Sunday, 2 June 2013

Beyond The Comfort Zone - 3rd June 2013

And the running begins
This is as famous as I will ever get. It's my Kim Kardashian moment (minus the sex tape). My gorgeous friend Jess Fell has written a profile piece on my crazy plan to raise $10k for women struggling with hunger and poverty in Uganda. I love that she found the comedy a midst the madness of my plan!



Beyond The Comfort Zone

By Jessica Fell

Patrice Gibbons hopes her selfishness can help raise women out of hunger in Africa. It’s a big call.
She is one of 22 women who have committed to raising $10,000 – as part of The Hunger Project and Business Chicks Leadership and Immersion Project –  to help women in communities in Uganda raise themselves and their families out of poverty.
“I am the most selfish person I know . . . [but] you’ve got to be pretty selfish to raise $10,000. I’ve got to go to all my friends, who I love and adore and ask them for money to support me on this project to try and make a difference” said the 36 year-old Communications Manager.
Patrice has guaranteed the $10,000 to the trip organisers.  If she can't raise it, she’ll have to pay it from her back pocket. She has six months to fundraise and knows how to pitch herself. 
Patrice has been known to have Coke and chocolate for breakfast. She does not run, ever. Yet she spent Saturday night plying a friend with wine for instruction on how to run, because she has registered to run 14 kilometres in four months time. She knows her friends will pay to see her struggle up Sydney's Heartbreak Hill at the City2Surf in August.  It’s the first strategy in her fundraising plan.
"I am motivated by the fear of failure. In the next six months I am going to spend a lot of time outside my comfort zone . . . I want to feel like I've achieved something I could never, ever do," she said. "Not raising the $10,000 means I've failed. I don't like to commit to anything unless I can do it well", she said.  She even set up a spreadsheet before committing to the project, detailing every possible avenue for fundraising.
It won't be her first trip to Uganda. At 25, Patrice dumped her job as a journalist at The Financial Review and left Sydney with a backpack and $4,000. She continent-hopped and worked in London as a writer and producer for almost seven years, before returning to Sydney in 2009, via Africa. 
Adjusting to life back in Sydney was the launching pad for The Perspective Project (http://myperspectiveproject.blogspot.com.au/) – Patrice’s first step out of her post-travel slump. While she knew her life was great on paper, she said she felt the need to start appreciating the little things in her new life, rather just missing her ‘London life’. In a bid to find some elusive happiness, she committed to photographing one thing that made her smile and blogged about it every day for a year. And she did it. 
The blog came to close in December and Uganda is her next project: "I moved to a new job with a better work/life balance, but discovered after The Perspective Project I didn't have anything in my life to balance it out with. Instead of just watching reruns of The Voice every night, I thought I should get a new project," she said.
The Uganda trip is an opportunity to use her personal journey to impact the lives of women in Africa, and stems from her childhood aspirations to be Prime Minister and save the world. "While I’m a selfish person who rarely does anything that doesn't have a personal benefit for me – the same as many of us – I hope what I’m doing to make my own life happier, will also help improve someone else's life too." 

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