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    Solo hiking & wild camping heaven vs. the darkness of depression and early menopause 007: Stephie Boon

    enOctober 20, 2021

    About this Episode

    Stephie Boon 007 - HeadRightOut Podcast

     

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  00:17

    Hello, and welcome back to the HeadRightOut Podcast. This is the show that hopefully will launch you into doing something that is way beyond your comfort zone. Something that you never believed you were capable of doing. Perhaps there's just a little seed of an idea growing and hopefully this is going to be the show that will spur you on that will give you the encouragement that you need to HeadRightOut. Now today, I have a lovely, lovely guest, somebody who I've been friends with online for many years. Her name is Stephie Boon, and I have to say she is so honest in her conversation with me, particularly about her experiences with mental health. I should add here that we do talk about the darker side of depression, anxiety, and feelings of suicide. So if you are not in the right frame of mind to listen, please feel free to skip this episode for another day when you're feeling in a better place. That said, Stephie is still very keen for women who suffer with depression to hear her story and understand that there's a light at the end of the tunnel. There ARE ways of coping and learning to manage this debilitating illness. We also touch on early menopause and living with a son with Aspergers and how above everything else, hiking just fuels our souls... and challenges... well, they help us to push us out of our comfort zone and they help to give us focus. There's a lot of things that Stephie and I have in common, and in addition to we both love hiking, we both feel the same about challenges, and funnily enough, we both have a degree in Fine Art in fact, Steffi has got post-grad in Fine Art. So we just have very similar viewpoints. It's a wonderful conversation, go and have a listen. Enjoy.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  02:21

    Okay, and welcome everybody, back to the HeadRightOut Podcast. My name is Zoe Langley-Wathen and I am here today with another wonderful guest. Today I am going to be chatting to Stephie Boon and I have a wee bio here to read out for you so Stephie lives in Cornwall, she spends a lot of time on the coast path. A woman after my own heart. She's been a walker and backpacker for as long as she can remember. One of her most significant past challenges was to hike the Inca Trail, before her fortieth birthday. She made it at thirty-eight! It was a charity track and the biggest part of the challenge was the fundraising.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  03:00

    Nowadays she solo hikes and wild camps in the UK. At the moment her goal is to backpack all the national trails before she reaches sixty. So far she's completed the South West Coast Path, Offa's Dyke Path, the Cotswold Way, the South Downs Way, the Pedders Way and Norfolk Coast Path, and she says she's gradually working her way south to north. Stephie has an MA in Fine Art and always takes a sketchbook with her on her hikes. She plans to make a series of national trail paintings and possibly sell or publish them. Stephie shares her expertise and guides over on her website and on her blog, 10MileHike. She also suffers with serious episodes of depression, which was first treated for her in her early twenties. She's very open about this on her social media and within her blog, and she hopes that by sharing her experiences, she may inspire others to overcome personal difficulties and step out of their comfort zones. After all, life is just too precious not to do the things you've always wanted to do. There's also an article over on the 10MileHike blog called 'Fears Laid Bare' and I'll put the link to that in the show notes. It really does bear all, particularly about the biggest challenge that Stephie  is facing at the moment, that she says is literally scaring the living daylights out of her. And that's something we'll come to in a moment.  Stephie, welcome to HeadRightOut.

     

    Stephie Boon  04:23

    Hi Zoe, and thank you so much for having me. It's a real pleasure.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  04:29

    It is an absolute pleasure and delight for me too and I should let the listeners know that we have been friends on social media for how long? Probably four or five years maybe?

     

    Stephie Boon  04:39

    Yeah, long time.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  04:41

    Feels like a long time and we feel like we know each other so well. We've had lots of conversations back and forth, and lots of support for one another and lots of Insta love. And now this is the first time that we've actually spoken... I want to say face-to-face.Well, this is as close as face-to-face as we're gonna get at the moment - it's Zoom-to-Zoom.

     

    Stephie Boon  05:04

    Live, I think is what we can call it.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  05:08

    Yes.

     

    Stephie Boon  05:08

    In real time.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  05:10

    So, Stephie, where did it all start with your love for hiking? You know you're setting out to cover all of these trails, but have you been hiking from a really early age?

     

    Stephie Boon  05:20

    Actually, this is quite interesting. I was sixteen when I went on my first backpacking trip with a couple of school friends, and we went to the South Downs Way. It was just a few days and we were just wandering around, as teenagers do completely clueless, just having as much fun as possible. But then, earlier this year, I realised it was forty years since my first backpacking trip, and I decided to celebrate that by going back to the South Downs. And I walked the South Downs Way, which is part of what I walked when I was a teenager. So I decided I'd stay at one of the youth hostels that we'd stayed at when I was young, as it was a bit of an anniversary. An anniversary hike.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  06:17

    And a trip down memory lane too.

     

    Stephie Boon  06:20

    Yes, yeah. It was really funny actually, because my memories of that trip was bright sunshine, and hot and beautiful scenery. And this time it just rained. And storms, big winds, forty-fifty mile an hour winds. So a very different experience.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  06:42

    It's interesting, isn't it? Because very often, when people are recounting their stories from their teenage hiking experiences or camping experiences, very often it's the other way around. You know, they had an awful time and their feet hurt, they had blisters and it rained like the devil, and they swore they would never, ever do it again. And "how dare they" whoever 'they' were, you know, perhaps it was parents or school, "how dare they make me do this"? So you had an amazing experience by the sounds of it.

     

    Stephie Boon  07:15

    It was. I always have really good memories of it. Just getting out into the countryside, just seeing these amazing views, that I'd never experienced before. And just feeling completely at home really. That was realising I think that I was most at home in the outdoors, and walking, cycling, whatever it might be.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  07:40

    Yeah, I can relate to that. At home in the outdoors. Definitely. So how long was it before you then went off and did another hike?

     

    Stephie Boon  07:48

    Oh, probably quite a long time. Years, I would think. I did a cycling/bike-packing trip afterwards, which again wasn't particularly far. I think it was about a week, something like that, again along the south coast, all along the Seven Sisters. Then I went to art school, and most of the walks that I was doing then really were around the coast path and still cycling, but no major goals, I suppose. Everything else seemed to be... my focus was very much art at the time. That was just my absolute passion, I think was art. But I was still drawing the landscape walking in and drawing. You know, taking everything with me and drawing outside. Then we did the usual holidays. Walking holidays just in this country - Lake District mostly.

     

    Stephie Boon  08:50

    Then I had my son and it became family camping holidays on Exmoor, wild camping on Dartmoor. I think the first time I went solo wild camping was probably twelve years ago now and haven't looked back since. That's when hiking became a thing I felt I needed to do.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  09:16

    So in some ways, then although you had met and identified with hiking a long time ago, would it be correct to say that you didn't really feel the need for it - you didn't identify with it as something that made you feel better in your life until midlife?

     

    Stephie Boon  09:33

    I think I did realise that, but I don't think I realised that it could give me the challenges that it does. And it's the challenge that I thrive on now. I think previously it was mainly enjoyment, you know about being outside and just loving nature and knowing that when I was feeling ill that was where most people might think you retreat inside, but I retreated outside. It's just where I felt the need to be. And I've always escaped to the outdoors. on my own.

     

    Stephie Boon  10:12

    It was my way of just being - allowing myself to just be. It wasn't, I think, until I started really wild camping on my own, that I saw that I could create these challenges, which is what excites me now. And how you can overcome personal difficulties, it's a wonderful place to step outside your comfort zone, and to show it's a really odd phrase, but to prove to yourself, what you're made of, really, and what you can do. And it's funny, I'd never thought of myself as a resilient person at all. I've never felt that I bounced back from things particularly quickly. But I realised over the years, I'm actually a very tenacious person, and I will hang on and push myself through when things are very difficult, whether that's hiking or life in general, I feel the need to just grip hard onto things. And just a sheer determination will get me through difficult things.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  10:20

    It's so wonderful to hear you talking like that Stephie, because I, actually in hearing a lot of what you're saying, I feel it could be me talking, there are so many things there that I connect with, and in particular, the needing a challenge. I mean, I didn't discover until I was forty, that it was actually the challenge that I thrive on. So yeah, doing, yeah, going off long distance walking, facing some of those things that are perhaps out of my comfort zone, and that I had perhaps avoided previously, suddenly, it's like, oh, gosh, this is this is what I need. I love being outdoors. But the challenge is definitely what I need. And it sounds like yes, that it is for you too. It's fabulous.

     

    Stephie Boon  12:08

    I think when I hiked the Inca Trail, I'd run a business for fourteen years, and we made hand-painted kitchens and furniture. So time was very precious, you had very little free time, and I was just determined that before the age of forty, I was going to do something that was challenging, and was something I'd always dreamed of doing, which was trekking or hiking in an environment that I had never been in before. And I think when I did that, and the physical challenges are huge, you know, hiking at altitude, that you're not used to. People dropping like flies from altitude sickness, and that's really not something that you can predict. You either get, it or you don't. It's just one of those things. It's got nothing to do with fitness or health. And I was lucky, I didn't have that. So I did plod along these really high places, and the feeling of euphoria that you have when you get to the top and you look down and you think, 'I've done that, I've walked that'. That was the realisation, I think that it's actually the challenge that I love.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  13:35

    But it took a while then I think to find other challenges, because of other life difficulties. Now I had a long term relationship just fell apart. I was with my son's father for twenty-three years. After the business collapsed, then we collapsed, and I think it just took a long time to find who I was amongst all that fairly negative, extremely stressful part of life. Yeah, I feel like I've come out of all of that on the other side, but there are lots of other challenges and that's due to health and finances, basically. Yeah.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  14:22

    Wow, there's a lot in there that I'd like to just tease into if that's, okay?

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  14:28

    All of those things that you go through as well in life, particularly that relationship split, and I can totally relate to that, because that happened to me some years ago, and at the time, I was just in the wilderness and didn't know where I was going, who I was, what I was going to do, and I just felt like my whole world had fallen apart. That was a long term relationship too. But I think now in hindsight, I can see how I've learned from it, how I've benefited from it and each of those painful episodes have just added to my colorful tapestry of life. And I talk about life as being like a tapestry. And it's a bit floppy to begin with, because we don't have many skeins of thread in that tapestry. But the more skeins of thread that are added, the stronger it becomes, and the more resilient we become. And it just builds up our coping mechanisms and our ability to be able to manage a situation next time, it might not be a similar situation. But I think it just builds us and it also makes us more aware of other people's situations, it gives us more empathy, which I think is also important as people, you know, we obviously need that.

     

    Stephie Boon  14:28

    Yeah.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  15:40

    It's interesting, so you've talked about going through some difficult times, and then finding things that would help you. Finding yourself. Finding challenge. But you talk about fears, things that scare you on your blog, and I'd like to tease back into that in relation to what you've just been talking about. How have those fears affected you, and would you like to talk to us about what those fears are?

     

    Stephie Boon  16:09

    Yeah, when you suffer from regular bouts of long periods of depression, and feeling suicidal, I've had significant periods of my life where I've been in the mental health system with CPNs (community psychiatric nurse) for years and years, and one of the things that being in that situation is that it's very difficult to have a regular income, because there are periods where you can't work. I haven't worked for a very long time, because of illness, and because of another issue that I have. This is something I don't talk about a great deal, but my son has Asperger's, and it affects him mostly with really high anxiety. And that puts constraints on what I can do. I spend a lot of time anxious about him, I spend an awful lot of time being anxious about money and finances, and I am living on the bare minimum, basically, you cannot say, at all. So I have this little pot of savings. And I've been keeping it as an emergency fund. But it's really strange because this money is tiny. It's sat there for a couple of years doing nothing. And you suddenly think, 'well, what am I going to do, am I gonna leave that there for another five years and do nothing and not experience life in the way that is meaningful to me? Or am I just going to overcome the fears that I have of spending some of that money on investing in myself and my own wellbeing mental health?' And this year, I have walked three national trails using some of those savings, and it has scared the living daylights out of me. I mean, it really has because you feel well, I have nothing, what if something else goes wrong. And now I just think Well, as I said to I think a word I've always used to describe myself is 'tenacious', and I just think if something else happens, I'll just hang on in there until I can find a solution. So why not just invest in in myself and go out, jump in feet first, and do something that hopefully will inspire other people or might inspire other people. But even now just talking about spending some of that money doing hiking, I can feel myself shaking, thinking 'oh my god, what if, what if!'

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  19:01

    But I'm so pleased that you did actually take some of that, to go off and do those trails. I mean, I was following you throughout the summer, and even up until just a couple of weeks ago when you finished your last walk and I could see how much you were benefitting from it. Did the fear subside whilst you are actually out on the trail?

     

    Stephie Boon  19:21

    Oh, I didn't give it a thought. Not a single thought! It's just when I get back home and my world feels very, very small, when I'm at home. I don't have a car. Travel is not easy using public transport. So I think when your world is small, you tend to... I particularly... focus on the negative or I focus on the more difficult things, whereas when I'm outside and you're looking at this beautiful, spacious environment, you become spacious yourself.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  20:02

    I love that. I absolutely love that. When you're outside, you become spacious. And it fills your soul, doesn't it?

     

    Stephie Boon  20:09

    It really does, it feels like your whole body is this space to fill it up with wonderful things, whereas when I'm at home, I feel small and withered. I'm sitting here and I'm imagining a funnel on the top of my head, and trying to fill that funnel with good things. But when I'm at home, my body feels so small, and that there's not enough space to put anything else in, because I'm constantly worrying about how I'm going to get through the day, how I'm going to get through the next week. Whereas when I'm outside that just goes and you can fill up with life; with what life actually is. Where it's meaningful, where you are, where you really feel you ARE part of nature, you ARE nature. You're not separate from it, which I think is what our society forcing us into these small spaces does. It disconnects us from what we really are, which is part of nature.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  21:21

    We are one hundred percent that, and a lot of people don't see that, because it's very much about the material things. We're a very commercial world, aren't we? Sadly.

     

    Stephie Boon  21:31

    Yes.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  21:32

    Just then going back to how you feel out on a trail, compared to how you feel when you're indoors. You know, you said you're feeling very small, very withered. It sounds like you're feeling very restricted, whereas when you're outside, you're feeling free. If you are planning... so let's say you're indoors, and you've been indoors for months, but you suddenly have an idea to walk a trail, but you know, you can't do it for another, say another six weeks. If you are then focused on planning that trail, does that change your mindset? Does that change how you frame your day and how you feel.

     

    Stephie Boon  22:13

    Zoe, I plan NOTHING!

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  22:15

    Oh Stephie, I love you!

     

    Stephie Boon  22:20

    It's terrible, the thing for me is complete freedom. You cannot plan for the unexpected. I think being completely free is about having no plans at all. The plans I have are the day I leave, and the day I will come back, how I'm going to travel. I've worked out roughly how many miles on average I will need to walk whilst I'm away. But then when I'm away, I might think I'm going to walk twenty-five miles today and I'll do eleven the next day, because there's somewhere I'd like to spend some time, or I might be hiking along and I'm wild camping, and you might find a wonderful place where you'd like to stop that might be, I don't know, five miles short of where you were planning to get to that day. But because you have the flexibility, and you don't have the fixed plans, you can do that.

     

    Stephie Boon  23:25

    So the planning for me, I think, when I'm at home is planning, when I'm going to go, how I'm going to do it, it'll be planning, and I'm really not very good at this, but planning the things that I need to take on my back, that will sustain me, give me shelter over the time that I'm away. And I've only just really begun to think, 'right well, next year, I am going to do X, Y and Z'. And I'm going to try I guess you could say that the trouble with doing what I've done this summer is that once you've had that experience, you really want more.

     

    Stephie Boon  24:12

    The only way I'm going to be able to do that is if I can afford the train fares. So I'm trying my best to put a plan in place so that I can afford some train fares, next year. That's where my planning comes.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  24:29

    Yeah, I can understand that. And you're creative - you're creative in so many ways. So I'm sure you'll work out something that will make that happen for you. As far as the anxiety goes, and I'm really sorry to hear that you have gone down into that deepest, darkest pit that has taken you to thoughts of suicide. I know this will potentially be a trigger for quite a few people.

     

    Stephie Boon  24:58

    Yeah. I hope that my experiences will enable people to see that you can come through, even though in those darkest times you feel like, there's never going to be a way out.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  25:14

    Do you have people? Were you're dealing with this alone?

     

    Stephie Boon  25:18

    I have a strong medical support. It gets that bad at times, and I know that I can always find and access that support when I need it. Whereas I think a lot of people going into realising that they need help, more help than friends or family can give, I think it's difficult to know where to go to find that. But I've always had access to that through my GP, through the mental health team, psychiatrists, therapists, all of these things, but I went through a particularly low period last year, and I changed medication again, which is a constant theme. I changed medication again earlier this year. And it takes a few months for that to hit, for that to work. But I think that after so many decades of this kind of illness, I'm only just beginning to realise the thought processes or what's happening around me that indicate that I need to seek help before I get further down into that cycle. And that can be things like, I might notice that all I'm eating is bread and pasta - so carbs. Or that I really don't feel like going outside. That's a big one for me, when I know that the thing that I know, helps maintain mood at a reasonable level, when I feel that the motivation to do that, the energy to help myself in that way, I know that I need to go and find help.

     

    Stephie Boon  27:19

    So, to go back to the beginning of this complete ramble, my hope is that if somebody feels that I'm talking about triggering things, that I am proof, I suppose that you can come through these things - again and again. And that's not to diminish how difficult it is, because it's really tough. It's really tough.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  27:46

    So you can get through it, I get a sense that you're saying that you CAN get through it. It's not necessarily something that goes away. It's something that you are living with.

     

    Stephie Boon  27:55

    Yeah.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  27:55

    But you learn to recognise the warning signs, and you now know what to do, where to get help, how to handle your own mental health, to ensure that you don't end up in the bottom of that pit again.

     

    Stephie Boon  28:12

    Yeah, yeah and I think I wouldn't wish this on anyone, but I think that if you go through cycles of depression, constantly, throughout a life, then that's what you need to do. That's what I've learned through therapy, is help to understand the changes around me to notice them, so that I can step in and help myself.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  28:41

    Good, yeah.

     

    Stephie Boon  28:41

    Basically.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  28:43

    Yeah, well, yes, so that is an important one, isn't it? And did you find that things became harder for you throughout your son's childhood years, both with your mental health and being able to get outside and do those things that you needed or wanted to do? Could you get out for walks? Could you handle things when your son was young, because obviously, having children is a challenge in its own right, but having a son with Asperger's is another layer of challenge as well.

     

    Stephie Boon  29:18

    He wasn't diagnosed until he was seventeen, so I just thought he was a pain in the bum.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  29:29

    That's probably how half the teachers described him as well!

     

    Stephie Boon  29:33

    Yeah. Oh, yeah. When you look back and his father has Asperger's, and again, he was diagnosed as an adult, but when you look back, you can see all the... you can see it there. I mean, it's as plain as day. But it wasn't really until... and I think this is quite typical of Asperger's and autism. It wasn't until my son went through big changes in HIS life, so changing schools, moving from school to sixth form college, and then on to university; it's when those things happen, that the stress that you go through is huge. Because understanding what he's dealing with, it's like, trying to understand an alien.

     

    Stephie Boon  30:27

    Try as you might, you can never completely put yourself in someone else's shoes, whatever their shoes might be, whether it's chronic pain, or illness or something like Asperger's. I split with my son's dad when when my son was ten, and it was probably actually easier in some respects, because we co-parented. So my son was with me for a week, and then he was with his dad for a week, and we lived only three miles apart from each other. But because I had that week, that was when I was able to walk, get out on the coast, and just recharge, I suppose as batches. But it was never, I think that was definitely more walking for health, rather than walking for a 'challenge', and to fill my soul. I recognise that it does fill my soul.

     

    Stephie Boon  31:34

    One of the things, it's a bit mad, really, but if I notice that my mood is dropping, I think everybody tells you that walking is good for mental health. I've got to go walking every single day. Then I go into overdrive and I'm walking fifteen miles every day. And it's just getting the balance right, isn't it? But yeah, so when my son was younger, I think walking was more about health. Obviously it was pleasurable, but it was much more about maintaining an even keel through life rather than the challenges that I know I've always enjoyed. And I've always enjoyed doing them alone.

     

    Stephie Boon  32:25

    I think actually, I was thinking about this prior to this chat with you. When I was young, I was a teenager, a young teenager. And I remember thinking, I'd asked someone to do something with me, I can't even remember what it was now, but they didn't want to do it. And I remember thinking, Well I have to do this on my own then, because if I don't do things on my own, there's no guarantee that somebody else has the same interests as me or wants to do the same things as me. So am I going to deny myself the things that might be pleasurable or fulfilling simply because I don't have somebody to hold my hand? I think that that has been my mantra I suppose throughout my life, as you cannot expect somebody else to come along with you, because you need someone to hold your hand. You have to jump in and be your own friend. That sort of manifests itself in the simplest of things, like I will go to the cinema on my own and I have friends who say how do you do that? How on earth can you go on your own? I think 'I go to a ticket booth, I buy a ticket, I go and sit in the dark. and I watch a film!'

     

    Stephie Boon  33:44

    Or you know, how can you get into a pub on your own? How can you go to a cafe on your own? It's just those little things that then enable you to think, 'oh yeah, I can do that. I can go swimming on my own I can do this on my own maybe I can do the next bigger thing on my own'. Because if I want to go wild camping, which is what I love, absolutely love and I did a fair bit of it on Dartmoor with my son and his dad. And I thought after we split up will this just stop now because I don't have somebody to do it with? And I thought 'no, it damn well doesn't! You get out there and you do it on your own'. And it's been THE most liberating, wonderful thing. To know that you're doing something that you love and nobody else has been affected by your needs to fulfill your own needs.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  34:52

    Yes, but I remember how freeing how liberating it was when I wild camped for the first time and then I just thought 'why have I left it so long. This is absolutely amazing whatever was I frightened of?'

     

    Stephie Boon  35:04

    Yeah.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  35:05

    And what I love hearing you talk, Stephie is, you know, you're somebody who clearly was resilient as a child as a teenager. I mean, you had those foundations there already. And I know, actually, I guess a lot of children do - not all - but a lot of children do. But it does break down as we get older, yeah, by culture, or by the people we're with, or just by chemical makeup in our body. But what I love so much hearing you talk, is to hear the fact that you still have these struggles, in one hand. You are somebody who is very open about struggling with their mental health. And yet, in the other hand, you are fighting everything that's in this hand... in the right hand you are fighting it, and you're saying, 'No! I have got to go and do this. Because if I don't do this, I might not get the chance to, because other people may not want to come with me, why should I off-load MY dreams and MY ideas onto other people? This is my thing!' And I love that those two actually work in harmony, they work in balance with one another. Because, you know, I come from a family where my mother suffers with mental health problems and has done for years and years. So I understand, and I understand from her standpoint, that she does retreat indoors and she doesn't go out. She can't now because of her age. You know, she is housebound. But for many, many years, she wasn't able to go out because her head told her she couldn't go out. And this is what I am just so pleased that you have found that - that you have found a way to say no, my head is actually bringing me down. I know I need to go out.

     

    Stephie Boon  37:00

    Yeah, it's just, I still go out with constraints. As I said, my son has severe anxiety. So when I'm hiking, I'm having to... I get text from him. Where are you? Where are you wild camping? He's never happier than when I go to a campsite. And I'm never more miserable than when I'm on a campsite!

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  37:32

    Yes. I know that feeling.

     

    Stephie Boon  37:35

    We've worked out... I mean, he's twenty-three. His is no longer a child, but he does live at home. So we have this agreement that I will let him know where I am, so that he feels safe and secure. But I still have the freedom, I suppose too. And I have to say this, Zoe - sometimes I do pretend there was no reception! Which is terrible!

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  38:08

    No, for your own mental health and your own sanity, sometimes you do need to switch off, don't you? And it's a gentle way of giving him that message that well, yeah, maybe we've not been in contact today, but I'm sure everything's okay.

     

    Stephie Boon  38:23

    I have to say that most of that will be during the day. If he contacts me during the day. I just think 'No, this is absolutely MY time, and we've agreed that I will tell you where I am when I've pitched up my tent, and I'm sticking to that'.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  38:43

    So there's something else I want to ask you about, Stephie, because I know you've had many challenges throughout your life. We've touched on those, but there's something that we haven't discussed yet, and something certainly for midlife women that, you know, as we go through from our forties upwards starts to become more apparent, or we start hearing more or we're just more aware, and that is the menopause. We had a little conversation just before we started recording, and I actually WISH we had recorded that because you told me your age. There was this deathly silence because I did not know you were the age you said are, and in my notes that I made last night about the sorts of things that I wanted to touch on with you, the menopause certainly wasn't one of them, because I thought you were in your early forties and nowhere near that yet! But actually, that was very dismissive of me. I was making assumptions and even if you had been in your early forties, from what you told me, this would have still counted. So first off Stephie, would you mind sharing how old you are, please?

     

    Stephie Boon  39:55

    No. I am fifty-six and I think when you introduced me, I think you said that I planned to walk all our national trails by the time I'm sixty. And I think that before you knew my age, you probably thought I had plenty of time...

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  40:14

    I did! Because I read through your bio last night and thought oh well, she's got years to do that. Like, one a year...!

     

    Stephie Boon  40:25

    It's creeping up incredibly quickly. I'm going to have to save a lot of money and do a lot of miles.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  40:33

    How many trails? Is it eighteen national trails?

     

    Stephie Boon  40:36

    There are fifteen. But there are some in Scotland, which if you look at the Long Distance Walking Association, that you can include some of those and get some major certificate. Anyway, yes, I'm fifty-six.

     

    Stephie Boon  40:56

    But I went through the menopause early, and I was thirty-eight when I really noticed, I think, perimenopause.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  41:05

    That was when you were walking the Inca Trail then?

     

    Stephie Boon  41:07

    Yes, and I remember at the time, I went to my GP, I had no idea what was happening to my body at the time. But I went to see my GP and she gave me some magic pills, that meant I wouldn't have a period whilst I was away, so that was fine. But this is quite gross, but I discovered that I was in that phase of life actually, whilst I was wild camping in, I think it was Dartmoor somewhere. People really don't talk about the details of menopause, or perimenopause. But heavy bleeding is part and parcel of that, and I woke up completely out of the blue, literally, in a pool of blood, that made me look like I was a murder victim. I just thought, 'this isn't right. This is something I need to speak to my GP about'.

     

    Stephie Boon  42:14

    So having no idea that it could be perimenopause, I went to my GP, who I knew, and she was asking all these questions. 'Do you have hot flushes?' I've had maybe a couple but you know, it's just hot in the office. 'Do you have night sweats?' Yeah, but it's just hot under the duvet. 'Is there a history of early menopause in your family?' Yeah, I think my Nan went through an early menopause and she said, 'well, I'm really sorry'. And I looked at her and I thought sorry, about what what are you talking about? I mean, it really did not register at all that she was telling me that this was what was happening. And I came away in absolute floods of tears. And I don't know why it was it felt so devastating at the time, but it really did. It was just, I think, possibly I'd wanted another child, even though I was quite late for that. But the difficult thing came and I don't know if it's different now for people because obviously this was quite a long time ago now. But I felt incredibly alone at that period of time because none of my friends or contemporaries were going through this. They had no idea what happens to you or how... oh my god, if I think about my moods, not just the physical things, but your mental health and how it affects you.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  43:54

    Could you sleep?

     

    Stephie Boon  43:55

    No, I was always awake. I'd sleep on towels, trying to soak up the sweat that some people have. Now, I know, talking to friends now, but that's not unusual. But at the time, I had absolutely no idea. There were no books, everything that was written about menopause was aimed at people in their fifties and I felt I had no connection to that. They were talking about things like Empty Nest Syndrome. My child was FIVE!

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  44:36

    Gosh, that puts it into perspective then doesn't it? Good grief. And so how long did that period of perimenopause last for you, Stephie?

     

    Stephie Boon  44:46

    I think I was forty-two/forty-three maybe, when I had my last period. So it's quite common, apparently that with early menopause, that the period of perimenopause can actually go on for ten years. So on and off for a long period of time. But I say luckily, I feel quite lucky, that didn't happen.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  45:17

    Five years. Yes. Sounds like.

     

    Stephie Boon  45:19

    Yeah, maybe five, seven, on and off, it was. I tell you what, once you're through the other side, it's an absolute gift. It really is. I mean, especially if you're an outdoors person, you don't have to worry about dealing with any of that. So when younger women or women, my age, going through it now, talking about the difficulties of going on long distance hikes, and how they're managing menstruation, I haven't had to deal with that for so long, I've forgotten what that's like! But I don't ever recall it stopping me from getting outside and doing the things that I love to do outside. It's whether that's, I mean, I had a horrible experience wild camping. But it didn't stop me going wild camping. There's nothing in the world that would stop me doing that. You learn how unpredictable. It's a bit like camping, or hiking, really, there are things that you cannot predict, and you don't know what's going to happen. You just have to make the best preparations that you can. It's like whether that's carrying everything that you might need, just in case, or knowing where campsites are, just in case.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  46:44

    And it's a level of planning - I know you don't like planning - but it is a level of planning, isn't it? Knowing that you've got that backup... mitigating risk...

     

    Stephie Boon  46:54

    An escape route!

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  46:58

    Well, we've got probably two more things that I would like to ask you before we wrap up, and we're coming towards the end of time now. I am really interested to know, given all of the things that we've talked about, how do you give yourself encouragement during those hardest times? Do you have any methods of self talk? You know, what encouragement do you give yourself? What mantras, I mean, you have given us one mantra already, which was amazing. But is there is there something else that you talk to yourself about when you're going through those difficult times?

     

    Stephie Boon  47:33

    When things are really dark and difficult. It's the mantra I've already mentioned is: "you are tenacious. You have proved to yourself over and over again, that you can get through this. You are tenacious."

     

    Stephie Boon  47:49

    Remember that. Tell yourself that, and that's what I do. Actually, I was thinking about this the other day - this absolutely cracked me up when I heard it the first time. Janet Street-Porter, of all people, I heard an interview with her a long time ago now. And she said, "as soon as I wake up, as soon as my head comes off that pillow, I tell myself how brilliant I am. Because no other bloody bugger is going to tell you."

     

    Stephie Boon  48:14

    I thought at the time that's so funny, but there is no way I could ever tell myself I'm brilliant, because I just don't believe it. So I think that for me, a mantra has to be something I absolutely believe about myself, and that maybe I've just forgotten and need a reminder. And it is to remind myself that I WILL get through whatever is thrown at me. There is always a way through because I have proved it to myself already. So I know that that's a fact.

     

    Stephie Boon  48:53

    This is a bit daft as well, but when I'm in a good space, you know, I think a lot of people are very negative, that they have a very negative body image. And I know that when my mood is low, I can't bear the sight of myself. And I walked down the streets I catch a glimpse of myself in a reflection of a shop window, and I would just berate myself. Now whenever I catch myself in a reflection somewhere, I smile. And I just think, I look at myself as if I'm meeting a friend or a stranger. I may not be able to talk to myself that way. But I will look at myself that way. And if somebody I knew was coming towards me, I would smile and say hello. So I always smile at myself. It's probably this weird random woman walking down the street grinning at myself.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  49:52

    I think that is just lovely. And actually if I can be so forward as to push that a step further. If you saw a friend walking towards you, wearing a beautiful dress or wearing some wonderful walking gear, even, you would probably say to them, "oh, hello! You look wonderful today! Oh, you look gorgeous! OR, you ARE beautiful". And so yeah, there you go. I have said it Stephie.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  50:23

    It's that little voice on your shoulder, isn't it and the more that the Negative Nancy on one shoulder is telling you these things in your ear, I know it seeps into your psyche. And so somehow you have to find a way of having Positive Polly, I've just made those two up, on the other side, that is just going to feed you with good stuff. And if saying it doesn't work, then perhaps writing it down will. You know, maybe having something that you write every day that tells you...

     

    Stephie Boon  50:53

    I have named the negative person that I have felt pushes me up against the wall and shouts all this negative stuff so loudly that I believe it, as Benito... as in Mussolini. And now I tell Mussolini - Benito, that I'm not listening anymore.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  51:19

    Get lost! Get lost.

     

    Stephie Boon  51:21

    La, la, la, la, I'm not listening. But it is hard. It's very hard when you're used to having that voice in your head that is so intense and so loud, I found that the only way I can overcome it is to disassociate myself from it. To call it, it's like another person inside my head and not having that person in my head. Why would anybody want Benito in my head. It's finding those coping strategies, those counteractions and finding what works for you, and certainly grinning at myself randomly in the reflections is positive.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  52:04

    So the very last thing that I want to ask you, Stephie is the question that I ask everybody else: do you have a HeadRightOut Moment that you could share with us? Something where you have stepped out of your comfort zone and done something that you never thought possible, you never thought you were capable of? But you did it, and you've benefitted from it?

     

    Stephie Boon  52:27

    Yes. In recent years, I was going hiking, I think probably for a week on the South West Coast Path, on the north coast, sort of in Devon somewhere, and somebody I'd met and didn't know. But I met them said, oh, I'd like to join you for a day for a walk. And I said, yeah, that would be great, come along. He was actually based in Devon and I met him  on a course that I was doing, which was that I trained as a lowland leader, and he was on the same course. And I said, Yeah, come for a walk for a day. So I got this message saying, I've rearranged my entire work week, and I can now come for the week, and I was floored. Absolutely speechless. Dumbstruck. I just did not know what to say, or how to say, "No".

     

    Stephie Boon  53:25

    So this man came on this walk with me, wild camping, and the entire time, I felt unbelievably passive aggressive. Was hanging behind thinking, if only it was legal to push you over the cliff, he'd be gone! He talked about hiking on a Greek island somewhere and how much he loved this, and he just constantly talked about it, which meant I didn't feel I had the time to enjoy where I was, to be in the moment.

     

    Stephie Boon  53:58

    So when I got home from that, and I recounted this story to friends, they said, well, you'll definitely know how to say "no" now, don't you? And I thought, this is my HeadRightOut Moment. I now know when to say "no", and how to say "no". I know that that's possibly not the kind of moment that you were thinking of, but for me, that was a major 'I-need-to-do-this-for-myself-and-I-need-to-do-it-without-compromise'. And that was a big compromise. It was that moment of understanding. I don't walk with people on long distance hikes like that, for this reason, and I let it happen because I didn't know how to say "no".

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  54:46

    There's actually two sides to that, isn't there? Because you've learned that yes, you need to be able to say no, and I think that will become another HeadRightOut Moment, at the point where you are put in that position - and that possibly hasn't happened yet. But yeah the HeadRightOut Moment that I see there is actually just going ahead and walking with this guy for a week. But underneath it all you're all gr,gr,grrrrrrrrrrr!

     

    Stephie Boon  55:13

    It was terrible.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  55:14

    How on earth did you cope?

     

    Stephie Boon  55:15

    I am not an early morning person at all, and when I am camping, it takes me ages to pack everything up because I feel like a complete zombie. Just so slow, and he sent me a text one morning saying, "wakey-wakey!"

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  55:35

    Argggh!

     

    Stephie Boon  55:36

    Absolutely. I was so livid, and I didn't say anything. I just kept silent and held all this anger. I thought why should I be doing this? I will never let that happen again.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  55:57

    I wonder if he thought you were a moody wotsit.

     

    Stephie Boon  56:00

    Quite likely. Quite likely.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  56:02

    That's the polite version... a moody wotsit!

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  56:07

    Well, Stephie This has been an absolute treat. We've had a chance to catch up. You've shared a lot of wonderful experiences with us and with me that I haven't heard before. And I just hope that at some point soon here, we actually get to meet face-to-face and go on a LITTLE walk together. It's alright - not a long distance one! Just a little one.

     

    Stephie Boon  56:30

     I wouldn't mind you Zoe, at all! I think it was just this particular person.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  56:36

    I wouldn't want you to be passive aggressive with me - haha!

     

    Stephie Boon  56:39

    No I wouldn't, I wouldn't!

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  56:41

    Well, if I'm coming down to Cornwall, and I'm coming down your way, I will give you a ring. I have your number now.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  56:50

    I HAVE YOUR NUMBER... hehe...

     

    Stephie Boon  56:54

    When I'm planning to walk the Pembrokeshire Coast Path, this is my plan for next year so I will give you a call.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  57:01

    That would be fabulous. So, Stephie, where can people find you on social media and online?

     

    Stephie Boon  57:07

    I have a website and blog called 10MileHike, which is all one word, and that's a 1, 0. You can find me mostly on Instagram, where it's TenMileHike again, but unfortunately it had to be spelt T.E.N - 10MileHike, because the number had actually gone. They are the main places that you can find me. But I've also just set up a Ko-Fi account and it's like a mini-blog so I can post little bits and pieces.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  57:44

    Is that where people can go and buy you a coffee if they want.

     

    Stephie Boon  57:46

    Yes. Yeah,

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  57:47

    That's brilliant. Yes. Well, thank you so much. This has been wonderful and I hope people go and check you out on Instagram and do go and check out Stephie's website because she's completely overhauled it. It is fabulous. There is SO much information on there and she's got a beautiful way of writing.

     

    Stephie Boon  57:49

    Thank you.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  58:01

    It flows and I was chuffed to be included in her Woman Afoot Series, as well, where I talked about my walking experiences there too.

     

    Stephie Boon  58:16

    Zoe, it was a pleasure. It's been an absolute pleasure. Nerves have completely gone.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  58:22

    Yaaay! Stephie Boon, thank you very much.

     

    Stephie Boon  58:25

    Thank you. Take care, Zoe!

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  58:35

    Oh my word. What a raw and honest conversation that was with Stephie. Perfect for World Menopause Day too, which was the 18th of October. And as this goes live on the 20th of October, it's the same week. It's all about encouraging conversations surrounding menopause. I know a lot of thoughts may be generated regarding mental health too, from the conversations that Stephie and I had about her difficulties with mental health. And I hope that if you have any issues or any worries about a friend that you will take a moment to contact them, ask them how they are, see if there's anything you can do to help them, and perhaps if it's you, maybe you'll seek help. You will look for the support that you need... if you don't already have that support. We are here for you. There's so many people out there, that are here for you. And I hope that you will gain some reassurance from listening to Stephie's story.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  59:36

    Now I had a back-and-forth text conversation with Stephie, later the same evening. We recorded this last week and I'd like to share with you some of the text that I received from her, because I think you'll find this funny. So here was the text:

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  59:51

    Oh dear, Zoe, did I say I was fifty-six? Ummmm... I can't remember, but if I did, it was wishful thinking, because I'm fifty-seven!

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  1:00:02

    So I replied, No, really? That's so funny. I'll make a note of it in the end reflections. Am I allowed to put it down to post-menopausal brain?

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  1:00:14

    And Stephie says, I did say I was fifty-six, then... haha, what am I like? She then says I was fifty-six when I hiked the South Downs Way, so it was definitely a forty-year anniversary. That bit was right. My birthday is in mid-August so I was fifty-six when I hiked the Cotswold Way too. Anything after that, I've obviously blanked out. She says, feel free to blame it on dyscalculia - no diagnosis but if she had a test, Stephie says she'd be 'off the scale'. Do you know it's so easy to get numbers muddled up, I do it all the time. And Stephie says she gets her son's birth date muddled up, I get numbers muddled up too. It's just one of those things, so I'm not even sure I'm gonna put that down to post-menopause, but I'm sure a lot of us can relate to this. So Stephie is fifty-seven years old, and she didn't realise it. That is SO funny. But oddly enough, I remember not being able to decide if I was forty-seven or forty-eight a few years back, so it's not just you Stephie. Don't worry.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  1:01:22

    Now I have had a HeadRightOut Moment sent through to me by Bea, and this was a real joy for me to read:

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  1:01:30

    Ten Peak Challenge. I still remember my first mountain. We were on a girl's trip exploring Scotland when we decided it would be a good idea to hike Ben Nevis. I don't think I've ever complained so much. How could hiking up a hill be so hard? Once down, I vowed never to do it again.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  1:01:51

    Luckily, I'd forgotten that promise when a few years later, I felt the need for a challenge. I don't like doing what everyone else does. So I decided to make my own. "I know, I'll summit the ten highest Munroes, in five days."

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  1:02:06

    How hard could it be?

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  1:02:09

    I should add that my total mountaineering experience was still only Ben Nevis in trainers, but not one to be put off by it, I spent the next five months getting fit, buying the right gear, learning to read a map (ish), and generally falling in love with hiking.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  1:02:28

    I thought I was ready. But I wasn't. I was not prepared for my boots to fall apart on day three. Or to find myself in the middle of a plateau in whiteout conditions, having completely forgotten how to understand my compass.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  1:02:43

    I did not expect for it to rain so hard that my phone would stop working from water damage, or for the map to be whipped out of my hands by gale force winds leaving me stranded with just my memory to keep me going. I had not expected my mind to fight me every step of the way:  "Stop, turn around!", "It's too hard!", "You aren't going to make it." This challenge showed me that we are capable of what we set our minds to. That physical challenges are not just about physical ability, but more so the ability to convince your brain that you DO have what it takes. That you can make it. It taught me that pain doesn't last forever, that it fades from our memories.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  1:03:26

    I know I was in pain for much of it, but that's long forgotten. What I remember is the fear of having to cross the CMD arête, that's Carn Mor Dearg arête, despite being scared of heights. And the exhilarating feeling when I got to the other side, I remember sitting on my final peak, crying tears of joy, because I had made it despite everything that had gone wrong. I remember running as fast as I could towards the last gondola of the day to get me down from Aonach Mòr, having had to change my entire route. due to bad weather. I made it to the gondola just in time, only for it to stop halfway down the mountain. It gently swung back and forth for half an hour before setting off again. I thought I'd been forgotten about I knew that the Ten Peaks were going to be a physical challenge, but I never realised I would be putting my mental resilience to the test in that way. But it turns out we CAN achieve what we set our minds to.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  1:04:29

    Indeed we can, Bea!

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  1:04:32

    Bea Meitiner on Ben Nevis

    Wow! Bea has sent me three photographs which I'm going to put in the show notes. And the last photo where she's looking up with this vast view that just falls away behind her.

    Bea on CMD arete

    She's above the clouds and you can see a loch in the distance. And she just has that look of somebody who's completely energy-spent but deliriously happy.

    Bea Meitiner on Aonach Beag

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  1:04:58

    Yes, there's one of the pictures, she's standing, I'm assuming it's at the summit, with her arms raised and her poles dangling from her wrists. And it looks like it pretty much is a whiteout. So thank you, Bea, for sending that in. I really appreciate all of these HeadRightOut Moments that people are sending in. It just allows us to share and celebrate even more how important it is for us to push ourselves - push ourselves beyond what we think we're capable of doing. And that HeadRightOut Moment has clearly made Bea a whole ton stronger than she thought she was.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  1:05:38

    Now if you'd like to go, follow Bea she is on the socials as at B, B EA, underscore adventurous, underscore, that's Instagram. So @bea_adventurous_ and her blog is bea-adventurous.com. And that's actually bea hyphen adventurous.com. And she talks all about her travels and the things that she's been up to over the last few years. It's a really great blog.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  1:06:16

    Okay, well I have a little request today, to ask if you lovely people who have been following and listening to the show, if you could possibly rate and review and follow the podcast to help with the visibility of the show. HeadRightOut exceeded five hundred downloads last week in nineteen countries, which I'm delighted about. I've been excitedly watching the map to see if we can get into the twentieth country. But I've just been amazed at how quickly this has grown in the three weeks since I launched. So thank you all for listening and supporting me and thank you for all of your lovely messages and your posts, your likes, your shares and even the emojis. If it's just a few emojis, I just know that you're there with me, and they're keeping me fuelled and believing that this IS the right path and that HeadRightOut IS needed. It is needed to encourage you to head out of your comfort zone and create an armour of resilience, that will help keep your head right and healthy in the outdoors.

     

    Zoe Langley-Wathen  1:07:30

    HeadRightOut Hugs to you all.

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    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seasidedonkey/

    Twitter:  https://twitter.com/hannahengelkamp

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SeasideDonkey

     

    Slow Ways -

    Website: www.slowways.org

    Swarm including the link to the Google doc for submitting film clips from your walk.

    https://beta.slowways.org/Page/the-swarm-how-far-can-we-walk-in-a-weekend

     

    Map to use for searching for routes needing verification or choosing new walks to pioneer: https://slowways.maps.arcgis.com/apps/instant/interactivelegend/index.html?appid=7a48a682d41d450b99772f2e25d15d29

     

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/slowwaysuk/

    Twitter:  https://twitter.com/SlowWaysUK

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SlowWaysUK

     

     

    Where to find HeadRightOut and Zoe on social media:

    https://www.facebook.com/HeadRightOut/

    https://www.instagram.com/headrightout/

    https://twitter.com/HeadRightOut

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/zoe-langley-wathen/

    zoe@headrightout.com

     

    Music used in this episode:

    Intro, outro and transitions - ‘Stay Strong’ by Caffeine Creek Band

     

    SHOW NOTES:

    To follow

     

    FULL TRANSCRIPTION:

    To follow

    Fell Running, Marathons & Mountain Biking; Founder of Element for Active Women - 018: Ruth Pickvance

    Fell Running, Marathons & Mountain Biking; Founder of Element for Active Women - 018: Ruth Pickvance

    Ruth shares her passion for the mountains, becoming an international fell running champion, fast marathons and how mountain bike orienteering has captured her interest aged 60. She is the founder of Element, offering active courses for women in Wales.

    In 2012, Ruth Pickvance, an adventurous, retired international fell running champion and super-fast marathon runner, left her well-paid head of faculty role at a Sixth Form College, to set up Element. The business offers women the opportunity to find confidence in outdoor pursuits such as Yoga for Runners, Beginning Fell Running and Mountain Biking for Beginners. At sixty years old, Ruth herself has discovered that she enjoys mountain bike orienteering, which marries her love of the outdoors with the joy of moving her body with less impact on her joints than perhaps those marathons of her forties had created.

    Living in the beautiful Brecon Beacons, Ruth shares more about her involvement in local environmental projects and conservation, as well as offering some first-hand wisdom regarding facing our fears and stretching those comfort zones.

     

    SHOW LINKS for RUTH PICKVANCE:

    Website: https://element-active.co.uk/

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/elementactive/

    Twitter: https://twitter.com/RuthPickvance  

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/elementactiveuk

     

    ***PLEASE VOTE FOR HEADRIGHTOUT IN THE SPORTS PODCAST AWARDS:***

    In the Best Urban and Adventure Category

    https://www.sportspodcastawards.com/categories/18

     

    Where to find HeadRightOut and Zoe on social media:

    https://www.facebook.com/HeadRightOut/

    https://www.instagram.com/headrightout/

    https://twitter.com/HeadRightOut

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/zoe-langley-wathen/

    zoe@headrightout.com

     

    Music used in this episode:

    This Minimal Technology by Coma-Media from Pixabay

    Morning Garden - Acoustic Chill by Olexy from Pixabay

    The Cradle of Your Soul by lemonmusicstudio from Pixabay -

    Simple Piano Melody by ZakharValaha from Pixabay

    Intro, outro and transitions - ‘Stay Strong’ by Caffeine Creek Band

    SHOW NOTES:

    • Welcome to the episode 00:51
    • Request for votes in the Sports Podcast Awards - Best Urban and Adventure Category - currently ranked in third place - this is likely to change 01:17
    • Different format for episode due to mic problems when recording. Please let me know if you like the format or preferred HeadRightOut’s original style 02:27
    • What to expect in our conversation. 03:23
    • Where Zoe and Ruth first met and Ruth’s bio: International Mountain Runner, Former British Fell Champion, fast marathon runner, exploring nature and founder of Element 04:06
    • How Ruth came into racing, visiting the Lake District one Christmas around 1985 and making a spontaneous decision 06:20
    • How quickly Ruth became good at the sport and why it touched a chord with her 08:42
    • How old Ruth was when she started racing and where her deep-rooted love of the mountains stemmed from 09:33
    • Zoe talks about the Gold Hill 10 race in Shaftesbury, Dorset - the strength needed running uphill vs the fear of running downhill 10:41
    • Where the fear comes from and how it affects us when running downhill 11:42
    • How to let go and deal with the fear head on 13:10
    • Understanding resilience both personally for Ruth and in general 15:13
    • What is fear, to Ruth? Recognising negative cycles and what we need 18:36
    • About perimenopause symptoms for Zoe 21:19
    • When menopause kicked in for Ruth and how she handled it 22:44
    • Ruth’s love for swimming and other activities - cycling, running, strength work, land management, walking 24:35
    • Zoe hearing about positive impact of exercise from other women in perimenopause including Jo Moseley 26:05
    • Ruth’s recommendations to see a GP or specialist doctor in menopause and HRT if symptoms are debilitating 26:42
    • Zoe’s experience with some of the perimenopause symptoms 27:27
    • Ruth talks about bringing curiosity to fear in order to see fear differently 29:09
    • Digging deep when the doubts and thoughts of being hopeless creep in 31:32
    • Mountain biking for beginners with Element - Ruth shares what some of the participants have said about the two-day course 35:28
    • What Element offers to women coming on the workshops and courses 38:14
    • Ruth’s volunteer work with Stump Up for Trees, planting a million trees 42:50
    • Guardian articles and reviews, Antonia Bolingbroke-Kent and Kate Rawles 44:42
    • Talking about Ruth’s days racing and fell running in the UK and Europe 46:08
    • Types of sponsorship available and the preference to not be fully professional as an athlete 48:32
    • Ruth’s HeadRightOut Moment 50:40
    • Running marathons and choosing fell running over the Olympics 51:57
    • Where to find Ruth on her website and on social media 53:50
    • Laughing about talking for fifty minutes. Thanks from Zoe to Ruth 54:40
    • Zoe shares Ruth’s PB for her fast marathon. Subscribe to Ruth’s newsletter for Element 55:08
    • Lou Lloyd’s HeadRightOut Moment - wild camping solo in the Brecon Beacons and WWOOFING on a smallholding 57:00
    • Zoe taking a short break to deal with family things 59:44
    • Please let Zoe know what you thought of the episode format 1:00:10
    • Please vote for HeadRightOut in the Sports Podcast Awards 1:00:43
    • Thanks to the listeners, thanks to the guests and an invitation to plan and then step out of your comfort zone 1:00:55
    • HeadRightOut Hugs to all 1:01:39

     

    Truffles, Tribes & Tragedy; Healing Through World Foods & Adventures - 017: Sue Plastow

    Truffles, Tribes & Tragedy; Healing Through World Foods & Adventures  - 017: Sue Plastow

    After the sudden death of her husband, Sue Plastow and her family left their Italian truffle orchard to return to the UK. Less than 12 months later, she is finding her feet again with exciting plans ahead that involves outdoor adventures, good food and a space for women to walk and talk. Her children experienced a wonderfully feral upbringing of travel and freedom. Now it’s Sue’s turn to find adventures to honour her late husband’s memory. Her positivity and zest for life is infectious. While she is aware that she is still grieving, Sue knows that the only way forward is to reach back to old skills, reach out for support, and reach up towards the future.

    SHOW LINKS:

    Instagram:

    https://www.instagram.com/nakedtartufi/

    https://www.instagram.com/englishlanguagefoodschool/

    Twitter:

    https://twitter.com/nakedtartufi

    Facebook:

    https://www.facebook.com/nakedtartufi/

    ***PLEASE VOTE FOR HEADRIGHTOUT IN THE SPORTS PODCAST AWARDS:***

    In the Best Urban and Adventure Category

    https://www.sportspodcastawards.com/categories/18

     

    https://www.facebook.com/HeadRightOut/

    https://www.instagram.com/headrightout/

    https://twitter.com/HeadRightOut

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/zoe-langley-wathen/

    You can email Zoe: zoe@headrightout.com

    SHOW NOTES:

    • An audio clip from Sue’s conversation [00:00]
    • Zoe’s introduction to the guest [00:45]
    • Thank you for voting and news about HeadRightOut being a finalist in the Podcasting for Business Awards in the Best Health & Wellbeing category. Request to vote in the Sports Podcast Awards [02:33]
    • Sue Plastow’s bio across thirty years of family travelling and living abroad [03:58]
    • Sue’s fears and reservations about adventuring with a young family of four children under the age of five [07:37]
    • How Sue’s children, now young adults, have benefitted from a childhood of freedom and away from the conventional education system [08:52]
    • Children barefoot and feral, roaming anywhere; living in the mountains, and near the Med, snowboarding, skiing and sailing [09:52]
    • What her children are doing now and about their healthy emotional wellbeing [11:12]
    • Why Sue thinks she’s always been resilient [12:24]
    • Sue’s study/travel timeline, into a relationship, marriage and children, normal life attempt and then campervan adventures with the family in Canada [13:09]
    • What you learn to live without - living simply on the road [14:36]
    • Getting cold in Canada so moving to Dubai, doing desert drumming and sandboarding [15:27]
    • Talking through the personal circumstances that’s brought Sue and family back to UK [17:23]
    • Global Financial Crisis (GFC), Australia, Malaysia, South of France, Switzerland, Italy and Sue’s husband’s death [17:41]
    • Quick thinking prior to travel corridors closing due to the pandemic - rapid move back to UK and how everyone is coping [18:32]
    • Not wanting others to think they have to just crack on because Sue did [19:45]
    • How Sue and the family have found the things they need to survive and move on; honouring her husband’s life [20:32]
    • Sue looking back through her arsenal for skills to draw upon - what could she do? Cookery, social/communication, teaching English, gaining TEFL qualification [21:56]
    • The importance of connection with other midlife women [23:57]
    • Zoe’s similar experience of grief/loss [24:36]
    • A lurching horror vs a transformation - not wanting to be prescriptive about grief [26:44]
    • Message to all: You’re not alone and there are glimmers of hope [28:27]
    • Zoe’s old saying from someone years ago ‘Out of every adversity…’ [28:42]
    • The importance of food and travelling, cookery classes and a bridge between cultures [29:50]
    • Travel adventures with food, outside and a podcast about it [30:36]
    • New events kitchen - called Naked Tartufi [31:35]
    • New concept of outdoor adventure, food and walking along the South West Coast Path - a Moveable Feast [32:23]
    • A therapy, communication, tribe, group of women coming full circle from the bonding experiences of bringing up the family tribe [34:38]
    • The magic of walking and talking [35:24]
    • The impact of travelling so much on Sue and her children. Seeing a million ways to live a life [37:10]
    • Sue’s HeadRightOut Moment facing her fears and driving her children in the snowy, icy mountains to their activities [38:02]
    • Sue’s message that anyone can do it - if she can, they can [39:59]
    • Discussing Sue’s presence on social media - Instagram, Twitter and Facebook, including both the Naked Tartufi account and English Language Cookery School and her podcast, Eat Yourself Alive [40:23]
    • Zoe’s reflection on the episode [42:09]
    • Zoe’s own HeadRightOut Moment from exactly two years ago - Mount Tremper, upstate New York, 100ScaryDays [43:26]
    • Invitation to listen in next week - Ruth Pickvance next week’s guest - international champion fell runner, now running Element Active business - women in the outdoors [47:01]
    • Grateful reminder for listeners to vote for HeadRightOut on Sports Podcast Awards in the Best Urban and Adventure category [47:42]
    • HeadRightOut Hugs [47:56]

    A Do or Die Decision on Weight Loss; Discovering a New Life Outdoors - 016: Maria Roberts

    A Do or Die Decision on Weight Loss; Discovering a New Life Outdoors - 016: Maria Roberts

    This is a compelling conversation between Zoe and Maria Roberts about transitioning from size 26 to size 10. Self-loathing and lacking in confidence, her family needed her. She knew that she would have to make changes. She had to start moving her body and change her lifestyle, despite attempting many unsuccessful diets from the age of ten. After her amazing 8 stone weight loss in her late forties, Maria has now discovered a new-found love for staying fit, being in the outdoors, cycling, canoeing and particularly going on mountain walks and challenges. Her most recent challenge, Ten-y-Fan was gruelling and took every ounce of determination, as she aimed for ten ascents of the highest peak in the Brecon Beacons, Pen-y-Fan. Maria continues to push her comfort zone limits to keep her fit and healthy, both physically, mentally and emotionally and feels she has finally gained her life, and her family back. SHOW LINKS:

    Maria's Instagram

    Maria's Twitter

    ***PLEASE VOTE FOR HEADRIGHTOUT ON THE SPORTS PODCAST AWARDS:***

    In the Best Urban and Adventure Category

    https://www.sportspodcastawards.com/categories/18

    Connect with Zoe:

    HeadRightOut on Facebook

    HeadRightOut on Instagram

    HeadRightOut on Twitter

    Zoe Langley-Wathen on LinkedIn

    Email Zoe directly

    HeadRightOut website

     

    Miles, Mountains & Menopause: Getting My Life Back - 015: Jo Bradshaw

    Miles, Mountains & Menopause: Getting My Life Back - 015: Jo Bradshaw
     

    As a business advisor who feared heights, Jo Bradshaw never would have dreamed that just a few years later she would summit Mount Everest and lead expeditions across the world. Having now reached six out of the seven highest peak summits, on each of the seven continents, Jo shares how her biggest challenge found her learning to manage the blended symptoms of grief, menopause and lockdown, and how new adventures have since been born. In her conversation with Zoe, she is so incredibly honest about how severely her perimenopause symptoms affected her and how HRT has been a total gamechanger, giving back her life. While her last mountain is still on hold, Jo talks about her return to physical training: from the endurance walking and cycling events she designed last year, to the miles she needs to cover in her newest challenge, coming up in March 2022; a race in Lapland.

    SHOW LINKS:

    Jo’s website - www.jobradshaw.co.uk

    Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/_jobradshaw/

    Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/jobradshawadventurer

    LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/jo-bradshaw-keynotespeaker/

     ***PLEASE VOTE FOR HEADRIGHTOUT IN THE SPORTS PODCAST AWARDS:***

    In the Best Urban and Adventure Category

    https://www.sportspodcastawards.com/categories/18

    https://www.facebook.com/HeadRightOut/

    https://www.instagram.com/headrightout/

    https://twitter.com/HeadRightOut

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/zoe-langley-wathen/

    zoe@headrightout.com

    SHOW NOTES:

     

    Van Life, Challenging Ageist Attitudes & Pro-ageing; Retire Adventurously & Positively - 014: Siobhan Daniels

    Van Life, Challenging Ageist Attitudes & Pro-ageing; Retire Adventurously & Positively - 014: Siobhan Daniels

    The words HeadRightOut Podcast flank the left-hand side of an Instamatic style frame. A woman, Siobhan, in her early sixties, faces the camera with a broad smile, dark hair swept up from her face but draped over her shoulders. She is wearing a pale pink and navy blue chequered shirt.

    Siobhan Daniels inspires young and old alike. As a woman who has endured a variety of pains life had to throw at her, she is now not only living her best life into retirement, she's on a mission to encourage others to do that too, and to promote the enjoyment of growing older. Siobhan retired from the BBC, two years ago, after a thirty-year career working as a reporter, presenter, and producer in local news. Her life's rollercoaster involved being a single mum, taking a gap year from work to backpack solo around the world, suffering burn-out, ageism, and workplace bullying, all whilst dealing with grief, and multiple symptoms associated with peri-menopause. Knowing how much she had learned and grown from her back-packing adventure at forty-nine, after years of planning, Siobhan retired to travel the UK in her motorhome, championing and campaigning for companies, products and the public to see the good in ageing. In her words, ‘you are never too old for an adventure’.

    SHOW LINKS:

    Siobhan Daniels' website and blog:

    https://www.shuvonshuvoff.co.uk/blog

    Rachel Peru's podcast:

    https://www.rachelperu.co.uk/out-of-the-bubble-podcast

    HeadRightOut Moment from Charlotte Boenigk

    Personal training links:

    www.moreyou.online

    www.facebook.com/moreyoufitness

    www.instagram.com/moreyoufitness

    Free Your Instinct:

    www.freeyourinstinct.org

    www.facebook.com/freeyourinstinct

    www.instagram.com/freeyourinstinct

     

    Charlotte facing the camera, standing in the outside wearing a blue waterproof coat.

    A picture of a coffee cup in the foreground with a bouldering wall in the background

    ***PLEASE VOTE FOR HEADRIGHTOUT ON THE SPORTS PODCAST AWARDS:***

    In the Best Urban and Adventure Category)

    https://www.sportspodcastawards.com/

    Sports Podcast Awards screenshot

    Sports Podcast Awards Screenshot

    SHOW NOTES:

     

    Oceans Seven & 1111km Extreme Ultra-Triathlon; Strength, Meditation and Mindful Music - 013: Abhejali Bernardová

    Oceans Seven & 1111km Extreme Ultra-Triathlon; Strength, Meditation and Mindful Music - 013: Abhejali Bernardová

    Only the 10th person in history (the 4th woman and first swimmer from the Czech Republic), Abhejali Bernardová has completed the coveted ‘Oceans Seven’ - a physically gruelling and mentally demanding open-water swim across seven channels around the world. Zoe talks with Abhejali about her more recent challenge; an Extreme Ultra-Triathlon, crossing 1111kms from Dover to Prague.

    This conversation is definitely not just about swimming, running and cycling, however, as the deep and powerful methods of self-talk and managing the mind during endurance challenges are shared. With such a positive, thought-provoking and calm approach to this episode, it is an ideal opportunity to consider the condition of your own headspace prior to event preparation.

    SHOW LINKS:

    https://www.instagram.com/abhejali/

    https://www.facebook.com/AbhejaliB

    https://twitter.com/abhejali?lang=en-GB

    https://abhejali.cz/ (Czech website - English site being built)

     

    SHOW NOTES:

    *Please note error in the introduction - the date of editing the show is 2nd January 2022, not 2021 as stated.

    • Zoe's introduction to the guest - Abhejali Bernardová [01:39]
    • Abhejali's bio: from Czech Republic, 44yrs old, runner, open-water swimmer, extreme ultra-triathlete, member of Sri Chinmoy marathon team. She is the 10th person in history, 4th woman and first swimmer from Czech Republic to complete Oceans Seven. She has completed a 6-day run and is a multiple national champion at 100kms and 24 hours. She was nominated for both 2018 and 2019 world Open Water Swimming Woman of the Year. [02:15]
    • Why 1111kms? [04:33]
    • What is the Oceans Seven? [05:55]
    • Self-transcendence and meditation to assist the mental side of physical challenges. [08.31]
    • A choice of choosing challenge in order to learn more about self. [11:05]
    • Meditation techniques used. [12:17]
    • Dealing with the difficult mind stuff with meditation, mantras and music. [14:20]
    • The Oceans Seven criteria. [17:56]
    • The support crew on boat and land. [19:14]
    • Characterising an ocean - describing its personality. [21:41]
    • Witnessing the bioluminescence. [24:42]
    • About the training and commitment. [25:48]
    • Logistics of organising the Extreme Ultra-Triathlon. [30:17]
    • Funding challenges. [32:10]
    • What's next? [33:03]
    • Abhejali's HeadRightOut Moment. [35:08]
    • How Abhejali's life has been changed. [38:17]
    • Wrapping up the conversation and her book (to come). [40:41]
    • Zoe's reflection on her conversation with Abhejali. [43:56]
    • A HeadRightOut Moment from Iain. [45:12]
    • Gained weight - up to 16st. Lost weight through walking, running and then cycling- specifically, time-trialling.
    • In two years, gained a certificate in the Best British All-Rounder Competition in cycling for averaging 23mph.
    • How this moment has changed Iain's life.
    • Brief introduction to next week's guest - Siobhan Daniels. Motorhome living, retired, positive and pro-aging campaigner.
    • Request for listeners to follow, rate and review HeadRightOut. Ratings can also be left on Spotify now.
    • Thanks, good wishes for 2022 and HeadRightOut Hugs.

    PHOTOS OF ABHEJALI:

    Abhejali in 2018

    Abhejali in 2014

    Abhejali in 2015

    Abhejali in 2013 (Peace Run)

    PHOTOS OF IAIN - THIS WEEK'S LISTENER HEADRIGHTOUT MOMENT:

    Iain before his fitness regime

    Iain, two years later, 'time-trialling' on his bike

    Iain's Best British All-Rounder certificate

    Explore, Challenge and Observe: The Three Pillars of HeadRightOut - Solopisode - 012: Zoe Langley-Wathen

    Explore, Challenge and Observe: The Three Pillars of HeadRightOut - Solopisode - 012: Zoe Langley-Wathen

     

    In this Solopisode, Zoe shares in more detail about the three pillars of HeadRightOut, EXPLORE, CHALLENGE, and OBSERVE. She talks about what they mean for her, for the podcast, and HeadRightOut as a business, and ultimately, what they mean for YOU. They have, after all been written with you in mind. Zoe knows she’s not alone in the way her brain operates and that there are billions of people, women in particular, who share the same fears, and the same pain points as her. Zoe believes these pillars will speak to you, as they have spoken to her, and she’s so excited to share them with you.

     

    Why not take some time to EXPLORE what opportunities are open to you in your life? How you can make the CHALLENGES work for you with a little planning and belief in yourself. And with a daily or weekly journal, you could OBSERVE the impact it has on your routine, and open up further doors for you to adapt and grow. E.C.O. = EXPLORE, CHALLENGE and OBSERVE.

    Enjoy making magical inroads into your best life, making time and space to feel uncomfortable. Take risks and challenge yourself to HeadRightOut using Zoe’s EXPLORE, CHALLENGE and OBSERVE method. Make it part of your own ECO-system, and before you know it, it'll become habit.

    SHOW LINKS:

    https://www.facebook.com/HeadRightOut/

    https://www.instagram.com/headrightout/

    https://twitter.com/HeadRightOut

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/zoe-langley-wathen/

    zoe@headrightout.com

    Belinda Kirk - Episode 11 on HeadRightOut talking about the benefit of adventure on wellbeing.

    Nahla Summers - Episode 9 and Stephie Boon - Episode 7 on HeadRightOut talking about how they avoid planning, preferring to fly-by-the-seat-of-their-pants. Nahla talks also about having 'blind optimism'.

    Julia Goodfellow-Smith - Episode 2 talking about planning for a bucket list and how to go about achieving these goals in her book, 'Live Your Bucket List'.

    Joanna Penn - Author and Creative Entrepreneur :

    Joanna Penn can be found on her website The Creative Penn

    Joanna also hosts both The Creative Penn Podcast and the Books and Travel Podcast.

    SHOW NOTES:

    • Zoe introduces the outline and intention of this episode with the main focus being the three pillars of HeadRightOut. [00.23]
    • Starting with request to hit 'follow' in your podcast app. Rate, review and share with a friend. Show them how to listen to a podcast if they've never done it before. [02:51]
    • Monetisation - considerations for the future of sustaining the show. Feedback received along with unprompted requests to financially support the show and thanks. [03.50]
    • Fresh new year approaching. Changes Zoe has made to her routine, including rising super-early and use of Google Calendar. [05:59]
    • Potential for more Solopisodes than originally intended, if the listeners want them? Please let Zoe know - message on socials or zoe@headrightout.com. Can be on a variety of topics including perimenopause, caring for elderly parents, planning or packing for an adventure. [09:01]
    • The Three Pillars of HeadRightOut - main focus of today's episode. General introduction to them. [10:40]
    • About the first pillar - EXPLORE. The idea stage. Something has to change. You may not know where to start. It's a fallow time, like the autumn/winter time of preparing the land (for you - paving the way). [13.23]
    • About the second pillar - CHALLENGE. The hardest stage and often the stage at which many cannot move past. The organisation of the adventure happens in this stage. Trust and self-belief feature heavily in this stage. [20:31]
    • About the third and final pillar - OBSERVE. The best bit means experiencing and debriefing yourself. The importance of keeping a journal and/or a video/audio diary. Figuring out what has worked well and where you could improve for next time. Learning to accept that not everything goes to plan. Ask yourself a variety of questions during and after the challenge. You may have experienced Type Two Fun... [30:08]
    • Zoe's reflection and summing-up of The Three Pillars of HeadRightOut. EXPLORE, CHALLENGE and OBSERVE. [36:45]

    The world needs an Adventure Revolution: and midlife women to organise it! - 011: Belinda Kirk

    The world needs an Adventure Revolution: and midlife women to organise it! - 011: Belinda Kirk
     

    Zoe chats with Belinda Kirk, who has over 26 years of experience in leading expeditions. She has witnessed the positive impact of undertaking outdoor challenges on mental health and wellbeing and believes that now, more than ever, adventure should be the go-to for ALL age-groups. She shares the foundations of her ground-breaking book, Adventure Revolution and the importance of having a mindset that includes comfort zone stretching in order to grow in confidence, developing long-lasting self-efficacy, self-esteem and resilience.

    • Welcome back to Season Two
    • Thank you for returning if you have listened before. About Zoe and about HeadRightOut. [00:37]
    • Belinda Kirk introduction. [02:04]
    • What is the difference between being outside and 'adventure'? 'Nature Effect' vs 'Adventure Effect'. [04:09]
    • Choosing not just challenge, but uncertainty and adversity. Choosing to be uncomfortable and the benefits. Finding out what we're capable of and building resilience. [06:14]
    • Belinda's personal take on the research around the impact of adventure on women in particular. [08:17]
    • The importance of taking adventures at key turning points in our lives - not just as a teenager. [10:54]
    • The 'invisibility' of midlife women and how they are the backbone of Britain. [14:06]
    • Adventure Revolution - the book. Praise from Zoe and where it started. [15:50]
    • How adventure is powerful for well-being and positive psychology. [16:47]
    • Writing the book during lockdown. [19:25]
    • How the book has been received. Feedback at Kendal Mountain Festival. [20:51]
    • Does the Adventure Effect need maintaining? How? [22:14]
    • What Zoe calls 'Microbravery'. [23:53]
    • What's in Belinda's resilience toolkit? [26:26]
    • Using the word 'failure' - a correction to reframe the definition and use it more positively. [29:03]
    • If adversity and risk is good for us, how do we effect change? [31:47]
    • Belinda's HeadRightOut Moment [37:01]
    • About the Adventure Mind Conference. [38:55]
    • Where to find Belinda. [40:41]
    • Zoe's reflection on her conversation with Belinda. [42:01]
    • Karen Wood's HeadRightOut Moment. [44:23]
    • Next episodes coming up. Solopisode, Abhejali Bernardova, Siobhan Daniels and Jo Bradshaw. [50:38]
    • Update on the Out-Out episodes. [52:16]
    • Request to follow, rate and review the podcast. Request for listener's HeadRightOut Moments. [53:29]

    Belinda's Links:

    @explorerbelinda

    @explorersconnect

    belindakirk.com

    explorersconnect.com

    Click to book for the Adventure Mind Conference and find out more information (26th - 27th March 2022).

    To read my write-up of the 2020 Adventure Mind event, click here.

     

    Karen Wood - a 'Cold Water Bobbing' HeadRightOut Moment in the sea at Sidmouth.

    Follow Karen on Instagram here.