SectionE-zine: Beyond the Gravy
SectionMoving On
SectionOE Mark III
SectionRound Pegs, Round Holes
SectionJust Enough
SectionSuccess as a Zero-sum Game
SectionQuiet Success
SectionSaying Yes
SectionThe Missing 85%
SectionCount Your Blessings
SectionCambo's Success
SectionHave You Arrived?
SectionAre You Busy?
SectionTreating a Meaning Junkie (2)
SectionTreating a Meaning Junkie
SectionBeyond the Pinnacle
SectionHome Is Where The Heart Is
SectionStone Age Career Lessons
SectionFrog Appreciation Day
SectionShowing Up
SectionReprise
SectionExiting the Ring Road
SectionHow Are Your Eggs Spread?
SectionBeware Bosses With Dreams
SectionFolly Pays
SectionBeing Bright, Dammit!
SectionForward in Reverse
SectionOf Ceiling Fans and Cat Vomit
SectionGood Enough Beats Best
SectionBring On The Hurt
SectionThe Frugal Explorer
SectionWhat Drives You?
SectionTaking Charge
SectionMomentary Reflections
SectionHow to Fill a Bucket
SectionHas Your Future Passed?
SectionWhat's Holding Me Back? (3)
SectionWhat's Holding Me Back? (2)
SectionWhat's Holding Me Back?
SectionKeys to a Full Life
SectionSnuggsian Safety
SectionLessons from Middle-earth
SectionFear's Antidote
SectionEnough Already
SectionWithdrawing to Advance
SectionMake Reading a Ritual
SectionPerpetually Pregnant
SectionTrue Confessions
SectionThe Power of Attention
SectionWhat Really Matters
SectionHe Did It His Way
SectionJust Do It?
SectionThe Beekeeper Who Followed His Bliss
SectionKeeping Michael Dell in Business
SectionDo It While You Can
SectionWhat Should I Do With My Life?
SectionAre You Awake?

You could say that I worked every minute of my life, or you could say with equal precision that I never worked a day. I have always subscribed to the expression, "Thank God it's Friday," because to me Friday means I can work the next two days without interruption.

John Hope Franklin, historian

 

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The Beekeeper Who Followed His Bliss

May 21, 2003

This beekeeper is New Zealand's most famous son. (Well, OK, after Russell Crowe.) Next Wednesday will mark the 50th anniversary of the day he and Tenzing Norgay conquered Mt Everest.

Yes, Sir Edmund Hillary started out his working life as a beekeeper. Then he decided to follow his bliss. Within a few years he became the world's most famous mountaineer. But he fascinates me most because of what he did thereafter. He walked away from one concept of success - "mountaineering celebrity" - and committed to another, far more personal one.

 

It all began just a few years after the Everest ascent. An elderly Sherpa came to him: "Our children lack education. They are not prepared for the future. What we need more than anything is a school in Khumjung."

 

Hillary armed himself with hammer and nails. Soon he realized that he hadn't been put on this planet to climb mountains. His destiny was quite different: to build schools and hospitals in remote Himalayan villages. Since 1960, that has been his driving passion. His Himalayan Trust has built over 40 schools, hospitals and medical clinics, along with many bridges and airfields.

 

A few years back, Don George listened to Hillary speak at a New York fundraising event: 

You somehow feel that your own faith has been renewed, that there are dreams worth following, causes worth pursuing, that people can devote their lives to something larger than themselves and grow in heart and mind and grace until they become almost as high as the mountains they love... When Hillary shuffles off the stage, you watch people throughout the room - bankers and lawyers and writers and climbers - dab at their eyes, until you can't see because your own eyes too are filled with tears.

Why the tears? I think one reason Hillary moves us is that his rich, authentic life contrasts with our own pale half-lives. Hearing him, we mourn for the chances we haven't taken, the dreams we haven't followed, the truths we haven't honored.

 

Ed Hillary shows that it's never too late to start. He climbed Everest in the first half of his life; but that was merely, as he put it, "a footstep on a mountain." It is only in this, the second half, that he has discovered the work that gives his life its meaning. 

 

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