“Congratulations, you’re the first team to arrive.”
I’ve said that a few hundred times over the last 14 seasons of The Amazing Race, but it never gets old, especially when a team has that wonderful look of anticipation—not knowing if they beat the others yet or not.
The Amazing Race is all about people being pushed outside their comfort zone and completing every imaginable challenge.
It’s about ordinary people taking part in an extraordinary situation, being a fish out of water and taking part in a life-changing experience.
I call my personal philosophy NOW (No Opportunity Wasted). NOW means taking risks and living each day as if it were your best. Sometimes that requires doing things that are uncomfortable, but in the end, it’s what really makes you feel inspired about life.
Look for solutions, not excuses.
I learned about living life to the fullest from my parents. Life always felt like an adventure growing up.
When I was six we moved to Antigua, a small island in the Caribbean, only 108 square miles. My father, a plant scientist, was employed to set up a legume project, testing plants they could adapt to the harsh growing conditions and helping local farmers establish sustainable plants.
My mother was a schoolteacher and also gave piano lessons at home. At one point she had more than 100 students! Resources on the island were limited so my parents had to be resourceful and imaginative.
I remember my mother was asked to teach a typing class on the far side of the island. There were no typewriters at that particular school so my mom simply borrowed the machines from her school, transported them over to the other school, taught her class and then lugged them back again. She did this for an entire year so that typing could be taught to as many students as possible. Mom was a doer.
Ditto Dad. When we arrived on the island he was given the use of an old building inside the gates of an abandoned sugarcane factory.
After establishing some electricity and running water, he set about finding a propagation area for his plants. The place was pretty rundown. There were piles of old steel, tin roofing and a number of flatbed railway carriages that sat on a network of train tracks.
Dad quickly realized that these carriages were at a perfect working height to set up seedlings. They could be pushed to a watering area or shaded areas and, best of all, would cost him nothing.
As the famous New Zealand nuclear physicist, Sir Ernest Rutherford, once said, “We didn’t have money, so we had to think.” The most resourceful people I’ve met around the world are usually the ones who have the least.
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Comments
I was so excited when my
I was so excited when my boss e-mailed Phil Keoghan's inspiration story to me, it was timely as my best friend and I just submitted our application to compete on the Amazing Race! This has been a dream of ours since Season 1. As 40+ mom's, we want to be an inspiration to other middle-age women who think their "fun days" are limited. I pray we get on the show, I refuse to limit myself by the number of years I've lived! Thank you, Phil, for sharing such a great story!
Thanks for the last sentence
Thanks for the last sentence that indicated a willingness to wait to fulfill a dream and take risks until his child was enjoyed and provided for. This has always been my belief and I'm happy to see someone else feels the same way. The rewards from seeing children develop into strong, independent and caring individuals who in turn are modeling these traits to their children, are great!
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