
5 Connections, 5 Insights: 61-65 of 100
Project Horizon is a global conversation experiment by executive coach and high-performance consultant Dr Tim Dutton. It aims to uncover diverse human perspectives by connecting with 100 remarkable people worldwide, linked through six referral-based chains.
ON THE GO? LISTEN TO THE INSIGHTS đ§
The Connections
61. Personal trainer from New Zealand
62. A university student running a business alongside his degree
63. Best-selling author who walked around the UK coastline
64. Former England Rugby player and 2003 Rugby World Cup winner
65. An elite military operator who adores his son
Insight 61: Critical Moments
We probably all know at least one person that has moved away from home to âgrowâ, whether itâs another town, state, or country.
But there probably isnât a bigger relocation (in distance, at least) than moving from New Zealand to the UK. Thatâs exactly what Connection 61 did.
It was New Yearâs Eve and she was at a party on the beach. As she looked around at her friends, she heard a voice in her head say âthis is my last New Yearâs with youâ. Moving away was something sheâd had in her sights for a while, but now a threshold had been crossed. Sheâd recently gone through a break-up and was seeking change. Personal growth and exploration were high on the agenda.
The next day she booked a visa appointment and shared the plan with her family. She cried for hours about the change that was coming, and at what she was leaving behind. But, deep down, she knew it was important and necessary. She told me, âI had never lived outside of my family home before. I got on a plane and moved to the other side of the world.â
First of all, her story made me wonder about my own early 20âs and if itâs something I should have done. I donât regret anything, but the question does linger. I like the phrase âyou choose your regretsâ.
Second, it makes me think about the idea of âcritical momentsâ. Moments when we are met with a fork in the road and must choose between comfort and discomfort. I donât know how many critical moments we each have in life. Starting my own business last year was one such moment for me.
I admire that she leant hard into the discomfort.
Insight 62: Bullets and Butterflies
Itâs my opinion that most people shouldnât run a business alongside their university studies. Thereâs so much personal growth to be found in that period of time already, without bolting on an additional responsibility.
But, Connection 62 wasnât âmost peopleâ.
In fact, by the time heâd started his business degree at Loughborough University, heâd already been growing his collectibles resale business for several years. Back in India, where he grew up before moving to the UK to study, he had started collecting limited edition versions of shoes like Yeezys and Jordans. Over time this grew to buying and selling all types of collectibles. It started with selling direct to customers, but now heâs simplified things and sells to other businesses. This means he doesnât have to spend any time advertising. He doesnât even have a website. âItâs essentially automated at this point⊠itâs basically just an accounting process,â he told me.
So, if heâs not spending much time on the business, what is he doing? It sounds like heâs in growth mode. When heâs not in the university gym, heâs buzzing about the universityâs business innovation hub. âItâs a space for massive creativity as well as meeting new people who think along the same lines as me.â
Heâs also working on a new business idea which he intends to bring to life after heâs finished his degree. Itâs in âstealth modeâ at the moment, and should be much bigger than his current business. Knowing it will require plenty of money to get going, heâs been putting money aside for it over the years.
What his story makes me think of is this phrase: âpeople are either like bullets or butterfliesâ. Bullets are people who appear to know exactly what they want, have laid out the steps to achieve it, and seem to get after it in a relatively linear fashion. Bullets are in the minority of people. Connection 62 came across as one â he knew what he wanted to get after.
Butterflies, on the other hand, spend more time fluttering about life. Like a butterfly, thereâs no clear, straight path to the final, pre-established destination. They try a bit of this, a bit of that. These types of people might shift careers every 5-10 years. Dabble in things and then drop it.
As with many things, itâs not a simple dichotomy. Itâs probably more of a sliding scale. Personally, Iâm more of a butterfly. Flutter flutter.
Insight 63: Wisdom from a Three-Year-Old
I knew more about Connection 63 â Chris Lewis – before Iâd met him than I know about any of the connections after our calls.
Chris is well-known in the UK for having walked around the entirety of the UK coastline. It took him six years and his life changed along the way. He adopted a dog named Jet. Spent COVID lockdown on a remote island with only Jet for company. Following lockdown, he met a lady named Kate and fell in love. By the end of the walk, they had married and had a baby named Magnus.
Chrisâs story is well-documented in his two books, Finding Hildasay and Hildasay to Home. I teared up a few times whilst listening to them, and would highly recommend them for some insight into how acting with agency can change your life. I wonât ruin the story for you. Read it.
The interesting challenge for me was asking the ârightâ questions. There were a couple of things to consider. The first was because I knew so much about Chris already, I didnât want to ask something which I had or could read about in his books. I felt like that would be wasting his time. The second was that, over the six years of the challenge, Chris had spoken to an avalanche of journalists and reporters. Every news channel and paper had covered his journey. I didnât want Chris to see experience this as just another media engagement.
Whether he did or not, Iâm not sure. Either way, Chris was really generous in sharing his hard-earned wisdom. Hereâs a few of my favourite quotes:
âSo many people fail at things they donât even enjoy. Why not fail at something you do enjoy?â
âNo matter whether youâre rich or poor⊠purpose is everything.â
âDo you know what? Can I be honest with you? Iâm not even a huge fan of walking.â
That last one is gold, considering heâd walked over 19,000 miles.
My favourite moment of the call, though, was when I asked Chris âHow do you see life now?â He turned to Magnus, who was toddling around in the background, and said âHow do I see life Magnus?â.
Magnus, aged three at the time, responded: âFun!â
Insight 64: Humans Are Complex
I couldnât help but be a little excited when I was referred to a 2003 Rugby World Cup winner.
#64 played for England Rugby over a number of years, and even toured with the British and Irish Lions. After his playing career ended, he transitioned into the world of finance and investing where heâs been equally as successful. He now splits his time between Switzerland and Portugal, which doesnât sound too shabby.
But, what did I learn from the call?
Well, whilst he won the 2003 Rugby World Cup with England, he unfortunately wasnât selected for the final against Australia. I asked him, âHow did you take that when you werenât selected?â
His response was thoughtful and came in three parts.
Firstly, heâd suffered an ACL injury the year before. So, managing to rehab his knee and get back into the England team in time for the World Cup was an achievement in itself. He was grateful for even being there.
Second, a good friend of his named Nick Duncombe â also an England rugby international â had suffered a blood infection in the months before the World Cup. Within 48 hours, Nick had tragically died. Of course, this was a huge shock and brought up some philosophical questions about whatâs really important in life.
Thirdly, he admitted he still wakes up in the middle of the night thinking âAh, I wish Iâd have been selected.â
It struck me as a really human response. The âhumanâ bit being the presence of multiple emotions and perspectives relating to an experience. There was gratitude and there was ultimate perspective provided by the death of a close friend, but there was also the very normal questioning and âwhat if?â thinking youâd expect of missing out on such an experience.
My takeaway is that this âmessinessâ and inner tension is exactly what makes us human.
Insight 65: Override the Automatic âNoâ
Connection 65 was a military man, referred by⊠another military man. Diversity quota: met.
I already knew him, which breaks the oh-so-rigid rules of this project. But youâll forgive me when youâve read this cute little write-up.
The insight which has stuck with me since we spoke was one about seizing the moment while you can. We were standing in the gym on the military base. It was just before lunch time, and just before we went across to the galley for lunch, his phone went âpingâ.
It was his wife. She had messaged because their two-year-old son has asked her, âCan daddy have lunch with us?â.
Firstly, I imagine it would have been really easy for the mother to say âDaddyâs at work, he canât have lunch with us right now.â So, itâs lovely that she passed on the message.
Secondly, and this is where the magic is, it would have been even easier for the dad to say âI canât right now, I have to do X or Yâ, putting it off for âanother dayâ. Yet he didnât. He seized the opportunity (ditching me for lunchâŠ) and ran home to have lunch with his son. Probably chicken dippers or something.
It really warmed my heart to see someone who is hard-as-nails (he assures me) melt at his son reaching out. And, whatâs more, actually embrace it.
It reminded me that thereâll always be more work. There wonât always be the opportunity to spend time â as simple as the moments are â with loved ones.
Summary
These five conversations showed me the value of leaning into discomfort, that being a âbulletâ or a âbutterflyâ is absolutely fine, and that a three-year old can have Project Horizonâs most impactful insight! They also reminded me that humans are characterised by complexity; that itâs normal to experience multiple emotions about a singular experience. And finally, a great reminder to catch myself from the âautomatic noâ so I donât miss the moments that matter.
Next time: connections 66-70.


































