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Bristol2Beijing

31 Episodes

72 minutes | Dec 26, 2020
Christmas Special with Josh Day: The Original Bristol to Beijing Cyclist!
Josh Day cycled from Bristol to Beijing between 2017 and 2019, an odyssey that saw him cross the Pamir highway in winter and later cycle through Siberia in -25C conditions. In this podcast we go beyond our shared physical journey, discussing self-reliance, our mindsets during difficult periods and the purpose of goals. We also discuss what led Josh to leave his grad scheme for Beijing and how he's adjusted to life back in the UK. See below for Josh's favourite:Place: Kamchatka, Russia Piece of Music: Zvezda Po Imeni (A Star Called the Sun) by KinoBook: A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush by Eric Newby
44 minutes | Dec 9, 2020
Dr Ella Amoako: Changing the chances for kids with cancer in Ghana
"When the ideal is not available the available becomes ideal"Until recently there were only two centres in Ghana that could treat children with cancer. This meant that children from the Central and Western regions of Ghana had to make a journey of up to ten hours to receive treatment; In November 2019, Ella was able to use her expertise to set up a childhood cancer satellite unit at the Cape Coast Teaching Hospital, as part of World Child Cancer’s shared care programme.Yet Ella is still training as a paediatric oncologist. What difficulties did she encounter in creating a new treatment centre with minimal resources and staffing?To find out more about World Child Cancer, click here
54 minutes | Dec 1, 2020
David Smith: Challenging Corruption in Chișinău
When in Moldova I visited Taproom 27 - a craft beer bar - and the Smokehouse in the centre of Chișinău and talked with David Smith about his innovative way of challenging corruption through business.We discussed how corruption manifests itself in Moldova, how his bar and restaurant have defended themselves and what kept Dave going through the darkest moments.See below for Dave's favourite:Place: The Moldovan countrysidePiece of music: Teo Torriatte (Let Us Cling Together) by QueenBook: East of Eden by John Steinbeck
51 minutes | Nov 17, 2020
Lucy Palmer Part 2: Facing Death and Denial
‘The hardest thing I’ve ever done.’ Lucy Palmer describes with honesty the moment she climbed the stairs to be with her husband at the time of his death, the physical pain of his loss, navigating her way through a death-denying culture with three small children, the array of emotions she felt and the courage it takes to stand in that space of pain. ‘It is very easy to numb out and avoid the things that we don’t want to think about, the things we don’t want to face… When I was brave enough to face those things and to digest and understand those experiences, they were truly the most exhilarating experiences of my life’.See below for Lucy's favourite:Place: Mount Hagen, Papua New Guinea Piece of music: Afternoon in Paris by Stephane GrappelliBook: Middlemarch by George Eliot
47 minutes | Nov 10, 2020
Lucy Palmer Part 1: Where Angels Fear to Tread
“It was about the person I wanted to be, not so much about the person I actually was”Lucy tells the story of how she escaped from a difficult childhood in the UK to work in Papua New Guinea, how she fell in love and married her unexpected sweetheart and then faced the challenge of becoming stepmother to four teenage boys themselves grieving the death of their mother. She speaks candidly about the difficulties of forming relationships with her stepsons only to then face a double tragedy in the family.
55 minutes | Nov 3, 2020
Rory Stewart: Take Power by Taking the Blame
Rory Stewart talks about what he learnt from the 500 villages he walked through across Asia, how he stayed calm when his compound in Iraq was shelled and why being an MP was the hardest job he‘s done.He also shares his perspective for what is important for a divided America and his words of advice for Joe Biden.We also delve into society's last taboo, how to balance achievement with contentment and Rory’s favourite fruit!See below for Rory's favourite: Place: AfghanistanPiece of music: Pirates of Penzance by Gilbert and SullivanBook: Anna Karenina by LeoTolstoy
63 minutes | Oct 27, 2020
Zoe Davison: Pentathlon, Permission and Being Present
"You have to fully embrace yourself before you can fully love someone else. Hard things take time."Meet Zoe Davison, an Olympic hopeful in modern pentathlon, who has already proven herself in junior championships. Talent spotted at just 18 years of age she found herself training with women ten years her senior. Yet her attempts to match their performance and physique led her down a dark path towards eating disorder and depression.Her therapist encouraged her to acquire a dog whose unconditional positive regard was instrumental in her road to self acceptance. Zoe also talks frankly about her own experience of sexual assault, the dangers of making assumptions in relationships and the importance of open conversation around consent.TW: contains references to suicide, sexual assault and eating disordersSee below for Zoe's favourite:Place: Font-Remeu, FrancePiece of music: Half a man by Dean LewisBook: The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen Covey
69 minutes | Oct 20, 2020
John Sloan: Game face on
"We were young. The last thing we were thinking in our minds was cancer."John Sloan discusses the challenges of a cancer diagnosis at 24, the importance of support from loved ones, how his life was turned upside down again just as things seemed to be getting back to normal and how he found redemption in physical exercise and living in the moment."Challenge accepted. Now I’m going to hit this with everything I’ve got...The more I exercised, the more the anxiety would go away…the feel-good endorphins totally overrode everything else that was going on."See below for John's favourite:Place: The Amalfi Coast, ItalyPiece of music: The Sharpest Lives by My Chemical RomanceBook: Endurance: Shackleton's incredible voyage to the Antarctic by Alfred Lansing
66 minutes | Oct 13, 2020
Pen Hadow: Conquering a final frontier
Arctic explorer & ocean conservationist, Pen Hadow, reveals what it took to become the first person to trek solo from Canada to the North Pole, on his third attempt.“This is what the whole challenge is about, it’s not about the easy stuff, it’s about how you deal with the really hard stuff … We are all different … Have confidence in who you are and what you can do and bring to the table, and resist the herd mentality and the need to be like everyone else”See below for Pen's favourite:Place: Pentire Cove, north of Polzeath, CornwallMusic: Brahms Piano concerto no. 2 in B flat major or Loaded by Primal Scream Book: Fermat's Last Theorem by Simon Singh
39 minutes | Oct 7, 2020
Oli Broadhead: Why it matters to be nice
“I just kept talking calmly and pretending not to understand...I’m very happy to be robbed.”Oli started his adventures at a young age, sleeping in a tent in the garden when he was six. Growing up in Cornwall gave ample opportunity to explore the outdoors and this passion has led him to travel to remote parts of the world, including a walk across South India living on just a dollar a day and trekking through Sumatra. In this conversation Oli shares his tips with me on staying cheerful, how he survived an attempted mugging, the challenge of getting started on each expedition, and how he coped with lockdown.To find out more about Oli, check out http://www.olibroadhead.com/See below for Oli's favourite:Place: Looe Island, Cornwall, UKPiece of music: "Tales Of Girls, Boys & Marsupials" by The WombatsBook: An Empire of the East by Norman Lewis
41 minutes | Sep 30, 2020
Carla Molinaro: Testing the limits of your own endurance
Elite ultra runner Carla Molinaro took matters into her own hands when the COVID-19 pandemic threatened to cancel the 2020 racing season. Undaunted she decided to attempt to smash the record for running from Land’s End to John O’Groats and became the fastest woman to do this, running over 800 miles in just twelve days.In this episode Carla reflects on her extraordinary career, how failures lead to success and how she hopes to encourage more women to discover the benefits of getting out and active.See below for Carla's favourite:Place: The Tour of Mont BlancPiece of music: "Don't Stop Me Now" by QueenBook: Endurance: Shackleton's incredible voyage to the Antarctic by Alfred Lansing
66 minutes | Sep 23, 2020
Marvin Rees: 100 metres behind the start line
"I shouldn’t be mayor of Bristol. I grew up poor, there was some domestic violence, I’m the first in my family to go to university, I shouldn’t be sitting in the United Nations building… I shouldn’t be addressing the US conference of mayors, I shouldn’t be walking into Downing Street. That’s not my background. I’m at the same table as this person and I started 100 metres behind the start line."Mayor of Bristol Marvin Rees describes growing up as a mixed race child, his life defined as a struggle, before finding self-belief through the encouragement of the adults who believed in him and becoming a force for positive change in Bristol and in the lives of its young people.For more information about the City Leadership Programme, look at the link:https://www.bristol.gov.uk/mayor/city-leadership-programmeSee below for Marvin's favourite: Place: Spitsbergen, NorwayPiece of music: What's going on by Marvin GayeBook: 'A time to break the silence' - Speech by Martin Luther King, 4th April 1967
81 minutes | Sep 16, 2020
Josh Lasky: from grumble to gratitude
When Josh Lasky was in his early twenties he saw his father succumb to the ravages of Parkinson’s disease. He became one of his father’s main caregivers, discovering why carers are the unsung heroes of our time.As Josh entered adulthood, he had to grapple with the realisation that is father was human, and flawed. Through Josh's eleven years of experience as a caregiver he relates his journey from bitterness to gratitude, learning the value of time and the power of endurance sports.To find out more about Josh's story and his book 'Every Step is a Gift' go to www.joshlasky.com.See below for Josh's favourite:Place: 2nd Ave Beach, Bradley Beach, New JerseyPiece of music: Time Machine Invention by Cloud CultBook: Meditations by Marcus Aurelius and Born to Run by Christopher McDougall
41 minutes | Sep 9, 2020
Chrissie Wellington: What's tougher than an Ironman triathlon?
Imagine swimming more than two miles before cycling over 100 miles and then running a marathon…This week’s guest is disarmingly modest about her extraordinary career as four times Ironman world champion and yet she has achieved far more than this. Before becoming a professional athlete, Chrissie worked for the British government on international development policy and for a NGO in Nepal.Despite all of this, her biggest challenge was not Ironman related but instead one that many of us face. Chrissie talks candidly about the experience of being a mother and the secret behind the success of parkrun.See below for Chrissie's favourite: Place: Hawaii & Nepal Piece of music: You Are My SunshineBook: Dream Animals by Emily Winfield Martin
78 minutes | Sep 2, 2020
Luke Grenfell-Shaw: On loss, life, and a tandem ride to Beijing
"You were asking how the 23 year old Luke thought. He thought in terms of three years...of course I’m going to have that time. I don’t think like that now"The tables are turned in this episode as Luke speaks candidly to family friend Jane Philips of his journey over the past two years, encompassing his own diagnosis with cancer, the loss of his brother John shortly afterwards, and his altered perspective on life."If you don't have much time to live then surely you want to do as much as possible with that time - because it becomes immensely precious."
28 minutes | Jul 22, 2020
Graham Shaw Part 2: Growing up in WWII, life in the Navy and Generation Snowflake
In this second part, Graham and I discuss how he dealt with challenges in a robust Naval environment, what makes good leadership and why he thinks 'Generation Snowflake' have it harder than he did. 
41 minutes | Jul 20, 2020
Graham Shaw Part 1: Growing up in WWII, life in the Navy and Generation Snowflake
"I did feel a duty to look after my mother"In this episode I chat with my grandfather, Graham, about some of his experiences from the earlier part of his life, including his early bomb disposal work during as a child in the second world war, and how he came to join the Navy as a ship's boy and work his way up from the bottom. In this first part we also discuss our respective childhoods and how they shaped who we are today.Continued in part 2.
45 minutes | Jul 14, 2020
Philip Taylor Part 2: from IBM exec to the ambulance service
In this episode, Philip and I continue our discussion. Philip explains to me he does so much more than drive an ambulance, the importance of teamwork and family and his perspective from being on the front line of the COVID-19 response.For different outro music, Philip recommends: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kY4l2Xx3crsAnd Philip also found these two books highly impactful, check them out if interested!Leadership and Self Deception: Getting out of the Box by The Arbinger InstituteFeel the Fear and Do it Anyway by Susan Jeffers
39 minutes | Jul 13, 2020
Philip Taylor Part 1: from IBM exec to the ambulance service
This episode I talk with Philip Taylor, who "had it all" as a senior executive at IBM. However, despite the salary and company car, this didn't make Philip satisfied with his work or his life at IBM. We discuss the challenges he faced changing his career from the corporate world to a totally new sphere - the ambulance service.Along the way, we also discuss fear, materialism and the right way to buy.This is the first half of our discussion - it will be continued in part 2.
67 minutes | Jul 6, 2020
Beyond Cancer Survivor: what it is to live with a cancer diagnosis
This week, Facing Up takes a different tack and I discuss with Kate, Kirsty and Miranda what it is to live with a cancer diagnosis. We discuss the similarities and differences in the experiences each of us had, from coping with different treatments, handling uncertainty and how we have decided to continue our lives. We also discuss how having a cancer diagnosis has changed us as people, and to what extent it forms part of our identity.
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