Monday, March 19, 2012

Books that changed my life

Was it a childhood favourite that helped you discover the full power of your imagination? Was it an inspirational true story that taught you not to take life for granted? Was it a self help book that made you realise you were not living your life to the full? Or was it a novel in your adult years that taught you about love?
For me, two books have changed my life - one in my childhood, and one on the cusp of adulthood.
In the newspaper on the weekend, I read a great feature where eight well-known Wellingtonians - writers, politicians, a broadcaster, a sportsman and a comedian were asked what book changed their life, so I thought I would share mine with you.
The Magic Faraway Tree by Enid Blyton
I was delighted to discover that Bill Manhire - writer and the director of the International Institute of Modern Letters at Victoria University - and I share a life-changing book: The Magic Faraway Tree by Enid Blyton.
Being a shy, quiet child who preferred reading to sport, I read a lot of books in my childhood and Enid Blyton was there through it all. I read as many of the Famous Five books as  could get my hands on, and then discovered her foray into fantasy which I struggled to put down and read over and over again.
I will admit that I don't remember much of the story, but I do remember how it opened up my imagination and made me believe in another world, another reality that is closer than you think. It sticks with me today, and I even think it influences how I write - not shying away from magic, other worlds, and the possibility of a force, a sort of electricity around us that we can neither see, nor touch, nor understand, that would explain things like spirits and demons and people that don't quite make sense in this world.
Outlander by Diana Gabaldon
At the tender age of fourteen, I went to my local library after getting frustrated with the lack of mature fiction in my school library. I was bored with every book I read, so I asked the librarian if she would point me towards something a little different, something exciting. And that's when my obsession with Jamie and Claire Fraser began.
You've all heard me talk about Diana Gabaldon's Outlander series - I seem to find a way to slip it into every post I write about books - but it's just so GOOD!
Looking back now, I do wonder if it was appropriate for a fourteen year old girl to be reading a book so full of very, very detailed sex scenes. But in a way, I'm grateful because it taught me that sex is not just physical - it's the most intimate thing you can do with another person and when you love them more than life itself, you bear your soul to that person. And Diana Gabaldon herself taught me that the intense, all-consuming, impassioned love that exists between Jamie and Claire is possible in the real world - because she experiences it herself.
And then there's the time travel. I LOVE time travel stories, and this book started me on the road to writing my own novel - which I've dreamed about doing all my life - which also has a time travel element to it.
Again, it was not just the book, but the author who influenced me here. She came to Wellington a few years ago promoting the seventh book in the series, An Echo in the Bone, and spoke to a packed audience about her books.
At the end during question time, someone asked "What advice to you have for aspiring writers?" And she said, "Just start writing".
Then someone asked, "How do you find the time?" and she said, "How many hours a day do you spend watching television?"
Simple, I know. I mean, of course all you have to do to start writing a book is to "Just start writing", but so often we have this perception of an author having a degree in English Literature and a masters and a PHD to top it off - oh, and you have to be graying around the edges.
But - although Diana Gabaldon has three degrees in science: Zoology, Marine Biology, and Quantitative Behavioral Ecology - she was just a woman who wanted to write a book, so she just started writing - in her thirties while raising three young children.
So that's how Outlander by Diana Gabaldon and The Magic Faraway Tree by Enid Blyton changed my life.

What book, or books, changed your life?

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Happy Monday :)

Good morning friends and a happy Monday to you! Hope you had a great weekend. I for one am a little worse for wear this morning after a five hour hike up a really high mountain yesterday that was a lot harder than we thought it would be - and it was all my idea but I only have myself to blame. But it was worth it for the view and the amazing sense of accomplishment we all felt when we made it to the top... and then to the car at the bottom. It was great practice for the Tongariro Alpine Crossing, which we plan to tackle in January 2013. I will post photos of our amazing adventure later this week as part of my WellyLove feature, so watch this space. I also have a little business venture to tell you about, which is small, but super-exciting and something I have been wanting to do for a long time.
So here is some Monday inspiration, have a great week!

Risk! Risk anything! Care no more for the opinions of others, for those voices. Do the hardest thing on earth for you. Act for yourself. Face the truth.

Katherine Mansfield

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Strangely beautiful

The weekend before last, my partner and I were driving past Petone Beach a day after the "weather bomb", which included buckets and buckets of rain and gale force winds that battered the whole country for a day, and he pointed out how "ugly" the beach looked with tree branches and all sorts of debris washed up from the storm.
"It's kind of beautiful in a weird kind of way," I said, and he turned to me with that crease between his eyebrows that he gets when I say something odd, "You find beauty in the strangest things," he said.
He's right, I do. Crumbling down houses are beautiful because, although they will most likely be torn down one day or give in to the elements and simply crumble, once upon a time it was brand new, and someone lived there, families were raised there, there was a story. Washed up debris on the beach after a fierce storm is beautiful because it makes us humans aware of our vulnerability and how no man is a match for Mother Nature.
So that is why I want to show you this town in America that has just gone up for sale.
It's called Buford, it's in Wyoming, and it's population is: 1.

Isn't it fun to dream?

Source unknown

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Happy Monday :)

“You have brains in your head. You have feet in your shoes. You can steer yourself any direction you choose. You're on your own. And you know what you know. And YOU are the one who'll decide where to go...”

― Dr. Seuss, Oh, the Places You'll Go!

 

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Dreaming of... Lake Wanaka in Autumn

In a few weeks time, Lake Wanaka, Queenstown will start to look like this...




Couldn't you just imagine being that couple sitting together on the bench, all wrapped up looking out at the lake, surrounded by fallen autumn leaves?
It's funny how New Zealand is such a small country and I have lived here my whole life, yet I've only seen half of it. I feel a southern roadtrip calling...

Happy weekend xo

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Making the pain worth it

So a couple of weeks ago, I joined a gym. I've never been a sporty person - in my adult life, the closest I've come is watching rugby and the occassional game of soccer. So joining a gym was not the most natural thing in the world for me, but, much to my surprise, I'm thoroughly enjoying it, especially the Body Combat class which involves punching and kicking the air mixed martial arts-style to the tune of motivating music for an hour. I feel healthier, stronger, and much more energetic.
Although I do have a couple of general things I want to get out of the gym - making my shoulders stronger so they don't hurt so much, strengthening my core, and improving my fitness, I decided I needed a big goal - something I can do at the end of the year to prove I have achieved all these things.

So I've decided to walk what is said to be the best one-day hike in New Zealand, just a few hours drive from home - the Tongariro Alpine Crossing.

It's a world-renowned trek, with 19.4km of alpine meadows, craters, scattered pumice, active volcanoes, mountain springs, lava flows, emerald lakes, piles of scoria and statue-like mounds of volcanic desert. It's New Zealand scenery at it's best, and it sounds like a challenge with its ever-changing terrain and weather, and steep mountain climbs. Can't wait!


Simple pleasures

Good morning friends, hope you're having a lovely day... just wanted to share this gorgeous photo with you because it made me smile. I hope it makes you smile too :)

Photo from here