Mongolia reconnected me to my purpose

Originally published by Naomi Simson on LinkedIn: Mongolia reconnected me to my purpose

So much to experience, so little time

I’m known for my busyness. People often remark: “I don’t know how you fit everything in”. Always somewhere to go, someone to meet, somehow on a deadline.

Yet when Lisa Pagotto asked me to join her on one of her Crooked Compass experience trips – to north western Mongolia – I said to myself ‘of course I can find 10 days for this... in fact, I need to make it at least two weeks to justify the long flights'.

But as the departure date loomed over me, so too did the impending end of financial year. Many things were going and at the Big Red Group as well as Shark Tank and I found myself resenting the time away. I felt like I was letting my team and business partner down, by not physically being there at such a crucial time. Yet I had given my word to Lisa and my husband (as well as myself) that I would go on this trip.

I asked myself the question: how often do I dream, or plan to tick something off my bucket list, but daily life gets in the way?

So, I pushed ahead knowing that I would be off air for at least 7 days of the trip, and that for the first time in two decades I put an out of office on my email.

This was an emotional journey for me just to disconnect as I am always 'on', always busy, always present. But I also know how fragile life can be.

Last year two of my friends passed away suddenly, they were both younger than me and left behind children and a lifelong spouse. (My only Aunt passed away too). All of them had such a sense of joy, laughter and family. I wondered if they had done all the things they had wanted to do. If they were complete... I don't know.

In February this year I made a dash to the U.S. to be with my lifelong friend, the godmother to my son, for a few days in the week before she lost her battle with cancer. As I sat by her bed she reflected on the things that she did not quite get to – it made her sad thinking about things she would never experience. Her young children are raised in the U.S. and most of the trips back to Australia were about visiting friends and family. She had booked a trip for last June, for her kids and husband to get to experience Australia: jungle surfing in the Daintree, deep sea fishing, snorkelling in the reef, camping in the outback, learning dot painting with the elders at Uluru. I had helped her put together this incredible trip. She was to arrive in June last year but two weeks prior to her departure date the cancer had appeared in her brain and the trip was cancelled.