? How do we stay grounded and centered?