I love AirBnb.
Yes, love. First of all, you get to stay in people’s houses,
see what books they’re reading, meet their dogs, and learn how they cook corn
on the cob. But to me, anyway, connecting with a local and getting their
insider tips on their neighbourhood or city or beach is the very definition of
travel.
I pride myself on my AirBnb skills. Sometimes, I miss the
mark, like the woman I stayed in in New Zealand, whose daughter showed
unannounced and took the room I’d rented, so I slept on a single bed in the
12-year old son’s room. Which would have been fine if said son hadn’t had hourly
screaming tantrums for his mom to cook him pancakes and let him watch cartoons at
an eardrum-splitting volume on his iPad, and if his mom didn’t drink wine out
of the bottle every night in front of the TV, not that I blame her.
However.
I’ve connected with extraordinary people through AirBnb.
I’ve scored a cottage in the Welsh mountains and one in the rice paddies of
Ubud. I met a healer in Nelson and stayed in a gypsy caravan in Windsor. But none have been quite as successful as the
place I stayed in most recently, in Canggu, Bali. I chose it for the usual
reasons: good location, in my price range, pool, canopy bed (duh.) But also, the
woman running it, Leannah, is a life coach. And she plays the ukulele.
When I arrived, Leannah was having a meeting with two other
girls, all on their laptops… on beanbag chairs, by the pool. One girl leapt up,
greeted me with the enthusiasm of a long-lost relative from the old country, grabbed
my bag and carried it to my room. She was called Sarah and the third girl said
she was called Casha and I got in the pool and we started a conversation that
hasn’t really stopped for the past 2 months.
Casha, me, Sarah totally loving one of my jokes, Leannah
Sarah and Casha run these amazing retreats for entrepreneursand creative people, and Leannah, it turned out, was going teaching something
called a manifesto workshop at one that was coming up, which she generously let
me crash. In the workshop, we did exercises around where we were in different
aspects of our lives and and where we’d like to be. Sounds like common sense,
right? Is, in fact, not common sense.
You’d be surprised at how many dreams are lurking under the surface,
waiting to make their presence known. One of the things that came up for me was
that I really wanted to be teaching writing. That, in fact, I had wanted to teach
writing for quite some time.
Previous to Canggu I had been in another town, further south
in Bali. The folks at the co-working place I’d been a member of there had asked
me to do a skill share, which essentially, means to teach a workshop. Do know what
I said?
That I’d think about it.
They asked me again.
I said I still needed to think about it.
I was now, after all, in Canggu, a whole 45 minutes away.
And I was busy. Busy mostly doing things I wanted to be doing less than I
wanted to be teaching a workshop, but you know how this kind of logic works.
Basically, I didn’t want to teach the workshop, because I really, really wanted
to teach the workshop.
I mentioned this to Leannah. Leannah said, “I’ll come to
your workshop.”
Sarah said, “I’ll come to your workshop.”
Casha, who’s 22, said, “Dude, that’s so rad. I’m in.”
So I would teach a workshop to my buddies. That wasn’t so
bad.
The workshop got posted on Facebook. People signed up.
People I didn’t know. People from other countries. I made slides and rode
around on my scooter mumbling things to myself and rehearsed on my canopy bed.
(I know. Rough.) About 15 people came in
total, including Leannah’s surfer boyfriend Tim, who is French and thinks writing is touchy feely.
You can tell by how he holds that kitchen knife.
But when I got up behind the podium, it was like breathing.
It was like I was doing what I’d waiting my whole life to do.
Leannah said, afterwards, “You lit up.”
I do look pretty darn happy.
I took on a few clients, and starting coaching writing,
one-on-one. I lit up some more. Here is what they said about it their sessions. (I promise,
I didn’t pay them to.)
“Natalie is an amazing coach. She has taught me how to tell
better stories, and how to create a practice that is enjoyable and
sustainable.”
They said I was “empowering, encouraging and real.”
They said, “The tips and tricks I have received over the
past two months have vastly improved not only my writing technique and process,
but the confidence in my voice and the pieces I publish.”
They said, “I highly, highly recommend Natalie to anyone
seeking a writing coach.”
So here we go. A new chapter.
If you need to improve your writing for your job, your business,
or your creative path; I can help. If you want to get published, get more
clients, or turn up your mic; if you have a story you’re burning to tell, or
two or thirty, but can’t figure out how to start or how to finish or how the
fuck to actually sit down and get past your internal editor and make it come
out the way you want it to, I can help with that, too.
I’ve written for (deep breath): international retail brands,
major television networks, national broadcasters and critically acclaimed
magazines. I’m an award-winning scriptwriter; and have worked in reality and
factual television, documentary, and drama. Two of my personal essays were
released in anthologies in 2015, and many more are on the Huffington Post. And to
me, writing is meant to be fun and make you feel good. Really.
I’m offering a free 30-minute Skype or phone session to
anyone who wants one for the next 30 days. There will be introductory rates for
the first 5 clients who sign up for a 3 or 6-session package. Did I mention it
will be fun? And uplifting, and it will change not only how you approach the
written word, but creativity, work and even life. That’s a big promise! But I’m
sticking to it.
To say hi or get more info, write me at natalie [at]
nataliekarneef [dot] com.