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Being able to navigate
is an extraordinary gift,
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and there is nothing like it in the world.
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I get no more sense of satisfaction
greater than leaving a port
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and knowing that I can get
my team and my boat
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safely from that port to another port,
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maybe three, four, five,
six thousand miles away.
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Being at sea, for me, is ...
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it's total freedom,
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and it is the ultimate
opportunity to be you,
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because you can't be anything else.
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You are naked in front
of your peers on a boat.
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It is a small area.
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Maiden is 58 feet long.
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There's 12 women in a 58-foot boat.
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I mean, you are literally
up against each other,
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and so you have to be you.
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The greatest moment
for me when I'm sailing
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is the moment that the land disappears.
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It's an indescribable moment of --
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(Gasps)
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adventure and no turning back,
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and just you and the boat
and the elements.
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I wish everyone could experience
this at least once in their lives.
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The further you get away from land,
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the more you kind of fit into yourself.
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It is you,
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how do we get to the next place,
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how do we stay alive,
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how do we look after each other
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and what do we do
to get to the other side.
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So the question I get asked
the most when I go and do talks
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is "How do you become
an ocean-racing sailor?"
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And that's a really good question.
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And I've always wanted
to say "I had a vision,
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which became a dream,
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which became an obsession,"
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but, of course, life's not like that,
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and one thing I'm really anxious
for people to know about me
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is that my life hasn't gone from A to B --
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because how many people can say
their lives just go from A to B;
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they think, "I'm going to do this,"
and they go and do it?
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So I tell the truth.
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And the truth is that I was expelled
from school when I was 15 years old
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and my long-suffering headmaster
sent a long-suffering note
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to my long-suffering mother,
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basically saying that if Tracy
darkens these doors of the school again,
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then we will call the police.
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And my mum took me and she said,
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"Darling, education is not for everyone."
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And then she gave me the best
piece of advice anyone has ever given me.
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She said, "Every single one of us
is good at something,
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you just have to go and find
what that is."
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And at the age of 16, she let me
go backpacking off to Greece.
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I ended up working on boats,
which was OK --
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17 years old, didn't really know
what I wanted to do,
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kind of going with the flow.
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And then on my second transatlantic,
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my skipper said to me, "Can you navigate?"
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And I said, "Of course I can't navigate,
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I was expelled before long division."
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And he said, "Don't you think
you should be able to navigate?
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What happens if I fall over the side?
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Stop being a bystander in your own life,
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stop looking at what you're doing
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and start taking part."
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This day, for me, was the day
that my whole life started.
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I learned to navigate in two days --
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and this is someone who hates numbers
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and sees them as hieroglyphics.
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It opened up avenues and opportunities
to me that I could never have imagined.
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I actually managed to get a ride
on a Whitbread Round the World Race boat.
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It was with 17 South African men and me.
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I was 21 years old,
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and it was the longest
nine months of my life.
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But I went as a cook,
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I managed to survive until the end,
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and when I got to end of this race,
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I realized that there were
230 crew in this race,
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and three women,
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and I was one of them.
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And I'm a lousy cook.
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I'm a really good navigator.
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I think the second most profound
thought in my entire life was:
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"No man is ever going to allow me
to be a navigator on their boat, ever."
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And that is still the case today.
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In 35 years of the Whitbread,
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there's only been two female navigators
that haven't been on an all-female cruise,
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and that's how Maiden was born.
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That was the moment I thought,
"I've got something to fight for."
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And I had no idea
that I wanted to have this fight,
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and it was something that I took to
like a duck to water.
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I discovered things about myself
that I had no idea existed.
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I discovered I had a fighting spirit,
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I discovered I was competitive --
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never knew that before --
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and I discovered my second passion,
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which was equality.
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I couldn't let this one lie.
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And it became not just about me
wanting to navigate on a boat
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and having to put my own crew together
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and my own team,
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raise my own money, find my own boat,
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so that I could be navigator.
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This was about women everywhere.
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And this was when I realized
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that this was probably what I was going
to spend the rest of my life doing.
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It took ages for us to find the money
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to do the 1989 Whitbread
Round the World Race.
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And as we looked at all the big,
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multimillion pound,
all-male projects around us,
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with their brand-new shiny boats
designed for the race,
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we realized this was not going to be us.
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We had to make this up as we went along.
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No one had enough faith in us
to give us this kind of money.
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So I mortgaged my house
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and we found an old wreck with a pedigree,
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an old Whitbread boat --
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it had already been
around the world twice --
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in South Africa.
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We somehow persuaded
some guy to put it on a ship
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and bring it back to the UK for us.
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The girls were horrified
at the state of the boat.
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We got a free place in a yard.
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We got her up on the hard
and we redesigned her,
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we ripped her apart,
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we did all the work ourselves.
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It was the first time that anyone
had ever seen women in a shipyard,
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so that was quite entertaining.
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Every morning when we would walk in,
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everyone would just gawk at us.
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But it also had its advantages,
because everyone was so helpful.
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We were such a novelty.
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You know, we got given
a generator, an engine --
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"Do you want this old rope?"
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"Yep."
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"Old sails?"
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"Yep, we'll have those."
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So we really made it up as we went along.
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And I think, actually,
one of the huge advantages we had was,
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you know, there was no preconceived idea
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about how an all-female crew
would sail around the world.
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So whatever we did was OK.
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And what it also did
was it drew people to it.
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Not just women --
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men, anyone who'd ever been told,
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"You can't do something
because you're not good enough" --
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the right gender or right race
or right color, or whatever.
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Maiden became a passion.
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And it was hard to raise the money --
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hundreds of companies wouldn't sponsor us.
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They told us that we couldn't do it,
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people thought we were going to die ...
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You know, guys would literally
come up to me and say,
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"You're going to die."
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I'd think, "Well, OK,
that's my business, it's not yours."
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In the end, King Hussein of Jordan
sponsored Maiden,
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and that was an amazing thing --
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way ahead of his time, all about equality.
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We sailed around the world
with a message of peace and equality.
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We were the only boat in the race
with a message of any kind.
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We won two legs of the Whitbread --
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two of the most difficult legs --
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and we came second overall.
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And that is still the best result
for a British boat since 1977.
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It annoyed a lot of people.
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And I think what it did at the time --
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we didn't realize.
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You know, we crossed the finishing line,
this incredible finish --
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600 boats sailing up the Solent with us;
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50,000 people in Ocean Village
chanting "Maiden, Maiden" as we sailed in.
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And so we knew we'd done something
that we wanted to do
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and we hoped we'd achieved something good,
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but we had no idea at the time
how many women's lives we changed.
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The Southern Ocean is my favorite ocean.
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Each ocean has a character.
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So the North Atlantic is a yomping ocean.
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It's a jolly, go-for-it,
heave-ho type of --
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have-fun type of ocean.
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The Southern Ocean
is a deadly serious ocean.
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And you know the moment
when you cross into the Southern Ocean --
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the latitude and longitude --
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you know when you're there,
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the waves have been building,
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they start getting
big whitecaps on the top,
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it becomes really gray,
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you start to get sensory deprivation.
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It is very focused
on who you are and what you are
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with this massive wilderness around you.
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It is empty.
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It is so big and so empty.
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You see albatrosses
swirling around the boat.
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It takes about four days
to sail through their territory,
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so you have the same
albatrosses for four days.
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And they find us quite a novelty,
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so they literally windsurf off the wind
that comes off the mainsail
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and they hang behind the boat,
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and you feel this presence behind you,
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and you turn around,
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and it's this albatross
just looking at you.
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We sold Maiden at the end of the race --
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we still had no money.
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And five years ago, we found her,
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at the same time
as a film director decided
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he wanted to make
a documentary about Maiden.
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We found Maiden,
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she burst back into my life
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and reminded me a lot of things
I had forgotten, actually,
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over the years,
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about following my heart and my gut
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and really being part of the universe.
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And everything I find important in life,
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Maiden has given back to me.
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Again, we rescued her --
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we did a Crowdfunder --
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we rescued her from the Seychelles.
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Princess Haya, King Hussein's daughter,
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funded the shipping back to the UK
and then the restoration.
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All the original crew were involved.
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We put the original team back together.
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And then we decided,
what are we going to do with Maiden?
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And this, for me,
really was the moment of my life
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where I looked back
on every single thing that I'd done --
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every project, every feeling,
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every passion,
every battle, every fight --
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and I decided that I wanted Maiden
to continue that fight
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for the next generation.
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Maiden is sailing around the world
on a five-year world tour.
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We are engaging with thousands
of girls all over the world.
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We are supporting community programs
that get girls into education.
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Education doesn't just mean
sitting in a classroom.
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This, for me, is about teaching girls
you don't have to look a certain way,
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you don't have to feel a certain way,
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you don't have to behave a certain way.
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You can be successful,
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you can follow your dreams
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and you can fight for them.
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Life doesn't go from A to B.
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It's messy.
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My life has been a mess
from beginning to end,
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but somehow I've got to where we're going.
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The future for us
and Maiden looks amazing.
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And for me,
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it is all about closing the circle.
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It's about closing the circle with Maiden
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and using her to tell girls
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that if just one person believes in you,
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you can do anything.