“Kilimanjaro” Book Trailer

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KILIMANJARO: ONE MAN’S QUEST TO GO OVER THE HILL

A World Adventurers Book

www.mgedwards.com

Book Trailer (14MB)

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Book Trailer for “Kilimanjaro: One Man’s Quest to Go Over the Hill”

 

The first book in the World Adventurers Series, Kilimanjaro: One Man’s Quest to Go Over the Hill chronicles the author’s attempt to summit Mount Kilimanjaro, the highest mountain in Africa. At forty years old and on the verge of a midlife crisis, he tried to change his life by climbing a mountain. This is his true story of facing Kilimanjaro and other challenges at middle age.

This book is for anyone who feels over the hill and needs encouragement to make a life change in the face of difficult odds. It’s also for the casual climber or hiker who is interested in climbing one of the world’s tallest mountains. Filled with insights and advice for those who are contemplating their own Kilimanjaro climb, this book will put you on the mountain and inspire you to go over it.

Kilimanjaro: One Man’s Quest to Go Over the Hill features more than 60 photos from the author’s trek.

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E-book Available at:

Amazon.com

Barnes & Noble

Goodreads

Smashwords

The Wordshop

 

Available in Print at:

Createspace

 

 

 

Find out more about Kilimanjaro and M.G. Edwards at www.mgedwards.com, on Facebook at www.facebook.com/migedwards and on Twitter @m_g_edwards.

Youth Revisited

I’ve spent the last couple of months reclaiming my life.  I spent far too much time and energy on activities that should not have mattered as much to me as they did, and neglected what truly made me happy.  I made a conscious effort to reprioritize my life, and it’s already paid dividends.  I realized that what truly makes me happy is what I used to do until the realities of life interfered, pushing aside those activities that really brought me joy.  No more.  While I still need to do what I must, I am now making a concerted effort to rekindle the joys of my youth.  While one might say that therein lies the seeds of a mid-life crisis, another could say that they hold the source of the fountain of youth.

This weekend I rode my bicycle for about 1.5 hours.  I didn’t ride as far as I would have liked.  My body isn’t what it used to be, and I’m no longer used to sitting for an extended period of time on a bicycle braving traffic, hills, and headwinds.  My body was sore after the ride, but my spirit was satisfied.  When I was younger, I used to ride my bicycle everywhere.  I remember fondly a couple of long-haul bicycle trips I took.  On one trip in the late 1980’s, I rode with a youth group for four days from western Montana to North Idaho.  The following year, I rode for a week in western Montana.  After I went to college, I stopped taking these kinds of trips.  I rode my bicycle around campus, but it wasn’t the same.  My studies short curtailed my cycling.  After I graduated from college (many years later) and became a working family man, I didn’t start riding again – until now.  The ride this weekend was my first attempt in over two decades to recapture my passion for cross-country cycling.  I plan to ride once a month, perhaps more.  Each time I plan to ride further and build up my physical endurance.  I’m not as spry as I used to be, but the passion is still there and will carry me far.

I also revived my interest in creative writing and cartography.  When I was younger, I spent many hours writing books and stories and drawing maps.  I quit when I went to college.  Although I tried writing again in the 1990’s after I graduated, work and family took away any extra time I had.  In 2004, I started this blog to rekindle my creative writing juices.  It’s been coming back in fits and starts but came back with a vengeance this year.  This time I’m armed with a measure of wisdom I didn’t have as a youth.  I introduced discipline in my writing and cartography that I didn’t have when I was younger.  This year I finished transcribing and updating a book for young adults I wrote as a 15-year-old and finished writing a children’s story my son and I developed last year.  I’ve moved on to transcribing the first chapter of a fantasy novel I started writing in the late 1980’s but never finished.  Afterwards, I will go back to the first book I transcribed, expand on it, and review it for publication.  I haven’t started drawing maps again, but once I begin updating the fantasies I created as a youth I will develop maps for them.  This rigor will help me do something I always wanted to do as a kid but never really accomplished – publish my material.

As a youth I enjoyed drawing cartoons and illustrations.  I drew a couple of comic strips for two college newspapers many years ago; someday when my writing has taken off, I will try to resurrect them.  I also enjoy singing and writing songs.  I wanted to learn how to play the guitar, but I never did because I lacked discipline.  I’ve picked up the guitar a few times since the new year, but I haven’t made much progress yet.  I plan to increase the number of practices and eventually hire a guitar teacher.  If I can master a few songs, I’ll try to do something I’ve wanted to do for years – record an album.  My goal isn’t to be a professional singer; rather, I’d like to record it for my son.  My own father was an incredible singer.  I dreamed of one day recording a duet with him, but he passed away before I could do it.  I don’t want to pass on before leaving behind some kind of recording.  These are future plans; I realize that I can only do so much at once and am now focused on reviving these interests little by little.

I realized that in order to be truly happy, you should do what really makes you happy.  It also occurred to me that when you’re younger, you tend to do what you enjoy and have more time to do it before the realities of adult life begin pushing what you really want to do aside.  Think about what you did when you were younger that made you happy.  Do you still do it?  If not, why not?  Why not try doing it again?  It might make your life even more fulfilling or satisfying.  You’ll never know unless you try (again).

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Pre-China Trip Clutter

Much as I try, life always seems too cluttered.  I sit here tonight typing amidst a pile of things to do to prepare for our trip to Shanghai, China on Saturday.  Every time life seems to cool down, it suddenly shifts into high gear and becomes too hectic.  One of these days I would really like to jump off this crazy merry-go-round.  My new mantra is “Vive el Paraguay!”  I’ve heard that Paraguay, my next assigned location, offers a much slower pace of life than Korea does.  As my predecessor told me by e-mail (we’ve been in contact), “bring lots of reading material [to Paraguay].”  Somehow I wish that were true.  I’ll believe it when it happens, after I’ve made it through four books in four weeks.  I’m sure I will somehow find a way to make myself too busy to chill out–even in Paraguay.  It’s in my nature to do more than I have time to do.

I am really looking forward my first trip outside Korea since I arrived early last year.  First I have to wade through annoying trip planning.  Perhaps the worst part of any trip is the advance planning and preparation.  It’s more than suitcase packing.  It’s the little things like making sure your medical insurance covers you in exotic locations and putting together a photo album for the family back home.  It’s the plane tickets, passports, visas, bill paying, activity planning, transportation arrangements, electricity conversion, emergency planning, cash reserves build up, closure at work, fridge emptying–you name it.  Anyone who’s planned a multi-week trip away from home can relate to the grind of pre-trip planning and preparation.

China isn’t actually going to be a vacation for me.  I will work in Shanghai for about two weeks while my family is on vacation.  Fortunately, I can take time out on the weekends to have some fun.  On Sunday I will visit Thames Town, a new, unbelievable development reminiscent of Merry Ol’ England located in the suburbs of Shanghai.  The following weekend my wife, son, and I will take a short trip to Xi’an, home to the famous terracotta warriors.  As we have spent most of our time in the eastern half of China, I’m looking forward to seeing the Chinese Interior for the first time.  I don’t know how much time I will have to write during my journey in China, but I will post as frequently as I can.  Photos will follow when I return to Korea.