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Just Keep Turning Up
4th January 2023 • Push to be More • Matt Edmundson
00:00:00 00:57:46

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Ready to discover the hidden wisdom of "just keep turning up"? Check out this episode with guest Andrew Kelly on the power of curiosity and unstoppable motivation! This inspiring journey is guaranteed to help you move forward one step at a time.

Here's some of the great stuff that we cover in this show:

  • Andrew became interested in cycling in his early teenage years. He went on to pursue this passion and raced competitively in Australia and Europe, but had to stop due to a burst appendix, which almost killed him. but looking back, he feels happy about how things turned out.
  • He shares how the lessons learned from road cycling - such as the importance of conserving energy and always showing up - have impacted his life.He credits his coach with teaching him the "great secret" of just turning up, which has led to success both in his career and personal relationships.
  • He attributes his success to curiosity, something that drives him to constantly seek out new information and knowledge.
  • Andrew is an avid reader and considers reading a valuable pastime because it requires imagination and effort. It also helps spark new ideas and fuel curiosity.
  • Talking about his work with the Antarctic Science Foundation, Andrew shares how Antarctica is a huge repository of information that could help us understand our moment in time and build strategies to mitigate climate change.

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ABOUT ANDREW

Andrew Kelly started his career with eight years in banking and at the same time, competed at an elite level in Road Cycling. It was here that Andrew learned the importance of preparation for racing, training, visualisation, strategy, analysis, persistence, tenacity, determination, accountability…and, as we are talking about today - the unsexy wisdom behind the idea of just keep turning up.

He went on to build and sell an advertising agency before heading to the third sector captivated with the idea of doing good in society. Across two decades, he has witnessed the power of generosity by facilitating transformational gifts to Youth Off The Streets, The Smith Family, The Refugee Advice and Casework Service (RACS), the Society of St Vincent De Paul and Children’s Medical Research Institute.

Andrew is now the CEO of The Antarctic Science Foundation, which creates connections between philanthropists and researchers to enable catalytic scientific research on the Icy Continent and is an Observer on the Australian Antarctic Science Council.

He still cycles around 300km per week, plays the piano and guitar, reads lots of books but his self-proclaimed favourite role is simply being a dad!

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For complete show notes, transcript and links to our guest, check out our website: www.pushtobemore.com.

Transcripts

Andrew Kelly:

I was just thinking about this the other day, which is

Andrew Kelly:

one of the big races here in Australia is called gob of the Liverpool.

Andrew Kelly:

It's 180 kilometers and it's a, it's pretty hard race back in the day.

Andrew Kelly:

And I remember when I ended it the first time, I, I think that I'd probably be

Andrew Kelly:

counting each of those kilometers off.

Andrew Kelly:

Such was the pain that I expended.

Andrew Kelly:

Wow.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, during that race.

Andrew Kelly:

And, and over time you actually get a sense that, uh, through training you, you

Andrew Kelly:

are up to it and the kilometers fly by.

Andrew Kelly:

In, in road cycling, we have a bit of a code, which is you only push

Andrew Kelly:

your pedals hard when you have to.

Andrew Kelly:

Mm-hmm..

Andrew Kelly:

And when you have to, you push them as hard as you possibly can.

Andrew Kelly:

​ Matt Edmundson: Welcome to Push To Be

Andrew Kelly:

This is a show that talks about the stuff that makes life work

Andrew Kelly:

and to help us do just that.

Andrew Kelly:

I am chatting with today's special guest all the way from the other

Andrew Kelly:

side of the world, Andrew Kelly from the Antarctic Science Foundation.

Andrew Kelly:

We are gonna be talking about the unsexy wisdom of just

Andrew Kelly:

turning up amongst other things.

Andrew Kelly:

It's gonna be fun.

Andrew Kelly:

Now the show notes and transcript from our conversation will be available

Andrew Kelly:

on our website, pushtobemore.com.

Andrew Kelly:

And also, whilst you are there, you can sign up for our newsletter and each week

Andrew Kelly:

I will email you the links from today's show, the notes, the transcripts, they

Andrew Kelly:

all just appear automatically direct your inbox totally free, which is all amazing.

Andrew Kelly:

So make sure you sign up to the news letter now.

Andrew Kelly:

This episode is brought to you by Aurion Media, which helps entrepreneurs

Andrew Kelly:

and business leaders set up and run their own successful podcast.

Andrew Kelly:

You know what I have found running my own podcast to be really rewarding.

Andrew Kelly:

It's why I now have three of them.

Andrew Kelly:

Oh, yes.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, podcasting opens doors to amazing people.

Andrew Kelly:

Just like Andrew.

Andrew Kelly:

Like nothing else I've seen.

Andrew Kelly:

I've built networks, I've made friends.

Andrew Kelly:

I've traveled the world and visited podcast guests.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, and I've had a platform to champion my customers, my teams, my suppliers.

Andrew Kelly:

It's just, honestly, the list of benefits is horrendous.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, and I think just about any entrepreneurial business leader should

Andrew Kelly:

have a podcast because of the huge impact I've seen it have on my own business.

Andrew Kelly:

Now, of course, this sounds great in theory, but in reality, there's the

Andrew Kelly:

whole problem of setting up distribution, getting the tech right, knowing what the

Andrew Kelly:

right podcast strategy is, the social media, the blood, the list goes on.

Andrew Kelly:

You see, I love talking to people, but I do not enjoy all that other stuff.

Andrew Kelly:

So aurion Media takes it all off my plate.

Andrew Kelly:

I do what I'm good at, and they brilliantly take care of the rest.

Andrew Kelly:

So if you are wondering if podcasting is a good marketing strategy

Andrew Kelly:

for your business, check it out.

Andrew Kelly:

Check out uh, aurionmedia.com.

Andrew Kelly:

That's aurionmedia.com and we will of course link to them in the podcast

Andrew Kelly:

show notes too, which hopefully.

Andrew Kelly:

You are subscribed to on the email and if you're not, go to

Andrew Kelly:

pushtobemore.com and sign up to that.

Andrew Kelly:

Find out more about Aurion Media and get podcasting yourself.

Andrew Kelly:

Now, before I get into today's conversation with Andrew, I wanna give

Andrew Kelly:

a bit of a shout out and thank you to Simon O'Shaughnessy, who actually

Andrew Kelly:

connected my good self and Andrew.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, Simon, uh, who we used to call, I still call actually is, uh, Aslan.

Andrew Kelly:

He used to have bright, I dunno if you ever knew Simon, Andrew, when

Andrew Kelly:

he had red hair and a red beard.

Andrew Kelly:

So we called him Aslan.

Andrew Kelly:

It's all white now.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, but Simon is great at coaching and just a lovely guy.

Andrew Kelly:

In fact, he's coming on the show soon.

Andrew Kelly:

So do stay connected, uh, with what's going on.

Andrew Kelly:

Now.

Andrew Kelly:

Andrew started his career with eight years in banking and at the same time competed

Andrew Kelly:

at an elite level in road cycling.

Andrew Kelly:

Oh, yes.

Andrew Kelly:

Not an easy sport.

Andrew Kelly:

And it was here that Andrew learned the importance of preparing for racing,

Andrew Kelly:

training, visualization, strategy, analysis, persistence, tenacity,

Andrew Kelly:

determination, accountability, all the buzz words, of course.

Andrew Kelly:

And uh, what we're talking today.

Andrew Kelly:

The unsexy wisdom behind this idea of just keep turning up.

Andrew Kelly:

Andrew went on to build and sell his own advertising business before heading

Andrew Kelly:

to the third sector, captivated with the idea of doing good in society.

Andrew Kelly:

Across two decades, he has witnessed the power of generosity by facilitating

Andrew Kelly:

transformational gifts to check these out.

Andrew Kelly:

Youth Off the Streets, the Smith family, the Refuge Advice and

Andrew Kelly:

Casework service, the Society of St.

Andrew Kelly:

Vincent DePaul and Children's Medical Research Institute.

Andrew Kelly:

And if that's not enough, Andrew is now the CEO of the awesome.

Andrew Kelly:

Antarctic Science Foundation, which connects, uh, which creates

Andrew Kelly:

connections between philanthropists and researchers to enable catalytic

Andrew Kelly:

scientific research on the icy continent.

Andrew Kelly:

And he is an observer, an observer with a capital O, which obviously is a title on

Andrew Kelly:

the Australian Antarctic Science Council.

Andrew Kelly:

He cycles still around 300 kilometers a week, which I just think is nuts.

Andrew Kelly:

I rarely drive that far let alone cycle that far.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, he plays a piano and guitar, reads lots of books, but his favorite,

Andrew Kelly:

uh, self-proclaimed role is, or his self-proclaimed favorite role,

Andrew Kelly:

actually, I should word it slightly different, is simply being a dad.

Andrew Kelly:

Andrew, welcome to, uh, push to bemore, it's great to have you here.

Andrew Kelly:

Thank you for joining me all the way from the other side of the world.

Andrew Kelly:

How are we doing?

Andrew Kelly:

Thanks, Matt.

Andrew Kelly:

It's terrific to be with you.

Andrew Kelly:

Thank you for the invitation.

Matt Edmundson:

Ah, no, it's great.

Matt Edmundson:

Glad you turned up.

Matt Edmundson:

Now, I'm assuming you didn't have to cycle anywhere to get to the, uh, interview.

Andrew Kelly:

No, no.

Andrew Kelly:

I'm, I'm well ensconced at home now.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, on, uh, on Monday evening.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, it's funny, isn't it, with the

Matt Edmundson:

time zones and how that works.

Matt Edmundson:

So it's Monday morning for me.

Matt Edmundson:

It's Monday evening for you, uh, and you are based in Sydney, Australia.

Andrew Kelly:

That's right.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, as a boy grew up here, always lived in Sydney, uh, with some secondments

Andrew Kelly:

to, to New York and also to, uh, living in France when I was cycling.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

So tell me about this, right, the cycling thing.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, how, how did you get into that?

Matt Edmundson:

Was just that you just, when you were a kid, your dad bought you a BMX and

Matt Edmundson:

you got hooked, or how did that work?

Andrew Kelly:

Actually it, it's, it sounds strange cuz it's from another age, but

Andrew Kelly:

we used to have this program here in Australia called Wide World of Sports.

Andrew Kelly:

It was on, in the, on a Saturday afternoon and they used to cut up

Andrew Kelly:

bits of the tour of France and spread it across the, the whole afternoon,

Andrew Kelly:

you know, the previous week stages.

Andrew Kelly:

And I'd sit there and watch these little three and four minute segments and sort

Andrew Kelly:

of piece together the Tour de France over, uh, you know, three weeks, four weeks,

Andrew Kelly:

and these highlights, and it just seemed like an activity from not the other side

Andrew Kelly:

of the world, but from another world.

Andrew Kelly:

We didn't have internet, uh, we didn't have high definition tv.

Andrew Kelly:

And so we got these glimpses of this amazing sport, uh, and

Andrew Kelly:

I thought, I want to try that.

Andrew Kelly:

And.

Andrew Kelly:

And so I got a bike and I started hearing a round on it and, and then

Andrew Kelly:

I realized it's, it's really hard.

Andrew Kelly:

I went to a club, club race and started club racing and, and realized after

Andrew Kelly:

a little while that the, you know, the top level, it's, it's really

Andrew Kelly:

hard and that the romance of it, um, leaves, um, stage left pretty quickly

Andrew Kelly:

and, and so I just focused on that.

Andrew Kelly:

Um, figured that I could be okay at it and, and really experimented quite a

Andrew Kelly:

bit with, with my mind and my body, um, training it and seeing how far I could go.

Matt Edmundson:

So, and you're doing this, uh, what, when you're a teenager?

Andrew Kelly:

Yeah.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, I was, yeah, I was a teenager.

Andrew Kelly:

I started off when I was about 13-14.

Andrew Kelly:

And, uh, that's, that's junior level.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, and, and then got to seniors when I was 18, uh, while I was doing school.

Andrew Kelly:

And then in my early career when I was in banking, I was, um, I

Andrew Kelly:

was actually in overnight markets.

Andrew Kelly:

So European US markets, uh, working overnight and training during the

Andrew Kelly:

day to see how far I could take it.

Matt Edmundson:

So you were training during the day and you were doing

Matt Edmundson:

this sort of, uh, I, I never really thought about people working night

Matt Edmundson:

shifts in banking, but I suppose it makes sense with the worldwide market.

Matt Edmundson:

Right.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, and so you, you working nights and you're training during the day to see how

Matt Edmundson:

far it gets, so how far did you actually manage to get with the, the cycling?

Andrew Kelly:

Yeah.

Andrew Kelly:

So I, I raced here in Australia at an elite level and then went over to

Andrew Kelly:

Europe in 93 and on an international license, uh, an amateur license, uh,

Andrew Kelly:

that's how we were classified back then.

Andrew Kelly:

Mm-hmm.

Andrew Kelly:

, uh, entered international races, uh, with the hope of turning pro, uh, and

Andrew Kelly:

getting, uh, scavenging, if you like.

Andrew Kelly:

Domestic rides with, uh, development squads that had, uh, pathways

Andrew Kelly:

into the European Pro teams.

Andrew Kelly:

So I, I spent a season in Europe in 93 racing, and they said, come

Andrew Kelly:

back and win a Commonwealth Games or do well at a, at a national level

Andrew Kelly:

and then come back in, uh, 90, 95.

Andrew Kelly:

So I would've been, you know, in my.

Andrew Kelly:

Get getting to my mid twenties by then, which was the normal

Andrew Kelly:

time for, uh, riders to turn pro.

Andrew Kelly:

Um, what happened in between was, um, everybody turned pro under the new,

Andrew Kelly:

the new system in 94 when, uh, pros were allowed to go to the Olympics.

Andrew Kelly:

Mm-hmm..

Andrew Kelly:

And so Amateurism was basically, uh, stamped out.

Andrew Kelly:

And I also had a burst appendix.

Andrew Kelly:

So on the eve of going back to Europe in 95, I had a, a burst appendix.

Andrew Kelly:

Oh wow.

Andrew Kelly:

Almost killed me.

Andrew Kelly:

And, uh, and, and that, that took, put paid to, to cycling.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, the cycling world changed.

Andrew Kelly:

Um, it took me quite a while to recover from that.

Andrew Kelly:

And, you know, in some respects, if I had continued on, I would've gone into the,

Andrew Kelly:

probably the Lance Armstrong era, which have was obviously one of the, the less

Andrew Kelly:

glorious, um, periods of, of pro cycling.

Andrew Kelly:

So in some respects, the, the path diverged and though it wasn't pleasant

Andrew Kelly:

at the time, uh, I'm, I'm pretty pleased with the way things have worked

Matt Edmundson:

out.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

It's funny how that works, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

The amount of people that you talk to, uh, about stuff that happened, and there's

Matt Edmundson:

always this sort of, I don't wanna use the word calamity, but there's a, there's

Matt Edmundson:

something that happens which derails a, a, a path that you think you should be on.

Matt Edmundson:

And then the, the path that you end up on seems to be a, a better fit.

Matt Edmundson:

It's almost fortuitous in some ways, but you, um, I dunno why I, I mean, I'm not

Matt Edmundson:

saying that, you know, destiny did this, but I'm, I think people make the best of

Matt Edmundson:

the, the road that they're on, don't they?

Matt Edmundson:

And they, they can sort of find a new zeal and passion on that road.

Matt Edmundson:

Is that what happened to you?

Andrew Kelly:

Absolutely.

Andrew Kelly:

I, I, I agree that it, it's not fate and it's, it's not, it's

Andrew Kelly:

not some sort of predestiny.

Andrew Kelly:

I, I don't believe in that.

Andrew Kelly:

But it's, it's interesting to run the counterfactuals of, wow, if I'd gone that

Andrew Kelly:

way, these things might have happened.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, also, I think that when you are, in my case, a young man in my early

Andrew Kelly:

twenties, I wanted to be a pro cyclist.

Andrew Kelly:

I wasn't really thinking of what it might be like to be a husband or a

Andrew Kelly:

father or, uh, a family man or, or to have a profession outside of cycling.

Andrew Kelly:

So there's, there's that wisdom that's not, uh, existent in, in a younger person.

Andrew Kelly:

With a few years and a few scrapes, you, you start to accumulate that.

Andrew Kelly:

Hmm.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, and then you can see, um, how valid and also how limiting some of

Andrew Kelly:

your earlier thoughts or, or dreams or ideas or projects might have been.

Matt Edmundson:

That's interesting.

Matt Edmundson:

That's interesting.

Matt Edmundson:

So, um, so the path that you end up going down after cycling, we mentioned in the

Matt Edmundson:

introduction, I mean, one of the things that, you know, we've talked about,

Matt Edmundson:

uh, before hitting the record button obviously, um, is how the, the cycling,

Matt Edmundson:

the lessons that you learned there, um, really impacted then how you approached

Matt Edmundson:

this sort of new path that you were on.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, what were some of the things that you sort of, you know, we call

Matt Edmundson:

the show push to be more, I'm always curious where people have had to

Matt Edmundson:

sort of push and overcome things.

Matt Edmundson:

So here you are, uh, you know, a young man cycling, there's, I'm

Matt Edmundson:

sure there's a lot of lessons there where you've had to overcome.

Matt Edmundson:

Right?

Andrew Kelly:

Yeah.

Andrew Kelly:

So the first thing about, um, road cycling particularly, I was just

Andrew Kelly:

thinking about this the other day, which is one of the big races here in

Andrew Kelly:

Australia is called gob of the Liverpool.

Andrew Kelly:

It's 180 kilometers and it's a, it's pretty hard race back in the day.

Andrew Kelly:

And I remember when I ended it the first time, I, I think that I'd probably be

Andrew Kelly:

counting each of those kilometers off.

Andrew Kelly:

Such was the pain that I expended.

Andrew Kelly:

Wow.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, during that race.

Andrew Kelly:

And, and over time you actually get a sense that, uh, through training you,

Andrew Kelly:

you are up to it and the kilometers fly by in, in road cycling, we have a

Andrew Kelly:

bit of a code, which is you only push your pedals hard when you have to.

Andrew Kelly:

Mm-hmm..

Andrew Kelly:

And when you have to, you push them as hard as you possibly can.

Andrew Kelly:

And so that's that whole notion of you've gotta conserve energy, uh,

Andrew Kelly:

during a race that's as long as that.

Andrew Kelly:

And especially when those races are back to back, like the tour

Andrew Kelly:

de France and big stage races.

Andrew Kelly:

And then when you are called upon or you call upon yourself to make

Andrew Kelly:

that supreme effort, it has to be.

Andrew Kelly:

Absolutely all out.

Andrew Kelly:

So that, that's a, a bit of a motto that I've carried through my life as well.

Andrew Kelly:

Yeah.

Andrew Kelly:

But the, the big one, I suppose, is that notion you talked about,

Andrew Kelly:

which is just keep turning up.

Andrew Kelly:

And, and that was a, that was a really formative moment in my life.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, I was late to training one day, and again, this is back in the day

Andrew Kelly:

when we didn't have mobile phones.

Andrew Kelly:

We just met at a particular corner at 5:30 in the morning, which was

Andrew Kelly:

a bit of a hike from where I lived.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, it was about 17 kilometers, so I had to get on the, on the

Andrew Kelly:

bunny pretty, pretty early to, to meet the training, training group.

Andrew Kelly:

And one day I was late and I, if you're late, you just have to chase on.

Andrew Kelly:

So I chased on.

Andrew Kelly:

I was pretty good at time trialing and catching, catching up the road.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, caught the group.

Andrew Kelly:

We did the training session and we got back to where we,

Andrew Kelly:

where we used to, um, split up.

Andrew Kelly:

And my coach said to me, you were late to training this morning.

Andrew Kelly:

And I said, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Andrew Kelly:

You know, and sort of just brushed it off.

Andrew Kelly:

And he said, you know, Andrew, um, everything you get outta

Andrew Kelly:

life is what you put in.

Andrew Kelly:

You've gotta put in before you can expect anybody else to, to help you.

Andrew Kelly:

Um, and he says the great secret in life is to just turn up, he says, cuz

Andrew Kelly:

if you turn up to training on time, then the, the rest of the bunch to some

Andrew Kelly:

extent is gonna do the training for you.

Andrew Kelly:

You're in the bunch and, and you'll get the benefit.

Andrew Kelly:

He says, and then there'll be race meeting out in the country where it's

Andrew Kelly:

rained for a week and a whole bunch of people who are gonna go to that

Andrew Kelly:

race, that road race, they won't go.

Andrew Kelly:

They'll stay at home instead of venturing into the country knowing it's gonna

Andrew Kelly:

be a really wet, a wet park call.

Andrew Kelly:

And then on the morning of the race, people will look outside the hotel.

Andrew Kelly:

And they'll say it's been raining overnight.

Andrew Kelly:

And so they'll stay in the hotel rather than turn up to the, to the start line.

Andrew Kelly:

But you turn up to the start line and then the race starts off.

Andrew Kelly:

It rains.

Andrew Kelly:

It rains for the first two hours, and a whole bunch of riders just

Andrew Kelly:

peel off and jump into the team cars.

Andrew Kelly:

You stay in the race, you just turn up and stay in the race, and then a break goes

Andrew Kelly:

away and you just turn up into that break.

Andrew Kelly:

A break you've got no business being in.

Andrew Kelly:

But given the conditions and given the mindset of those around you, you

Andrew Kelly:

get into the break and then you'll be seven kilometers from home and

Andrew Kelly:

there'll be a rise in the road.

Andrew Kelly:

Everyone's looking at each other.

Andrew Kelly:

It's been a really hard day.

Andrew Kelly:

And you go away.

Andrew Kelly:

You just turn up when there's that opportunity and you end up winning a

Andrew Kelly:

race that you had no business winning.

Andrew Kelly:

Mm-hmm.

Andrew Kelly:

. Uh, and it's simply because of the cumulative effect of turning up.

Andrew Kelly:

And, and that's a message that Robert, my coach, uh, you

Andrew Kelly:

know, he still rides his bike.

Andrew Kelly:

Um, even in, you know, he's really pushing on and he's had enormous health problems.

Andrew Kelly:

Um, but that's a message that.

Andrew Kelly:

I've taken out of cycling and into everything else that I do.

Andrew Kelly:

And it's that cumulative effort, uh, of just turning up, putting in the effort

Andrew Kelly:

each day, which, which builds a career.

Andrew Kelly:

And, and it also, uh, builds connections.

Andrew Kelly:

It builds wisdom, uh, and it's the most valuable thing I've ever been told.

Matt Edmundson:

That's really powerful.

Matt Edmundson:

It's really powerful, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

The power of just keep turning up.

Matt Edmundson:

I mean, it's, it's, you know, we say in, when it comes to things like

Matt Edmundson:

social media, the, the way you win in social media is consistency, right?

Matt Edmundson:

It's just the, you just keep turning up.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, you do something of value.

Matt Edmundson:

Obviously you don't turn up with dribble, but you, you do something of value and

Matt Edmundson:

you just keep turning up and eventually you win because everybody else drops out.

Matt Edmundson:

And it's a really interesting one, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

That, um, that here you are on the bikes learning the same lesson that

Matt Edmundson:

actually everyone just drops out.

Matt Edmundson:

Same in e-commerce, you know, when the, the, the businesses that we,

Matt Edmundson:

we are involved with, people just drop out all the time, and it's

Matt Edmundson:

the ones who deliver something of value consistently, uh, over time.

Matt Edmundson:

I, I, I love that the unsexy wisdom of just keep turning

Matt Edmundson:

up because it's not something.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, that people want to hear usually these days.

Matt Edmundson:

I don't know if, if you, whether it's just me that thinks that Andrew, or whether

Matt Edmundson:

you've noticed this as well, there is a sort of a, I don't want to hear that.

Matt Edmundson:

I want the sort of the latest technique or silver bullet or something.

Matt Edmundson:

You go, well, it's just keep turning up and you're like, well, no, no, no, no.

Matt Edmundson:

Surely I need to know.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, you just keep turning up.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, it's, it's a really, What do you find, actually, when you talk to people

Matt Edmundson:

about this, I'm curious, do they, do they roll their eyes or do they go, oh okay?

Andrew Kelly:

I think intuitively we know it's true.

Andrew Kelly:

At the same time, if you switch it into finance, people talk about the

Andrew Kelly:

cumulative effects of bank interest to compound interest, uh, and or

Andrew Kelly:

reinvesting, uh, your dividends.

Andrew Kelly:

So we know, we know in another arena that, that it is absolutely

Andrew Kelly:

the cornerstone of, of success.

Andrew Kelly:

Yes, we would like a hack.

Andrew Kelly:

Yes, we would like that nip and tuck or, but, but it's never transformational.

Andrew Kelly:

And I, I agree.

Andrew Kelly:

You know, whether it's social media or any, any domain, it's those who have the

Andrew Kelly:

track record of, um, turning up, doing the work, um, and, and building your craft.

Andrew Kelly:

That's the other, that's the other piece, you know, they often say, you

Andrew Kelly:

know, There's only one question you ask a surgeon when you're going into

Andrew Kelly:

hospital for an operation, which is how many times have you done the surgery?

Andrew Kelly:

If he says, I'm really excited to do it for the first time, you know,

Andrew Kelly:

you wanna run and don't look back.

Andrew Kelly:

Yeah.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, so that's what you're looking for when you put your

Andrew Kelly:

life in somebody else's hands.

Andrew Kelly:

So, uh, I just figure it's probably a good, a good, uh, approach in,

Andrew Kelly:

in anything that's worthwhile.

Matt Edmundson:

It's interest, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

Because my, my brain functions slightly differently, uh, this juncture because

Matt Edmundson:

I'm like, yes, I don't want the surgeon doing it for the first time,

Matt Edmundson:

but my, the flip side of that will be, well, if he's done it a thousand

Matt Edmundson:

times, how's he not got complacent?

Matt Edmundson:

Because I, I, I, I find actually the, the, this is what separates the, the

Matt Edmundson:

craftsmen just from people who are really, they're okay at something is

Matt Edmundson:

the craftsmen don't get complacent.

Matt Edmundson:

They're always trying to look at how to, how to improve or how to make it better.

Matt Edmundson:

Whereas the complacent guys go, well, I know what I'm doing, it's fine.

Matt Edmundson:

It'll be alright.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, and I'm I, outside of work, I do a lot of joinery, woodwork type stuff.

Matt Edmundson:

I just love making stuff out of wood with my hands.

Matt Edmundson:

And, um, I learned this lesson when I put my hand through a table

Matt Edmundson:

saw, uh, just being complacent.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and you kind of think, well, yeah, how do you, how do you stop that complacency?

Matt Edmundson:

How do you, how do you keep building your craft?

Andrew Kelly:

Curiosity.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, I think that curiosity is, Something that's driven me on, uh, I'm, I'm always

Andrew Kelly:

interested in meeting other people, uh, hearing other views, uh, reading and

Andrew Kelly:

absorbing, uh, information and knowledge.

Andrew Kelly:

So curiosity is a, is a terrific, um, quality and in the case of your

Andrew Kelly:

surgeon, yeah, you want, you want to see somebody who is, um, staying on

Andrew Kelly:

top of their game and, and wanting to improve and keep up to date, and,

Andrew Kelly:

and they're pretty easy to spot.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, if you can ask them a question about, you know, what the current,

Andrew Kelly:

uh, trend is or the, or the latest technique, uh, in any field.

Andrew Kelly:

I find that really interesting, just talking to people in different fields

Andrew Kelly:

to understand their craft, how they keep up to date, what led them to do that

Andrew Kelly:

craft and, and what keeps them curious.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, I like that.

Matt Edmundson:

The power of curiosity.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, just the, the ability to ask questions.

Matt Edmundson:

I think it's one of those things that they don't teach

Matt Edmundson:

you at school or at university.

Matt Edmundson:

And actually, if you, if you were to distill.

Matt Edmundson:

The success of people down to several, you'd say, well, the big part of my

Matt Edmundson:

success maybe was, look, I was in the right place at the right time, or I saw

Matt Edmundson:

an opportunity, I took advantage of it.

Matt Edmundson:

But one of the things that I think is probably quite true that people

Matt Edmundson:

don't really mention is I think I'm successful because I've learned

Matt Edmundson:

how to ask questions along the way.

Matt Edmundson:

And I, and for some reason I asked the right question at the right

Matt Edmundson:

time to the right person, which opened the right door and you.

Matt Edmundson:

You, you, you get kind of intrigued by this, don't you?

Matt Edmundson:

That the ability to ask questions and the ability to be curious is one of those

Matt Edmundson:

things which makes us distinctly human.

Matt Edmundson:

But somehow I think in the advent of maybe it's social media, again, I dunno

Matt Edmundson:

if you've got any thoughts on this Andrew.

Matt Edmundson:

But we, because so much information is given to us, we seem to have lost the

Matt Edmundson:

ability to ask questions of people.

Matt Edmundson:

I don't know.

Andrew Kelly:

Yeah.

Andrew Kelly:

That, that's really interesting.

Andrew Kelly:

So, so the curious mind, uh, is, is in real trouble when you start getting

Andrew Kelly:

into, into social media or an enormous vat of information like the internet.

Andrew Kelly:

And, and what I've come up with is, uh, through reading and listening to people,

Andrew Kelly:

is that the, the real skill on top of the curiosity is relevance realization.

Andrew Kelly:

So looking at something and understanding.

Andrew Kelly:

Is that relevant to me?

Andrew Kelly:

Can I make that relevant to a situation, uh, that I'm in or I might be in?

Andrew Kelly:

So it's collecting information not just as trivia, but it's information

Andrew Kelly:

techniques, approaches, mindsets, uh, through a relevance realization

Andrew Kelly:

lens, uh, which actually narrows down what you are looking for.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, and, and I think that that'll probably become one of the skills that is, is

Andrew Kelly:

really in demand, uh, and will be, um, you know, the, I suppose the distinguishing,

Andrew Kelly:

um, talent or skill of, of people who can, who can navigate all of that information.

Andrew Kelly:

Cause we've just got too much of it at the moment.

Andrew Kelly:

Mm-hmm.

Andrew Kelly:

much more than we ever had.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, no, it's very true, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

That, um, I like that.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, very clever.

Matt Edmundson:

Very clever.

Matt Edmundson:

Are you a, are you a learned man?

Matt Edmundson:

As in, do you, do you read a lot?

Andrew Kelly:

Yeah, when I'm, when I'm not walking or working on, I'm reading.

Andrew Kelly:

I, I read an enormous amount and it's, yeah, it's one of

Andrew Kelly:

the life's great pleasures.

Andrew Kelly:

And again, it's that, uh, curiosity and, um, testing my views and my opinions

Andrew Kelly:

or my ideas against those of others.

Andrew Kelly:

And I think it's one of the, the great pleasures and, and the great tech

Andrew Kelly:

human technologies is to have another person's opinion on a piece of paper.

Andrew Kelly:

And to have that person convey that to you and then to be in some really, it's

Andrew Kelly:

in communion with that other person where you're trying to understand them and

Andrew Kelly:

they're also trying to understand you, not knowing that you even exist or that you'll

Andrew Kelly:

be there at the other end of the writing.

Andrew Kelly:

Yeah.

Andrew Kelly:

So yeah, reading is, is tremendous and, and novels, I, I think are

Andrew Kelly:

the most understated and, and probably the most countercultural

Andrew Kelly:

and subversive art form that there is because it's somebody putting an

Andrew Kelly:

idea or story, uh, the machinations of relationships into your brain, uh,

Andrew Kelly:

which I find endlessly fascinating.

Andrew Kelly:

I have enormous amounts of, uh, admiration for people who can write that well.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, you and me both.

Matt Edmundson:

I've tried it on the odd occasion and I just come away going, how in the world?

Matt Edmundson:

You know?

Matt Edmundson:

I've just, it's just, I totally agree.

Matt Edmundson:

Right?

Matt Edmundson:

But I think it's interesting with novels, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

Because there's something quite powerful that I've not been able to

Matt Edmundson:

articulate yet, but there's something quite powerful at the end of the day

Matt Edmundson:

just to pick up a novel and read it.

Matt Edmundson:

You kind of disassociate with, you suspend reality is maybe a better,

Matt Edmundson:

and you get drawn into this story, which in your head is not real,

Matt Edmundson:

but you are so engrossed in it.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and I find it a remarkable way just to sort of switch off and,

Matt Edmundson:

and, and just relax and recharges just to read a novel, you know?

Matt Edmundson:

And I'm, I'm, I, I just reread.

Matt Edmundson:

I should, I dunno whether I should admit this or not.

Matt Edmundson:

I just reread all the Jack Reacher novels by Lee Child, right?

Matt Edmundson:

So I know there's a new one just come out, which I'm saving for a Christmas present.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, but I, so I reread all like 20 million novels that, you know,

Matt Edmundson:

Lee Child has written beforehand.

Matt Edmundson:

But there's just something about getting drawn into it.

Matt Edmundson:

And then you watch the TV show on Amazon and you go, well, it's close to the

Matt Edmundson:

book, but it's not quite the book is it?

Matt Edmundson:

And uh, and there is something quite powerful, quite magical,

Matt Edmundson:

like you say, about a novel.

Andrew Kelly:

Yeah.

Andrew Kelly:

The, the suspension of disbelief that you are reading letters off a page and you

Andrew Kelly:

are feeding this imagination in your mind when every other, uh, absorption technique

Andrew Kelly:

that we have has been improved enormously.

Andrew Kelly:

We now have super high definition televisions and, and cinema screens.

Andrew Kelly:

We, we have, uh, better and better fidelity headphones and, and speakers

Andrew Kelly:

to listen to music and watch, watch cinemas, but we are still there with,

Andrew Kelly:

uh, you know, The, the novel printed by Penguin, or Favor and favor.

Andrew Kelly:

It's just letters on a page and we suspend disbelief that we are, we are reading

Andrew Kelly:

this ink off a page, but in fact, we are having this amazing imaginative, uh,

Andrew Kelly:

process take place in our, in our mind.

Andrew Kelly:

And, and, and we are participating.

Andrew Kelly:

That's the other thing where, where, uh, you see something on

Andrew Kelly:

Netflix or the cinema, it's being done to you in almost every sense.

Andrew Kelly:

Whereas with, with reading, it's, it's hard yacker, there's a, there's

Andrew Kelly:

a real effort that's, uh, required.

Andrew Kelly:

You don't build up momentum when you're reading, except if you

Andrew Kelly:

are drawn into the story, as you've said with, with the novel.

Andrew Kelly:

So, so reading is hard and, uh, and writing in an age where reading is

Andrew Kelly:

getting harder is is a real skill.

Matt Edmundson:

Mm, yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

It is.

Matt Edmundson:

It is.

Matt Edmundson:

I like that.

Matt Edmundson:

So reading, I mean, my son would listen to, do you listen to audio books?

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, you know, I, I, my son listens to novels as opposed to, well,

Matt Edmundson:

one of my sons listens to novel.

Matt Edmundson:

The other son likes to read them.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, both of which require you to sort of imagine the scenes, right?

Matt Edmundson:

Sure.

Matt Edmundson:

The writer is painting.

Matt Edmundson:

The scene with some words on the page, but it's very incomplete.

Matt Edmundson:

Whereas Netflix is very complete.

Matt Edmundson:

There's no room for imagination because cgi now everything is so.

Matt Edmundson:

Pristine.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, you don't have to, you can take your brain out the box and watch the program,

Matt Edmundson:

whereas, like you say, with a book or an audio, but you have to get involved and

Matt Edmundson:

you have to imagine scenes, don't you?

Matt Edmundson:

And build these things in your, in your mind, very good.

Matt Edmundson:

We could wax lyrical about that.

Matt Edmundson:

It's always nice actually find, uh, people who like me at the end of the day, just

Matt Edmundson:

like to sit and read a novel and just enjoy the novel for the novel's sake.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, I think it's a great way to sort of unwind at the end of the day.

Matt Edmundson:

So you, do you read business books as well, or is it just predominantly novels?

Andrew Kelly:

I, I do read right across genres and, and certainly, uh, you know,

Andrew Kelly:

there's some, there's some really good books, uh, around economics or cognitive

Andrew Kelly:

psychology and, and, and behavior.

Andrew Kelly:

Um, you know, thinking fast and slow is a, is a tremendous book by Kahnerman.

Andrew Kelly:

Mm-hmm.

Andrew Kelly:

, uh, which is pretty influential.

Andrew Kelly:

Um, I also like, um, Benoit Mandelbrot, wrote some great books about chaos.

Andrew Kelly:

You know, he's the godfather of chaos.

Andrew Kelly:

Chaos theory and his applications to human behavior and also to

Andrew Kelly:

markets is, is pretty interesting.

Andrew Kelly:

I like Nassim Taleb, uh, and his work around black swans and,

Andrew Kelly:

and being fooled by randomness.

Andrew Kelly:

That, that whole series is excellent and it's very countercultural.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, so, uh, you know that, that would be the, uh, The extent of, of business

Andrew Kelly:

related books that I've read and, and there's, there's trading books and,

Andrew Kelly:

and the like, but I also like science and history and, um, maths and poetry.

Andrew Kelly:

So it's, it's a, it's a pretty broad range of books and I'm a bit promiscuous.

Andrew Kelly:

I, I have lots of books on the run at any one time.

Andrew Kelly:

I really try hard to, to keep it down to a few ongoing, but I, I inevitably run

Andrew Kelly:

off and have an affair with a, with a..

Matt Edmundson:

You know what we're so similar, Andrew, uh, I said to..

Matt Edmundson:

My wife, said to me, uh, my wife and my daughter and I were sat around the table.

Matt Edmundson:

And Zoe and my daughter was like, what do you want for Christmas, dad?

Matt Edmundson:

I said, oh this.

Matt Edmundson:

These books that I've been recommended.

Matt Edmundson:

And Sharon's like, you don't need more books.

Matt Edmundson:

You've got 20 books by the side of the bed.

Matt Edmundson:

You've got four books on your Kindle, which you're reading, right?

Matt Edmundson:

You don't need any more books.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm like, I definitely need more books.

Matt Edmundson:

It's just funny.

Matt Edmundson:

There's just something quite lush about it.

Andrew Kelly:

Well, I think, I dunno if it was Umberto Eco.

Andrew Kelly:

I think it was, he said, you should have and, and certainly Nassim Taleb,

Andrew Kelly:

so I may confuse the reference, but one or other or both of them said, you

Andrew Kelly:

should have the biggest library that your financial means can, can sustain.

Andrew Kelly:

And it's a.

Andrew Kelly:

It's a constant reminder of that which you don't know and that you have access to.

Andrew Kelly:

And so whether it's, uh, you don't know the end of the particular novel

Andrew Kelly:

series that you're on, or you don't know a particular, um, the history of a

Andrew Kelly:

particular country or region, it's, it's a good, um, it's a good provocation to

Andrew Kelly:

have information around you that possibly you might not get through in a lifetime.

Andrew Kelly:

But it's there and it's, it's whispering that, that you don't know everything.

Andrew Kelly:

And, and I think that that's a, that's a good, um, well, I, I find it healthy.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Well, it drives curiosity, doesn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

Going back to, to what you said, you know, it drives that curiosity ideal.

Matt Edmundson:

You said on your, um, LinkedIn bio, two great tasks of my life have been

Matt Edmundson:

learning how to think and being in the service of others, which I thought

Matt Edmundson:

was a really interesting quote, right?

Matt Edmundson:

So the, the two two things that they don't really sort of teach you necessarily

Matt Edmundson:

at school, um, but sort of this idea.

Matt Edmundson:

the two great tasks, learning how to think.

Matt Edmundson:

And so this again, is highlighted by your love of reading, your sort of, and your

Matt Edmundson:

curiosity, your thirst for knowledge.

Matt Edmundson:

Was that something that you've always had or is that something that you

Matt Edmundson:

consciously developed later in life?

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, I think early on I got a sense that, you know, we had this amazing.

Andrew Kelly:

Amazing mind that's given to us.

Andrew Kelly:

And I read, uh, Edward, De Bono's, six Thinking Hats really early in.

Andrew Kelly:

Yeah.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, I think I was a teenager when I read that.

Andrew Kelly:

Um, I think my dad gave that to me.

Andrew Kelly:

And, and also, uh, towards the end of school into university, read, um, Zen

Andrew Kelly:

and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, which is just a brilliant book, which

Andrew Kelly:

I read, I reread every 10 years.

Andrew Kelly:

Mm-hmm.

Andrew Kelly:

, uh, out of school and knowing how powerful our minds are, but also how prone we are

Andrew Kelly:

to, to biases and, and easy thinking.

Andrew Kelly:

Mm-hmm.

Andrew Kelly:

uh, really makes me curious about how, how to best approach situations,

Andrew Kelly:

uh, with curiosity, with an open mind rather than, um, by rote and just

Andrew Kelly:

using the same techniques every time.

Andrew Kelly:

So one of the things that I do in situations is I ask myself, what would

Andrew Kelly:

I have to believe for this to be right?

Andrew Kelly:

What would I have to believe for this to be wrong?

Andrew Kelly:

And so I try to take that, you know, that, uh, two-handed approach or,

Andrew Kelly:

uh, opposing views of a situation, of a view, uh, of an opinion.

Andrew Kelly:

And, and quite often that helps uncover, uh, blind spots, uh,

Andrew Kelly:

that are just, just out of the periphery, uh, of, of my vision.

Andrew Kelly:

Um, That's, that's really, you know, in, in simple terms, what, what I've tried

Andrew Kelly:

to do is, is just avoid fooling myself.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, and, and we, we can be, um, we we're all prone to, to fooling ourselves.

Andrew Kelly:

We, we can, um, We can be us ourselves the best.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, you know, if you, if you can, if you can do it to yourself, you can

Andrew Kelly:

pretty much do it to anybody else.

Andrew Kelly:

And so if you can, if you can just, um, step back and look at situations and,

Andrew Kelly:

and not participate in magical thinking, that's, that's another piece which is, you

Andrew Kelly:

know, that somehow this will all work out.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, and just, just bring a bit of rigor to it.

Andrew Kelly:

Um, and so, That's led my curiosity into, into that field and just

Andrew Kelly:

understanding how I think.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, it's interesting that, um, I, I, as you were talking

Matt Edmundson:

then, I was reminded of the, the book Jim Collins, Good To Great.

Matt Edmundson:

And he talks about, one of the things in there was the confrontation of the

Matt Edmundson:

Brutal Facts, is what he called it.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, and he was, uh, he referenced Viktor Frankl's Man's search For Meaning book.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, he talked about life in concentration camps.

Matt Edmundson:

Phenomenal book if you ever get a chance to read it.

Matt Edmundson:

And, um, Oh yeah, just eye opening.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, and this whole idea of actually the, the magical thinking is what

Matt Edmundson:

made me smile and think of this actually is this, this understanding

Matt Edmundson:

of, actually you can't do that.

Matt Edmundson:

You have to confront the brutal facts.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, and you have to, be aware of them and, and, and, uh, and deal with those.

Matt Edmundson:

So this is, um, You know, your, your sort of desire to learn.

Matt Edmundson:

The second part of that, uh, statement you put on LinkedIn was

Matt Edmundson:

in being in service of others.

Matt Edmundson:

And there seemed to be a very distinct career switch for you where you went

Matt Edmundson:

from sort of, uh, Banking, economics, advertising, all that sort of stuff

Matt Edmundson:

into what you, you call the third sector that you mean, where you've

Matt Edmundson:

now been doing, uh, that for a couple decades, fundraising, um, raising

Matt Edmundson:

in effect awareness and resources for some incredible charitable work.

Matt Edmundson:

Right.

Matt Edmundson:

And you are now with.

Matt Edmundson:

The Antarctic Science Foundation.

Matt Edmundson:

Tell us a little bit about that.

Matt Edmundson:

What does the Antarctic Science Foundation do?

Matt Edmundson:

Sounds really cool, by the way.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, you know, it's probably the best job title ever.

Matt Edmundson:

I am CEO of the Antarctic Science Foundation.

Matt Edmundson:

Just sounds really cool.

Andrew Kelly:

It's pretty amazing.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, so the Antarctic Science Foundation was set up to fund projects and, and

Andrew Kelly:

very tenacious people to go south into the most inhospitable hardest

Andrew Kelly:

environment you can possibly imagine.

Andrew Kelly:

I mean, one of the, one of the great fibs of Antarctica is you see these

Andrew Kelly:

beautiful vistas of white and blue skies, but the place is brutal.

Andrew Kelly:

When, when the first explorers went down there, you know, 200

Andrew Kelly:

years ago they called it hell.

Andrew Kelly:

No gps, no email.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, Facing 200 meter cliff faces of ice not knowing where they're gonna park.

Andrew Kelly:

The, the wooden ship that they've sailed away from, from home and family on.

Andrew Kelly:

And so the foundation backs people through our supporters, our, our amazing

Andrew Kelly:

supporters back these people to go south into this environment, to to do the

Andrew Kelly:

research, which arguably will inform.

Andrew Kelly:

The future of life on this planet.

Andrew Kelly:

Antarctica is a, a huge repository of information.

Andrew Kelly:

So, uh, in, in the ice, in the, in the species and animals that are down there

Andrew Kelly:

in, in the geology, uh, in the waters is information that we have never seen.

Andrew Kelly:

And so I often describe Antarctica as humanity's greatest library.

Andrew Kelly:

But again, we've barely read any of the books and you can only get down there, uh,

Andrew Kelly:

you know, about five months of the year.

Andrew Kelly:

Mm-hmm.

Andrew Kelly:

the rest of the time.

Andrew Kelly:

It's impossible.

Andrew Kelly:

It's, it's easy to get people on and off the International Space Station

Andrew Kelly:

most days of the year than it is to get them in and out of Antarctica.

Andrew Kelly:

And so it is, of course it is.

Andrew Kelly:

Yeah.

Andrew Kelly:

Yeah.

Andrew Kelly:

. So we are really dealing with the extreme of, of elements and, and to be able

Andrew Kelly:

to go down and do, uh, ice cores, uh, to, to, to drill down into, uh, these

Andrew Kelly:

mountains of ice and take out cores, which possess these ancient bubbles full of

Andrew Kelly:

particles and gases, which will tell us.

Andrew Kelly:

What the atmosphere and in the environment was doing million years, 2

Andrew Kelly:

million years ago, is crucial for us to understand our moment in time compared

Andrew Kelly:

to, uh, that which has come before us and for us to understand how we will

Andrew Kelly:

build strategies and mitigation for the amount of carbon that we've emitted

Andrew Kelly:

into, into the atmosphere and then if you like, rep charge back to, to,

Andrew Kelly:

to get that information and then put that into, uh, strategies in society

Andrew Kelly:

that will allow us to, to flourish.

Andrew Kelly:

Mm.

Andrew Kelly:

So that's the, that's the work of the foundation.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, we do it with the support of, uh, amazing, uh, supporters,

Andrew Kelly:

philanthropists, and donors.

Andrew Kelly:

Um, from the very big to, to the, to the moms and dads.

Andrew Kelly:

Ultimately what we are looking for are those, those answers, uh, that will,

Andrew Kelly:

that will push us forward and allow, uh, us to, to flourish on this planet.

Matt Edmundson:

That sounds fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

Is that what drew you to the Antarctica Science Foundation?

Andrew Kelly:

Absolutely.

Andrew Kelly:

Antarctica is the canary in the coal mine if you like.

Andrew Kelly:

Hmm.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, it drives our, our oceans.

Andrew Kelly:

The circumpolar current in the southern ocean drives all

Andrew Kelly:

of the oceans in the world.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, it drives, it is the engine room of, of global climate and weather systems.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, it has a tremendous effect on us here in Australia, uh, but also right

Andrew Kelly:

around the world for, uh, arguably, uh, 150 million years it's been taking,

Andrew Kelly:

uh, carbon and heat and returning.

Andrew Kelly:

That to, to the environment and cooling our planet.

Andrew Kelly:

Hmm.

Andrew Kelly:

So there really is no greater touchstone, uh, for our time and our moment as a,

Andrew Kelly:

as a human community than Antarctica.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, we have certainly influenced it when we go and look in those ice cores.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, we can, we can see the, uh, the coal being burnt in Glasgow, Dublin, Edinburgh,

Andrew Kelly:

uh, in Newcastle steelworks here in Australia, turning on and turning off.

Andrew Kelly:

We can see leaded fuel turning on and turning off an unleaded fuel coming in.

Andrew Kelly:

So it's almost like csi, Antarctica.

Andrew Kelly:

We can see the fingerprint of human interaction and, and it's that

Andrew Kelly:

knowledge, uh, which is absolutely unique to that environment, which

Andrew Kelly:

we need to, we need to grab.

Andrew Kelly:

We need to discover, we need to put the best of the best minds

Andrew Kelly:

onto it, uh, so that we can answer those questions, which are urgent.

Andrew Kelly:

They're, they're absolutely urgent.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, as we can see with the meetings that are occurring around the world,

Andrew Kelly:

uh, presently, uh, and, and talk to, as I say, Antarctica has, has the answers.

Andrew Kelly:

We just need to ask the questions.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, that's amazing.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, uh, I find the whole thing down there fascinating.

Matt Edmundson:

I mean, I, I have to be honest connecting with you.

Matt Edmundson:

I obviously understand it a little bit more than what I did.

Matt Edmundson:

So, um, if you like to know more about the Antarctica Science

Matt Edmundson:

Foundation, the work that's going on there, why it's so important.

Matt Edmundson:

Head over to Antarctica Science Foundation, www.asf.aq.

Matt Edmundson:

I dunno what the AQ standards for, an unusual domain, but I,

Matt Edmundson:

anyway, that is the domain asf.aq.

Andrew Kelly:

That's um, The, the domain for Antarctica.

Matt Edmundson:

Is it?

Matt Edmundson:

Well, there you go.

Matt Edmundson:

I figured it.

Matt Edmundson:

It must have been something like that.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, the, uh, , I can't imagine there's that many people on Antarctica

Matt Edmundson:

searching for Antarctica domains.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, , matt.aq might actually still be.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, so you've been doing that for a couple years, right?

Matt Edmundson:

So, um, here you are sitting in Sydney, which in my head is probably

Matt Edmundson:

one of the warmest places on the planet doing work in probably what

Matt Edmundson:

is the coldest place on the planet.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, and you, you, you've been raising funds and awareness.

Matt Edmundson:

You told me actually a story, uh, Andrew, which really intrigued

Matt Edmundson:

me about a lady who came to the, the website and left a donation.

Matt Edmundson:

I couldn't remember what it was like 70 bucks.

Matt Edmundson:

It was a small donation.

Matt Edmundson:

You wrote to her and she left the donation on behalf of somebody else.

Matt Edmundson:

Do you know the, do you remember the story that I'm talking about?

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah,

Andrew Kelly:

so, uh, the, there was a lady who, uh, left the donation and

Andrew Kelly:

it was in honor of one of her great friends, and I sent a note as I do for,

Andrew Kelly:

for new donations and noticed that she was from the US and asked her, Firstly,

Andrew Kelly:

thanked her for the donation and asked her, um, how she'd come to hear about

Andrew Kelly:

the Antarctic Science Foundation.

Andrew Kelly:

And she said, oh, uh, I, my best friend is, um, is a, a huge fan of

Andrew Kelly:

Antarctica and I'm making this donation on, in honor of his 90th birthday,

Andrew Kelly:

uh, which was in a few days time.

Andrew Kelly:

It turned out that he'd been in Operation Deep Freeze in the,

Andrew Kelly:

the US program in the fifties.

Andrew Kelly:

Mm-hmm.

Andrew Kelly:

And such was the impact of his time in Antarctica, uh, that he, I suppose,

Andrew Kelly:

much like my cycling has taken that experience and it has informed the rest

Andrew Kelly:

of his life and he still gives a, a learning in the community program at

Andrew Kelly:

Oregon State University, even in his nineties, and uses his experience in

Andrew Kelly:

Antarctica as the cornerstone of, of that, that program that he still delivers.

Matt Edmundson:

Mm, fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

How it all sort of brings all of this together.

Matt Edmundson:

So as we sort of, uh, finish out the show, I, I understand I suppose

Matt Edmundson:

areas where you've had to push.

Matt Edmundson:

I understand you.

Matt Edmundson:

In terms of how you fill your tank, whether it's on your bike, reading a

Matt Edmundson:

book, or just being around people, um, and being intensely curious, what's

Matt Edmundson:

your hope for the future, Andrew?

Matt Edmundson:

What do you, what do you wanna be, uh, involved?

Matt Edmundson:

What do you see?

Matt Edmundson:

What, what do you wanna grow into?

Matt Edmundson:

What do you wanna be more of those kind of questions.

Matt Edmundson:

What, what, what, 3, 4, 5 years' time?

Matt Edmundson:

What are we, what are we hoping?

Andrew Kelly:

Well, the, the thing I hope for most and, and

Andrew Kelly:

work for is, is to have energy.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, I I think that energy, personal energy is, is the, the

Andrew Kelly:

currency of getting anything done and, and having a, a good life.

Andrew Kelly:

And, and you ask most people, um, as they get older, they just say,

Andrew Kelly:

oh, I just wish I had more energy.

Andrew Kelly:

So, uh, as I get older, I, I really focus on that and, and keep a close

Andrew Kelly:

eye on it because, um, I'm a dad, um, which is a young man's sport.

Andrew Kelly:

They tell me.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, so I've gotta, I've gotta keep up with my daughter and, and be a,

Andrew Kelly:

you know, vibrant dad and husband.

Andrew Kelly:

Um, and also to give as much as I can, uh, in, in my work.

Andrew Kelly:

And when you say 3, 4, 5 years time, uh, For Antarctica and, and

Andrew Kelly:

for humanity we are really facing some, some serious questions over,

Andrew Kelly:

over the next, uh, five to 10 years.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, and what we do in that time period will have, um, serious

Andrew Kelly:

knock on effects for the future.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, we can't do it individually.

Andrew Kelly:

We're going to all have to do it together, and, and that is as it should be.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, so.

Andrew Kelly:

I'm focused personally on, on making sure I've got the energy, uh, to do the work

Andrew Kelly:

and, uh, and then with that energy to be able to do it as best as I possibly can.

Matt Edmundson:

Mm oh, fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

Outside of, um, cycling and reading, uh, how, how do you maintain or build energy?

Matt Edmundson:

What are some of your insider secrets?

Andrew Kelly:

You've gotta keep moving.

Andrew Kelly:

So the, the exercise is, is crucial.

Andrew Kelly:

And also I think it's mindset as well.

Andrew Kelly:

So making sure that, um, I, I try not to fixate on, on things too much.

Andrew Kelly:

That's, that's easier said than done.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, but trying to keep, uh, that mental balance, uh, where there's variation

Andrew Kelly:

between doing the work but also spending time reading, uh, spending time in

Andrew Kelly:

conversation with, uh, intelligent and attractive people like you, Matt.

Matt Edmundson:

Sorry I shouldn't laugh.

Andrew Kelly:

But conversations a terrific, uh, a terrific energy builder.

Andrew Kelly:

In fact, I think it's one of the, one of the great ones because it's, it's, again,

Andrew Kelly:

it's that sharing that communion between two or more people where you, you're

Andrew Kelly:

sharing ideas, you, you're comparing experiences, um, letting curiosity run.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, and, and I find that even when I'm at, at my most tired, uh, a good conversation,

Andrew Kelly:

uh, I, I've always got energy for that.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, no, true.

Matt Edmundson:

It's very, very true.

Matt Edmundson:

It's why when, uh, you, you see friends you've not seen for a while, you're quite

Matt Edmundson:

happy to stay up until two o'clock in the morning just chatting away and it,

Matt Edmundson:

this is just a beautiful thing, right?

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

No, I've been Absolutely, absolutely.

Matt Edmundson:

So, Andrew penultimate question.

Matt Edmundson:

As you know, this show is sponsored by Aurion Media, which specializes in

Matt Edmundson:

helping interesting, intelligent, and good looking people like yourself,

Matt Edmundson:

uh, set up and run their own podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

Maybe that's what we should call the show from now on.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, so, um, you've obviously, you've been on a lot of podcasts,

Matt Edmundson:

but let's assume you've got your own podcast, The Andrew Kelly show.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, I'm really curious to know who your guests would be.

Matt Edmundson:

Who would you want to have on the show, the people that have impacted

Matt Edmundson:

your life, or people that you think could have the best impact on what's

Matt Edmundson:

going done in on down in Antarctica?

Matt Edmundson:

Who'd be on the show and why?

Andrew Kelly:

Well, I mean, my, my first top of the list would be my

Andrew Kelly:

dad who passed away 20 years ago.

Andrew Kelly:

If I could have anyone on the show.

Andrew Kelly:

Um, absolutely.

Andrew Kelly:

Yeah, absolutely.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, that, that's a, that's a great question, Matt.

Andrew Kelly:

There's, there's so many scientists that are doing great

Andrew Kelly:

work that are virtually unknown.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, any one of those scientists, uh, to have on, on a podcast would be fantastic.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, not only to give them a platform, but also to show, uh, you know,

Andrew Kelly:

wider community, uh, the, the work that's being done in, um, in

Andrew Kelly:

Antarctica, in, in all of our names.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, so yeah, certainly some of.

Andrew Kelly:

Some of the scientists that I work with who have, uh, a tremendous sense of

Andrew Kelly:

humor, an amazing sense of application, and again, that tenaciousness, that,

Andrew Kelly:

that, um, sends them back down to the icy continent when, uh, it's, it's a

Andrew Kelly:

pretty tough, pretty tough environment.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

I dunno if there's a Netflix streaming service on Antarctica.

Matt Edmundson:

So I, I It's one of those, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

It's one of those.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm curious, why would you, if you don't mind me asking, why would

Matt Edmundson:

you have your dad back on the show?

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, he was, you know Mark Twain said when I was, when I

Andrew Kelly:

was 17, I thought my dad was an idiot.

Andrew Kelly:

When I was 25.

Andrew Kelly:

I was amazed at how much he'd learned in eight years.

Andrew Kelly:

Oh, that's brilliant.

Andrew Kelly:

You know, and I, I just look back at my dad and just amazed

Andrew Kelly:

at the wisdom that he had.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, you know, he grew up in Nottingham.

Andrew Kelly:

He was a, he was a Nottingham boy.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, left school when at the age of, uh, you know, the equivalent of year six.

Andrew Kelly:

Um, and, you know, had, had, had businesses, raised a big family.

Andrew Kelly:

Um, and, and I think that the quality that I, I love most about him is that he

Andrew Kelly:

was always open to good things happening.

Andrew Kelly:

Mm-hmm.

Andrew Kelly:

. He never fretted about a car parking spot.

Andrew Kelly:

Um, one would always materialize cuz he always figured one would.

Andrew Kelly:

Um, but he was open to having conversations.

Andrew Kelly:

Um, he always, he always encouraged us to ask people, uh, how they'd been

Andrew Kelly:

successful, how have they done things.

Andrew Kelly:

And that's been an amazing door opener for me.

Andrew Kelly:

Just to know that you can drop an email to an author, or anybody.

Andrew Kelly:

And most of the time they, they reply and, and the conversations that I've had

Andrew Kelly:

with the great and the good is, you know, quite remarkable and I owe that to my dad.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

I like your Mark Twain quote as well.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm gonna put that on a piece of paper and give it to my kids.

Matt Edmundson:

Wonder if it will help them.

Matt Edmundson:

Might help me, I dunno.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, Andrew, listen, it's been a great conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

I've loved every minute.

Matt Edmundson:

How do people reach you?

Matt Edmundson:

How do they connect with you if they want to do that?

Matt Edmundson:

How do they find out more about the Anttarctic Science Foundation,

Matt Edmundson:

all of that sort of stuff.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, certainly connect with me on LinkedIn, Andrew J.

Andrew Kelly:

Kelly.

Andrew Kelly:

Uh, you'll find me there, uh, on LinkedIn.

Andrew Kelly:

And as you said, the Antarctic Science Foundation website is asf.aq.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, definitely check those out.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, we will link to Andrew's info in the show notes, uh, which as I've said,

Matt Edmundson:

you can get it for free along with the transcript at pushtobemore.com

Matt Edmundson:

or direct to your inbox if you've signed up for our newsletter.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, Andrew, thank you so much Bud, for joining me.

Matt Edmundson:

Thoroughly enjoyed the conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

Thank you for the work that you do down in Antarctica as well

Matt Edmundson:

with the, with the foundation.

Matt Edmundson:

Appreciate you looking out for us.

Matt Edmundson:

And, um, honestly, mate, it's uh, it's been an absolute joy and a privilege.

Andrew Kelly:

Thanks, Matt.

Andrew Kelly:

I've, I've really enjoyed it.

Andrew Kelly:

Thanks for the invitation.

Matt Edmundson:

Oh, it's been great.

Matt Edmundson:

What a great conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

Huge thanks again to Andrew for joining me today.

Matt Edmundson:

And also don't forget today's show sponsor Aurion media.

Matt Edmundson:

If you are wondering if podcasting is a good marketing strategy for your business.

Matt Edmundson:

Check out their website cause I'm convinced it will be.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, aurionmedia.com.

Matt Edmundson:

That's aurionmedia.com.

Matt Edmundson:

We will, of course, link to Aurion, uh, along with, uh, a link to the Antarctic

Matt Edmundson:

Science Foundation, along with the link to Andrews, uh, LinkedIn profile, all of that

Matt Edmundson:

sort of stuff, uh, on our website too.

Matt Edmundson:

pushtobemore.com.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, and you can find all of this information there.

Matt Edmundson:

Be sure to follow push to be more wherever you get your podcast from

Matt Edmundson:

because we've got some more fantastic conversations lined up and I don't

Matt Edmundson:

want you to miss any of them.

Matt Edmundson:

And in case no one has told you yet today, uh, dear listener,

Matt Edmundson:

uh, let me be the first.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, you are awesome.

Matt Edmundson:

Yes you are.

Matt Edmundson:

It's just a burden you have to bear and uh, Andrew has to bear it.

Matt Edmundson:

I have to bear it.

Matt Edmundson:

You've gotta bear it too.

Matt Edmundson:

We're awesome people.

Matt Edmundson:

So Push To Be More is produced by Aurion Media.

Matt Edmundson:

You can find our entire archive of episodes on your favorite podcast app.

Matt Edmundson:

The team that makes this show possible is Sadaf Beynon, Josh Catchpole,

Matt Edmundson:

Estella Robin and Tim Johnson.

Matt Edmundson:

Our theme music was written by Josh Edmundson, and as I mentioned, if you

Matt Edmundson:

would like to read the transcript or show notes, head over to the website,

Matt Edmundson:

pushtobemore.com where coincidentally, you can also sign up for our weekly

Matt Edmundson:

newsletter and get all of this good stuff direct to your inbox, totally free.

Matt Edmundson:

So that's it from me.

Matt Edmundson:

That's it from Andrew.

Matt Edmundson:

Thank you so much for joining us.

Matt Edmundson:

Have a fantastic week.

Matt Edmundson:

I'll see you next time.

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