Interview with Cath Duncan, Mine Your Resources

Interview with Cath Duncan, Mine Your Resources

Written by Brooke Ferguson

Topics: Interviews

Welcome!

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As part of the inspiring force to help you ‘take the leap of faith’, we will be conducting mini interviews featuring global entrepreneurs who have become “Business Backpackers”.  Because we are all busy traveling, working, and having loads of fun, it is a short list of questions that will hopefully give you a quick glimpse of others “Living the Life”.

This month’s  mini-view comes from Cath Duncan, life coach, writer, and author of the blog site Mine Your Resources.   Her site is one of my favorites, and I land there often, whenever I need a ‘Pick Me Up’ or some inspiration for life.  Cath is a great example of someone living an unconventional life with a business that will travel.  She also has a wonderful charity project her and her husband are working on, learn more by reading Extreme African Adventures and How to Create More Meaning in Your Life.

What is your passion and how are you sharing it with the world?

I’m most passionate about Agile Living and helping people to develop the mind and life management skills that’ll enable them learn and change easily, so they can thrive in a high-change world and create the life they want.

The main thing that gets in the way of us learning and changing easily and being who we want to be is fear, so I love helping people to develop a positive, resourceful relationship with their fears. Fear is an incredibly resourceful emotion and it only expands when we try to ignore or fight it, so I teach people how to mine the resources in their fears, so they can create the life they want.

One of my main projects is the Bottom-line Bookclub, where I help people to accelerate, deepen and apply their personal development learning by providing learning programs that give them the Bottom-line on the highest-leverage ideas and the most effective change tools in the best personal development books.

I also coach people one-on-one through major changes they’re making or wanting to make, and I share a lot about how to learn and change more easily on my blog, Mine Your Resources and in the monthly free expert teleseminars that I host.

Where in the world are you now and how did you end up there?

I’m living with my husband, Andy, in Cape Town, South Africa for a few months and we’ll head off again in the new year. We’re still deciding our next location. We’re keen to live somewhere we haven’t lived before – there’s still so much of the world we want to see.

I work online, because that’s the most agile small business model I’ve found and it allows me to easily change my location and other big parts of my life and keep doing the work I love doing, without having to start all over again with building my business.

What would you say was the most challenging part of getting to where you are now?

I found it really hard to uncover what sort of work I wanted to do. Creating and working has always been very important to me – even as a child, I was unusually “productive” and created little projects for myself.

We’re taught to look at the different categories of jobs that already exist in the world, choose one to do for the rest of your life, and then go and follow the linear, pre-determined path into that job by doing the “right” training, starting in the “right” junior jobs to get the “right” experience, and then working your way up, making a life-long career out of it. I guess this process suits some people, but it didn’t work for me, and I think it’s rapidly becoming outdated in our high-change world. At some point I realized that I didn’t want to try to fit myself into a job because I couldn’t find one that I felt I could fit well enough into, and I realized that I needed to invent my own work and workstyle around the values that were important to me and the activities I loved doing.

That sounds simple and straightforward, but getting clear on my values and what I loved doing, and then creating a platform and the necessary scaffolding to make it possible to get paid to do it has been way tougher and has taken a lot longer than I’d thought it would. I didn’t realize that it was going to take so much soul-searching and I didn’t expect all the existential and identity crises that it triggered. And when it comes to setting up the systems and scaffolding to make a successful business out of the stuff I love doing, it’s been a relentless and steep curve of continuous personal and professional learning. It’s probably a good thing that I was so naive, or else I might never have taken the leap!

Inspiring words and advice for others interested in going global & putting lifestyle first…

1.) Live lean.

You don’t need all the “things” that the media says you need, in order to be happy, and that stuff just creates the pressure for you to work harder and longer so you can earn more money and buy that stuff you think you need. You can create a lot of financial freedom by dropping the desire for “building a fort” and collecting stuff.

2.) Realize that the quality of your life is all about the quality of your thinking.

The only way you can experience the world or decide what to create in the world is through your own thoughts, so your greatest resource is your own ability to think. Developing your ability to use your whole mind is the most important investment you can make. Don’t skimp on developing your thinking, and be willing to review and renew your thinking by questioning your assumptions often.

3.) Prioritize action over planning.

You can do all the research and reading in the world, but most of the things that’ll make the biggest difference in your happiness and success in life can’t be controlled or planned, and at the end of the day knowledge is worthless unless you use it and take action.

Connect With Cath:

http://www.mineyourresources.com/
http://twitter.com/cathduncan
http://twitter.com/bottomlinebkclb

and… Don’t forget to check out her Bottom-line Bookclub!  Cath is running a special till December 18th for a 2 for 1 six month gift subscription! Click below for details!!
Two-for-one 6-month Gift Subscription Special

Questions?  Comments?  Leave ‘em below!

6 Comments For This Post I'd Love to Hear Yours!

  1. Mark Eckenrode Says:

    the three points given under “inspiring words” are golden. much thanks to cath and brooke for sharing.

  2. John Bardos - JetSetCitizen Says:

    Great advice again Cath.

    That should be a manifesto.
    1. Live Lean.
    2. Develop your thinking ability.
    3. Prioritize action over planning.

    All three are very important to thriving in a rapidly changing world. It is easy to read all the blogs, buy books and attend seminars but never take action. Spending an hour or two a day to study about how to be more productive defeats the purpose.

  3. Brooke Ferguson Says:

    @Mark – Thanks, Mark! I’m excited to share your interview next month, working on it right now :0)

    @John – Hahaha… I couldn’t agree more. I have spent WAY too much time trying to Organize the Perfect Way of Doing Something, only to completely exhaust myself and do absolutely nothing! I am slowly weaning myself from the evil ways of Over-planning, and learning that just doing things is actually much more efficient and enjoyable! Well put, John!

  4. Rasheed Hooda Says:

    Thank you, Brooke, for sharing this interview with Cath Duncan.

    I agree with Mark and John, specially the third point about taking action, something I need to work on more effectively.

    Thanks for your time and wisdom shared, Cath.

  5. Mark Eckenrode Says:

    looks like we’re all loving the 3 points. interestingly enough, i’ve only been able to really “get” those 3 points since i started traveling. i learned that i’m happier living lean, my thinking definitely broadened, and action is the catalyst for the most amazing experiences.

  6. Cath Duncan Says:

    @Mark, John, Brooke, Rasheed: thanks for your feedback – glad you enjoyed my “advice.” Mark, I think you make a good point there – I learned the importance of those three points while I was traveling, and throwing yourself into a situation where you have to learn the skills to thrive in that situation is a good way to learn, so I’m with you on recommending travel as a rigorous personal development program.

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