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Monday, December 31, 2012

How to Decide Between Two Equally Good Things


How to Make a Big Decision

There's a book called, "The Paradox of Choice," that describes how we are often paralyzed by all of the options we have in life. There are so many choices that we often decide not to make one at all! But we must make big decisions. And today, guest author Mark Ford shows us how.

Craig Ballantyne

“Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life you have imagined.” – Henry David Thoreau

 

By Mark Ford

Number Three Son had narrowed down his summer internship choices to two. But he was stuck. Where should he go? The office in Mumbai or the one in Melbourne?

Each had its benefits and drawbacks. India was more exotic, but Australia was more familiar. India might offer him more challenges, but Australia would give him a more personalized mentorship. India had more resources, but Australia was focused on what he wanted to do.

How do you choose between two good options when they are so evenly balanced?

Number Three Son asked for advice. His mother said one thing. His aunt said another. His friends were equally divided.

I was sitting on the porch, enjoying a Padron Aniversario 1964 (Natural) when he put the question to me.

“This is driving me nuts,” he said. “How do I decide?”

“Why don’t you flip a coin?” I suggested.

“Flip a coin? Is that how you make your important decisions?”

“Not always. But sometimes.” I said.

“I can’t believe that.”

I told him the story about how I got into the direct-marketing business. If you are a long-time ETR reader, you may have heard it before, so I’ll retell it very quickly.

It was 1981. I was sitting on a beach in Key Largo, watching jet skiers cutting back and forth on the Gulf’s crystal blue water.

Next to me sat Tom. Tom’s hair curled at his shoulders. He was smoking what was then called a “doobie.” Tom’s job was to put people on the jet skis and then take them off. That was it. And it appeared to be about all he was capable of doing.

I had just been offered three great job opportunities. A desk position at the Miami Herald, a reporting job at the St. Petersburg Times, and an editorial management slot with a newsletter publisher in Boca Raton. In my mind’s eye, I could see three career paths ahead of me: publisher, journalist, or marketing maven. All three appealed to me. I couldn’t choose.

So I decided to leave it up to Tom. I explained the jobs, the benefits, the drawbacks, and my thoughts about where they could lead me. Tom listened semi-attentively. Then, when I had told him everything there was to tell – all the details and all the nuances – I put my hand on his bronzed shoulder and said, “What should I do, Tom? Which way should I go?”

He took a what-we-then-called “toke” from his doobie, exhaled contentedly, and with a glassy-eyed gaze said, “Boca. Go Boca, man.”

That, in fact, is exactly what I did. I took the Boca job and things turned out very nicely.

Just hours before Number Three Son had tracked me down on the porch, MaryEllen Tribby and I had spent some time with Brian Andreas, an ETR reader and an attendee at our business-building boot camp. In describing his amazing success in business, Brian said, “Everybody thinks that you can go through life making logical decisions based on factual input. One logical decision after another. But when I think about my career, it is clear that many of the most important directions I took were impulsive or arbitrary. Life doesn’t unroll in a straight line. It’s more complicated than that.”

I thought about The Black Swan, the best-selling book by Nicholas Taleb that made a similar point. Life’s most critical events, Taleb argued, cannot be predicted.

Those thoughts were in my head when I suggested to Number Three Son that he flip a coin. Both opportunities were likely to be very good to him. But it was impossible to predict how they might develop and what benefits they would provide.

I pointed out that asking Tom to make my decision back in 1981 was the equivalent of flipping a three-sided coin. I wasn’t relying on Tom’s wisdom. I was simply using him to arbitrarily pick one of three good choices. What I did with those opportunities and what I got from them would depend on my actions later on.
So Number Three Son went into his room and put on some music.

And when he was ready, he flipped a coin.

“What did the coin tell you?” I asked.

“It said to go to Australia.”

“And how do you feel about that?”

“I feel good, actually.”

“That’s great,” I said. “So now you’ve decided. Now you can go forward and make something of that opportunity. It’s entirely up to you.”

I didn’t tell him that if the coin toss had made him feel bad I would have told him to ignore it and go to India. That’s one useful outcome of making decisions arbitrarily. Sometimes they will show you how you really feel about the choices you’re considering.

This happened to me about eight months ago. The stock market had me worried, and I was thinking about pulling out all my money and putting it into cash. I called up one of the advisors I most respect and asked him what I should do. He made a very cogent argument for staying in the market. I thanked him for his advice, hung up the phone, and sold my stocks. Not because I don’t trust him. I do. But because his advice forced me to reckon with what my gut was telling me. And my gut was telling me to get out.

We store our emotional intelligence in our limbic brain. We do our rational thinking in our neocortical brain. The two are connected, but they don’t always communicate well with one another.

Sometimes you need a coin toss to help you know what your limbic brain wants you to do.

For Number Three Son, his limbic brain had already told him to go to Australia. That’s why he felt good when the coin toss came up Australia.

Just to be clear – I am not suggesting that all decisions should be made by tossing coins. I don’t believe that at all. Quite the opposite, I believe we should use our rational faculties to analyze problems, to break them down into smaller issues and figure them out. But when the rational answers are in, you must compare them to your gut instinct.

Good decisions are made when both parts of your brain are saying the same thing. And when your rational mind tells you that both options are good and you are not sure what your limbic brain is saying, then an arbitrary decision-making process like flipping a coin can be very helpful.

Sunday, December 30, 2012

Give Yourself Thirty Minutes


Between now and 5pm on New Year's Day I want you to carve out at least 30 minutes of self-reflection. Look back on the bottlenecks that remain in your life. What can you do to overcome them? And also look back on your victories from 2012. What did you achieve and how can you have more success stories like those? And notice that the answers will come only from yourself. You cannot rely on the government or anyone else. You can only depend on the Person of the Year for 2013.

Craig Ballantyne

Are you doing everything you can with all that you have been given?


Person of the Year 2013

By Craig Ballantyne

I woke up to paradise. It was a beautiful star-filled sky (it was 4:51 a.m. after all), there was a warm sea breeze, the sound of waves crashing into the beach was all around, and I could smell the Pacific Ocean's saltwater.

Yet, I felt irritable and stressed in paradise. As I meandered about before my morning writing ritual, my mind weakly wanted to lay the blame for this mood on others.

"Grrr, Matt shouldn't have convinced me to stay up so late drinking Coronas beside the beach," was my first thought.

"If only the seminar wouldn't have gone on so long I could have finished my email newsletters earlier last night," I grumbled.

On and on the excuses went as I tried to immerse myself in my writing. But each of my excuses were brittle, easily broken and discarded by reality.

My foul mindset, my late rising, and my inability to focus on my work, all of these were my fault. The situation was my responsibility. I had gotten myself into this trouble and I was also the only person who could get me out of it.

This situation was no different from any of the other mistakes I have made in life. It was my fault in elementary school when my friends and I were caught throwing snowballs and spent the afternoon in the principal's office. It was my fault each time I was late for my after school job in high school. It my fault, and my fault alone, for losing muscle and gaining ten pounds of fat during my first - sedentary - semester at college. All of these were my responsibility and consequences of my actions.

As this 'right thinking' began to slowly permeate my brain, my mood began to improve. After all, Rule #8 on my list of the 12 Rules I Live By states:

"Everything that happens to me - good and bad - is my personal responsibility. I blame no one but myself. These are the choices I've made - this is the life I'm living. I will accept the consequences of my actions."

Accepting that the fault was no one's but my own was the start towards changing my mood and becoming more productive. I also knew that the quickest way out of this predicament was to get some exercise. That always works to boost my mood and help with my creativity. And so I walked from my oceanfront condo up to the gym and jumped into a workout that fixed my mood and brought me this message to share with you today.

The bottom line is that solving my problem was my responsibility. And if I may give you some tough love, the truth is that solving all of your problems is entirely your responsibility as well.

As Donald Trump once said, "You can't rely on anyone for anything."

We can only rely on ourselves to improve our situation in life. You must take personal responsibility for your situation and use self-reliance to improve the situation.

The dictionary definition of self-reliance is the "Reliance on one's own capabilities, judgment, or resources; independence." That is far more powerful than being dependent, which is defined as, "Relying on or requiring the aid of another for support," "Subordination to someone or something," "The state of being controlled by something else," or "A compulsive or chronic need."

Each of these definitions demonstrates that without personal responsibility and self-reliance that you will remain a prisoner, trapped by the inability to take control of your life. Dependence leads to a miserable, helpless existence.

Like it or not, if you are in debt, struggling with your business, your health, or your personal relationships, no one else is going to come along and fix that for you. It is entirely up to you, and you only, to make the changes in your life to improve the situation.

You must, "Identify and replace all external authorities with internal strength and competence. Take full control of, and responsibility for, your conscious mind and every aspect of your life," says Kekich Credo #30.

While Early to Rise teaches and preaches the need for and benefits of finding positive social support, networking with like-minded people, and attending educational seminars, at the end of the day it's your decision to follow through on all of this. It is up to YOU and you alone to change your life.

No one else can do it for you. No one else can show up at your house and eat less and move more for you if you want to lose weight. No one else can stop you from watching television and to spend that time on creating a second income instead. No one else can say the words, "I love you" or "I forgive you" to mend the important relationships in your life.

Wherever you are in life, there is only one person who got you into this and only one person can get you out - and that's you. You are the only person who can set you free by taking personal responsibility and choosing the path of self-reliance.

No matter how tough a position you feel you might be in, there's no one you can count on to change your life for you.

As Dan Kennedy once said when explaining what separates the best from the rest, "To move forward you must give up your "story" - whether it is excuses about your childhood, lack of education, your bad "luck", your unsupportive family, your low metabolism, where you live, etc."

Ouch. That's tough. And there's no doubt today's message is tough love, but make no mistake, it IS written with love. It's just happens to be tough love because sometimes we all need a kick in the pants to change our ways.

I promise you, when you commit to taking personal responsibility for your status in life, and turn to self-reliance to change your situation and to no longer depend on others to rescue you from your mistakes, only then will you have true freedom and control over your future.

"That which is most satisfying is that which is earned. Anything received free of charge is seldom valued. You can't get something for (from) nothing. The price is too high." - Kekich Credo #38
Your success depends on the most important person in the world - You. That's why YOU will be the Person of the Year in 2013.

When You Feel Like Quitting

"Your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. And the only way to do great work is to love what you do. If you haven't found it yet, keep looking, and don't settle. As with all matters of the heart,...you'll know when you find it." -- Steve Jobs




By Craig Ballantyne

Recently I had a coaching call with one of my Executive clients. We'll call my client, "D." They run a $20 million dollar per year business that has helped hundreds of thousands of people change their lives for the better, and yet D was overwhelmed, stressed out, and ready to give up.

And even though we don't have the exact same problems as someone running a $20 million dollar business, we know the feeling of being stretched beyond capacity.

D thought it would be easier if they could just run away. To give up the responsibilities that they now had that had taken them away from what they loved doing in the first place. D would be free of the never-ending deadlines and the constant barrage of requests from people that wanted to take some of their time, energy and resources.

D wanted freedom from managing people, supervising large projects, or running the household staff. It was all becoming too much. In fact, D's exact quote was...

"Sometimes Craig, I think about shutting the business down, selling our house, and buying a simple place in the countryside - you can buy a beautiful piece of property for a modest amount of money in my state - and just living off our savings until I eventually have to do something again."

I smiled.

You know how many times I think something along the same lines?

Just the other day, I was visiting my old family farm after a couple of days of intense filming of my latest workout programs. The weather was uncharacteristically warm for mid-November, and it was perfect for walking through the recently harvested cornfields. It was peaceful, very peaceful. Far from the hustle and bustle of Toronto with the 4 a.m. car alarms, 24-7 traffic, late-night yelling drunks, and insane drivers (and all that in one of the nicer areas of the big city).

As I was packed up old Bally the Dog in the back seat of my rental car to bring him back to the big city, I thought to myself, "What's the worst case scenario in my life? What if I didn't go back?"

Let's say my business blew up.

Let's imagine that I lost all my money, all of my relationships, all my business contacts and even my email list.

What would happen if I were down and out and alone?

Where would I be?

The answer came to me:

I'd end up living in a simple home in the beautiful countryside, with space for the dog to run around, and all the time in the world to read the dozens of books I've ordered from Amazon that I currently have no time to read.

Essentially, I'd be living out high school again. And that wasn't all that bad.

WHOOOOSH.

Away went the stress because my worse case scenario is the best case scenario for 95% of the world's population (if not more).

As is yours.

But that's not the lesson...

The BIG lesson is that almost everyone thinks of quitting sometimes.

Over a year ago I wrote an article about my business failures, and about how Donald Trump was once not only broke, but in debt to the tune of billions of dollars.

One of my friends, one of the most successful people I know, responded to the article and thanked me for writing it. I didn't even know he was on my email list, but he said he was getting sick of certain negative aspects of his business, and thought - briefly - of instituting a scorched-earth strategy, shutting his business down, and retiring to ski all day.

But as he read in my email, despite the extremely negative circumstances, Trump didn't quit. And so neither did my friend.

However, he DID think about it. We all do. We all go through tough times.

And so we must all crush that voice of resistance in our minds.

Now I'll be the first to admit, the voice of resistance is always around for me. As it is for my client, D. We both come from very humble backgrounds and we now make more in weeks than our parents did in a year. When you accomplish that, you'll have days where you'll think, "That's enough."

But you can't quit like that because there is too much work to do, too many other people to help, to many personal revolutions to start. So on our coaching call we worked through D's problems, and I always work through mine on my own or with the help of ETR Publisher, Matt Smith.

We all must choose to solve these problems because we've committed to "Turning Pro," as Steven Pressfield has told us to do in his book of the same name. And we follow his advice and continue to fight The Resistance every day.

Sure, both D and I would love to retire to our country retreats, and write about whatever topic we want to whenever we want to, without the stress of deadlines or constant nagging from editors or partners.

We would feel like we were free...

...but the feeling would not last.

Because soon we'd realize that what we've gained in freedom, we've lost in value and worth. What we do - and by we I mean everyone anywhere struggling to build a business or career that adds value to the world - is important to others.

It's not about us.

It's about delivering hope, relief, and love to the people that look to us to end REAL problems. Whether your daily value is added to people trying to get out of debt, raise better children, stop smoking, lose weight, organize their life, or be a better person in any form, delivering your information and adding value to the world is more important than our selfish desire to run away from the stress.

So no matter what business obstacle has gotten you down, no matter what seemingly insurmountable hurdle is in your way, and no matter how frustrated you might be with the snail's pace of progress; remember that this is not about you and your worries, it's about fixing other people's problems.

When you realize that, you'll be energized. Because one thankful email or one kind Facebook comment that says, "Hey, thanks for your help, I couldn't have done it without you," will be enough to keep you going through the deepest dip.

And when you keep going, you'll keep helping. As you help, you'll grow and become better. As you get better, you'll help more people. As you help more people, you'll hear more positive feedback. And this fuels you through the dips, through the hard times, and through the slow grinds.

Never stop, never give up, never run away and never give in to The Resistance.

We all go through tough times. But we all get through it with social support, wisdom from our mentors, and mostly, by taking action.

"Do the work," as Steven Pressfield says, no matter how tough the work is.

It's what really matters in the end.

Friday, December 28, 2012

Happy New Year!!!


Before you  skip, dive, dance,
meditate, tippy toe or "Yeehah!" into a brand New year, don't be so quick to turn your back on 2012 without an honouree farewell, a taking stock and reaping of the gifts, love, strengths, growth, learning, healing, accomplishments, blessings, and so on.

Also to more fully accept, forgive and let go of any of the rough or painful patches, pitfalls and experiences, which can also hold gifts, whether you are aware of them presently or not.

How I Conquered My Biggest Retirement Fear

I'm one of those folks that will likely not ever retire - voluntarily, but still, I thank my mother for getting me started on saving my money from before I was 12 years old. And while the concept of retirement might be foreign to me, it's not for many ETR readers. Today, Bob Irish, one of Mark Ford's good friends, shares a valuable lesson you can apply to your retirement goals today.

Craig Ballantyne

"Nothing wins more often than superior preparation. Genius is usually preparation." - Kekich Credo #73



By Bob Irish

When she said, "twice the husband, half the income," I had to laugh. I had just asked Jane, whose husband Phil had retired a few months ago, how retirement was going. Her answer underscored the two fundamental issues in retirement.

One is psychological. The other is financial. We'll be looking at both sides of retirement in this series of monthly essays.

I had more than a passing interest in Jane's response to my "How's retirement going" question. I was maybe three months away from calling it quits myself. And I was already filled with anxiety about it. Her answer didn't make me feel any better, either... particularly the "half the income" part. 

Some of my discomfort revolved around the phrase "I'm on a fixed income." I knew I was close to having to utter those words when describing myself. 

For me, "fixed income" had always conjured up images of scarcity. Things like buying used tires, using rabbit-ear antennas, and drinking grain alcohol. But even those things didn't look so bad when compared to my biggest fear about retirement: 

Being forced to live on a budget. 

The thought of actually having to live on one terrified me. My bride didn't think much of the idea, either. 

My aversion to budgets goes way back. I was 10 years old when my parents started giving me an allowance. Fifty cents per week. Now, $0.50 went a lot further in those days. But there was still too much of the week left when the money ran out. 

So I got a paper route. And started knocking back $2.50 per week. Woo-hoo! Big stuff. I could now go to the hobby shop and buy a model car without having to save up for two months. 

What a thrill spending that money was! I've never forgotten how good it made me feel. That allowance was my first experience with fixed income and a budget. I knew I never wanted to go back. 

But 50 years later, I was going back. To a fixed income. I worried about a diminished quality of life. I worried about feeling deprived. 

I know this may sound shallow. Sure, the best things in life are free. But still. Any change is anxiety producing. And I suspected this was going to be a big one.

How big (or small) was my fixed income going to be? There was only one way to find out: by doing a financial X-ray. 

So for the first time in 30 years, I took a complete inventory of assets and expenses. And it raised some questions. 

Why, for example, was I a member of two golf clubs in the same town? I didn't play enough golf to justify being a member of one club, let alone two. So I resigned from one club. Savings? $12,000 annually.

There were a number of other nonessential expenses I was able to reduce or eliminate. Things I wouldn't miss at all. For example, the third car I hardly ever drove. Or the vacant lot I was never going to build on. As I added up the savings, I only wished I had done the X-ray years ago. 

But I knew why I hadn't done it years ago. I was scared. Not having a budget was one of the ways I defined freedom. And spending money gave me pleasure. Who wants to give up freedom and pleasure?

I was also afraid of what an X-ray might reveal. Maybe it would challenge the notions I had about myself. Denial is a powerful mechanism. I actually thought I was fairly prudent from a financial point of view. 

And what if the X-ray suggested some kind of budget might be in order? I already knew I didn't want to go there. No way. But when you retire, everything changes (see Jane's comment above). 

Today, I use a tool that I call my "Retirement Spending Plan." And I can tell you that my fears of a fixed income and any kind of budget were way overblown. The quality of my life has not been diminished. In fact, it's been enhanced. My Retirement Spending Plan makes spending money a genuine, guilt-free pleasure. And no one is more surprised at this than I am.

Why is being on this Retirement Spending Plan better? It has a lot to do with the absence of a stressful internal dialogue. 

Before I started using my Retirement Spending Plan, with every significant purchase, the conversation would go something like this. "Is this a need-to-have? Or is this just a want-to-have? Am I being responsible or frivolous? How will I feel about this later on? Shouldn't I really be saving more money? Am I paying too much? Is this wasteful?" 

And so on. In the end, with most purchases, it was "What the hell, just buy it." So I did. And I'd get the rush that comes from the pleasure of spending.

But later on, I'd often have buyer's remorse. And a touch of guilt and anxiety. Perhaps I should be saving more money for retirement.

Today, the buying decision is much simpler. No internal debate. Is it in the Retirement Spending Plan? If so, then it's a yes.

Let me give you an example. In September, my wife and I took a month-long road trip throughout the Western United States. Before the Retirement Spending Plan, I would've agonized (internally, of course) about the cost of every hotel room and meal.

But now I have a travel plan. We'd already allocated the money for this trip. It was almost like it had been paid for. So it didn't feel like money out of pocket. Mentally, I had already spent it. I could simply relax and enjoy the vacation. And the spending gave me a great deal of pleasure. With no regrets.

Another reason my Retirement Spending Plan works so well is the way it makes you feel. It's kind of like being in good physical shape. I'm lighter. I feel like I've slimmed down. I've gotten rid of the excess fat. The extra weight. And it feels good. Almost virtuous. 

It's funny. For most of my life, I refused to budget because I felt it would restrict my pleasure and freedom. And while I've cut my expenses dramatically, I'm no less happy than I was when I was living large. In fact, I'm far happier. And free from the guilt and anxiety that were part of my life before I started using my Retirement Spending Plan.
 
Today, I have a much healthier relationship with my money. I'm more in control of my life and finances than I have been in years. I only wish I'd done it sooner.

So that's the takeaway. If you haven't done an X-ray of your financial life, do it now. And start using the Retirement Spending Plan.

To help you, here's what mine looks like. You'll probably need to delete some of my items and add some of your own, but it should be a useful starting point. The items fall into three categories.

The numbers in red are expenses for which you typically have no wiggle room. Things like homeowner association dues and property taxes. The numbers in yellow are fixed expenses but ones for which it might be possible to lower your costs. Most of your insurance premiums are in this category. Finally, the numbers in green are typically more flexible, such as expenses for a personal trainer and your travel plans.


Why You Must Give to Receive More in Life

Human nature sure is funny. We want to believe. We live to believe. Finding a guru, putting our faith in them, and believing what they tell us - without checking the facts - is hardwired into our minds. Sounds like a recipe for disaster, right? Well, it's not always. Today you'll discover how to use this to make the world a better place.

Craig Ballantyne

"One person gives freely, yet gains even more; another withholds unduly, but comes to poverty. A generous person will prosper; whoever refreshes others will be refreshed."- Proverbs 11:24-25



By Craig Ballantyne


On Saturday afternoon I met an Internet multimillionaire colleague of mine in Ann Arbor, Michigan at Qdoba. He was generous enough to treat me to a lunch of a Naked Burrito and water.

But more important, we had a great conversation about what's working in sales letters, copy, promotions, front-end sales funnels, and back-end upsells.

We gave each other advice and held nothing back, and as a result we both walked away with fresh insights into how our businesses could grow.

And that's today's lesson: Give, and you shall receive more in life.

People often ask me, "How can you build a business when you give away so much for free?"

Well, here's the truth.

No matter how much information you give away, people will ALWAYS think that you are holding something back.

Take this website and my articles, for instance.

I'll bet that most Early To Rise readers still think,

"There's a lot of great information here, BUT there's still some secret that Craig and Matt Smith are NOT telling us. There has to be one more magical secret to success."

Likewise, when I was a personal trainer, my clients always believed that - no matter how much I told them - that there was still one secret fat loss secret that I wasn't sharing.

That goes for every industry, right?

It's human nature to believe that the "gurus" are always holding back "The Secret."

(This was probably even true of the millions of people that watched "The Secret." Oh, and it was true, because that movie forgot to mention the real secret - WORK. But that's another essay for another day.)

Back to my online and offline businesses.

Even when we simplify things as much as possible, even when we tell people that diet is more important than exercise and you just have to eat less and move more, the end user STILL thinks that there is a trick to it.

That's just human behavior.

We always want to believe in the mysticism that there is still another easier secret to success out there.

You know it's true.

I bet you have some incredible stories in your own life and business where you've told people EVERYTHING you know about a subject and they still ask, "So what's the secret?"

We're wired for this for some strange reason.

Heck, I still feel that way about Mark Ford's content, sometimes.

Surely there must be ONE more thing that he isn't telling us about how he built his multimillion dollar businesses, surely there must be one more secret that can give me faster results, surely there must be something more?

We all refuse to believe the simple and we demand something more complex.

It is an irrational belief that exists in every market, that no matter how much information has been given, that there is still one secret being held back.

And so that is why you can give away plenty of free advice, attracting people into your world with goodwill and good wisdom, and they will still buy.

You build up the Know-Like-Trust (KLT) factor with free content and then you continue to deliver more great wisdom and step-by-step guidelines in your paid content, and people will still buy, because they believe that you are hiding something.

So that's why you can give away so much free content and build up tremendous amounts of Goodwill with your readers and prospects and they will STILL buy from you.

Start giving more.

In fact, I dare you to try and out-give the universe.

You'll lose every time.

More will come back to you the more you give.

It always will...

...because your prospects and clients will never give up hope of discovering that one last secret they think you are holding back.

And while there really is no secret sauce, the implications here are big.

Our irrational beliefs as consumers make it easy for you to:

a) Create more products, give more seminars, and do more selling. That's why you must always be creating and selling, because your happy clients want more.

b) Be everywhere that matters, being someone to the right people, and doing something dramatically. Dan Kennedy calls this the Principle of Extreme Visibility, and it's a mandatory rule to follow in your quest for a 6-figure and 7-figure income.

"Be someone. Be somewhere. Do something." - Dan Kennedy

Give away free content to build your business, and know that we silly humans will never be satisfied with what you give away, because we always believe that you have more, that one secret that you are holding back.

We'll never give up our belief.

We'll always think there is something more.

So keep on delivering.

Expanding Your Mental Paradigm

Why You Must Expand Your Mind

Imagine if all you did in life was live in the same house, do the same job, and hang around the same people as you did when you were 14 years old (assuming you had a job back then). What type of personal growth would you have? Not too much, right? We need new experiences, new connections, and new lessons to become a better version of ourselves. The mind and its mental paradigms determine where we'll go in life. Robert Ringer explains this today.

Craig Ballantyne

"Sometimes adversity is what you need to face in order to become successful...If you learn from defeat, you haven't really lost." - Zig Ziglar


By Robert Ringer

Motivational speakers and authors have long insisted that it's possible to exert a great deal of control over your destiny by having a positive outlook on life.  Even though problems are an integral part of the living experience, they believe that the key to success is how you react to those problems.  So, are they right?  Or is it all just a bunch of motivational hype?

When Napoleon Hill, in his classic Think and Grow Rich, first penned such statements as "Anything the mind can conceive and believe, it can achieve" and "When you're ready for a thing, it will make it's appearance," they weren't just frivolous thoughts.  He based his beliefs on centuries of empirical evidence drawn from human experience. 

As modern scientific research has rapidly accelerated its pace, creditable cases, such as Norman Cousins' well-publicized recovery from a diagnosed terminal illness, gained more and more attention.  Cousins, who finally passed away in 1990, was famous for his amazing mind-power cure that he described in his best-selling book, "Anatomy of An Illness." 

Cousins had a friend bring a movie projector to his hospital room and spent months watching hilarious movies like those of the Marx Brothers.  As a result, he believed that he literally laughed himself out of his disease.  What is particularly impressive about Cousins' case is that even his doctors agreed that his mental state was the crucial determinate in his overcoming his "incurable" illness for so many years.

Since then, scientific researchers have made dramatic strides in discovering the major role that the mind plays in producing results.  Of particular interest is the research done by Dr. Karl Pribram, a neurosurgeon who has convincingly demonstrated that there is a direct correlation between what the mind visualizes and the results a person achieves. 

Dr. Pribram's Theory of Holographic Memory contends that the mind houses three-dimensional holographic images of what it envisions, which in turn stimulates the senses to translate those images into their physical, real-life equivalents.  More precisely, when your mind believes something to be true, it stimulates your senses to draw to you the things, people, and circumstances necessary to convert the mental image it houses into a physical reality.

Thus, there is nothing at all mystical about the power of the mind to control a person's destiny.  On the contrary, it's a phenomenon that is scientific in nature.  Therefore, the individual who desires to achieve a genuine positive mental attitude (as opposed to the superficial rah-rah stuff) would be wise to study and learn how the powers of the mind can, indeed, draw to him the things, people, and circumstances necessary to convert his desires into results.

Based on the evidence, you might say that a good way to start getting what you want in life is to develop the habit of imagining that you already have it.  For example, let's go back to Napoleon Hill's statement, "When you're ready for a thing, it will make its appearance."  Have you ever heard something for years, then suddenly the right person, in the right place, at the right time says it in just the right way, and you say something like, "Wow, what a great thought!"  Then a friend or spouse says, "But I've been telling you that for years, and you've never gotten excited about it before.  What's the big deal?" 

The big deal was that prior to that time your mind was not ready to receive the information, so you didn't really believe it.  Then, when it finally hit you like a sledgehammer, it was because you were at a point in your life when you were ready to hear it, ready to absorb it, ready to act on it.  Thus, it created the illusion that it magically made its appearance at that particular moment. 

But it wasn't really magic at all.  Rather, it was a result of raising your awareness level and expanding your "mental paradigm."  I use the term mental paradigm to describe an imaginary box within your mind, a box that houses what you believe to be the world of the possible.  Conversely, everything that lies outside the perimeter of that box represents the world of the impossible to you. 

It's the combination of what lies both inside and outside of this imaginary box that forms what is commonly known as your "system of beliefs."  What determines on which side of the box's boundaries something lies are your experiences, your environment, your knowledge, your wisdom -- everything you've been exposed to throughout your life. 

To the extent you have accumulated a great deal of knowledge and wisdom, not only will more possibilities lie inside the boundaries of your mental paradigm, the paradigm itself will be expanded; i.e., your mind will be more open to new ideas, new concepts, and new possibilities.  On the other hand, to the extent you have not done much to improve your mind through reading, learning from others, and firsthand experience, you will tend to have a much smaller mental paradigm.

Thus, it's a cycle:  The more knowledge and wisdom you have, the more likely you are to believe in your power to control your destiny; the more you believe you have the power to control your destiny, the more expanded your mental paradigm will be; and the more expanded your mental paradigm is, the more knowledge and wisdom you will accumulate. 

Start the new year by making a commitment to put more effort into improving yourself (particularly when it comes to knowledge and wisdom) than you put into your job or profession.  When you do so, you will be absolutely amazed at how your mental paradigm naturally expands and how that, in turn, will draw to you the things, people, and circumstances you need to accomplish your goals. 

Trust me, it works!

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

The First Chakra

The existence and functionality of the chakra system is the basis of many ancient practices such as acupuncture, martial arts, reiki and yoga. Each of us have seven major chakras that begin at the base of the spine and extend up the spine through to the crown of the head. These areas store energy and send it out through the meridians (a path through life-energy or your “qi” flows)  to service the entire physical body.
Chakras can wax and wane in their strength and vibrancy. They can even become blocked and stagnant like ponds that don’t have enough flow. So it’s not an exaggeration to say that complete health of body and mind begins and ends with the health of the chakras.
Each of the seven major chakras deal with different aspects of the body, the mind and the soul, although all seven chakras are interconnected and interdependent.

Probably the most common chakra to be in a weakened state is the First Chakra. Sometimes called the Root Chakra, the First Chakra is located at the very base of your spine. It deals with issues of physical survival, safety and security and is blocked and weakened by fear and insecurity.
Which is why it deserves some extra love and attention, because the First Chakra acts as a pump at the base of the chakra system that helps energy rise and flow. If this base pump is weak, work done on the other chakras won’t be as effective.
So look out for these signs, and work on strengthening your First Chakra using the guide below:
Five Signs Your First Chakra is Weak
  1. You feel a general lack of physical energy and vitality resulting in a lackluster will to create.
  1. Your sense of well-being is highly dependent upon external circumstances. So long as everything is going smoothly and to your liking, you feel OK, but when circumstances aren’t to your liking, you feel insecure.
  1. You feel a general lack of confidence in dealing with anything outside your comfort zone.
  1. You believe that money creates security and that there is an amount of money that if attained, would guarantee your security.
  1. You experience any of the following physical symptoms on a frequent or recurring basis: eating disorders, adrenal fatigue, foot and leg pains and injuries, rectal or colon problems, immune disorders or bone disorders.
Five Things You Can Do To Strengthen Your First Chakra
  1. Make a list of everything you tend to think of as providing your sense of security. Now cross off any items on that list that could be taken away from you without your permission. What is left? Anything? Now, make another list titled, “Things That Can Never Be Taken From Me.” You might have to reflect a little more on this list – but it’s worth the time to do so. These are the true source of your security.
  1. Reconnect your body to the earth in some physical way. Walk barefoot in the dirt or go outside and sit beneath a large tree, resting your back against the trunk. Spend time reflecting on all the ways you are supported like nature.
  1. Sing the word “grow”, holding out the “oh” sound as long as your breath allows. The word grow provides the proper vowel sound and has meaning related to the First Chakra. As you hold out the “oh” sound, bring your attention to the base of your spine and feel it vibrating and glowing red, sending life and health to your entire lower body.
  1. Do the “Mudra Lock” breath. From any sitting position, inhale deeply into your lower belly. Now hold the breath in and tightly squeeze everything from your navel to your buttocks. Hold the squeeze for a few counts. Exhale, and with the breath held out, repeat the squeezing and holding for another few counts. As you are squeezing, try to feel the energy rising up your spine and reaching the crown of your head.
Perform the “Seated Pelvic Rotation” yoga asana below:
 5 Signs Your First Chakra Is Weak
Sit in a cross-legged position and grab your knees with your hands. Slowly rotate your hips and waist in a clockwise circle. Imagine that your navel is tracing as wide a circle around your seated center position as possible.
Use your arms as leverage (as shown by figures 2 and 3). Keep the movement slow and steady, breathing naturally but without trying to synchronize your breath with your movement. Breathe through your nose if you can.
Continue this clockwise movement for twenty to thirty seconds. Now reverse the direction and begin in a counter clockwise direction, for another twenty to thirty seconds.

The First Chakra

The existence and functionality of the chakra system is the basis of many ancient practices such as acupuncture, martial arts, reiki and yoga. Each of us have seven major chakras that begin at the base of the spine and extend up the spine through to the crown of the head. These areas store energy and send it out through the meridians (a path through life-energy or your “qi” flows)  to service the entire physical body.
Chakras can wax and wane in their strength and vibrancy. They can even become blocked and stagnant like ponds that don’t have enough flow. So it’s not an exaggeration to say that complete health of body and mind begins and ends with the health of the chakras.
Each of the seven major chakras deal with different aspects of the body, the mind and the soul, although all seven chakras are interconnected and interdependent.

Probably the most common chakra to be in a weakened state is the First Chakra. Sometimes called the Root Chakra, the First Chakra is located at the very base of your spine. It deals with issues of physical survival, safety and security and is blocked and weakened by fear and insecurity.
Which is why it deserves some extra love and attention, because the First Chakra acts as a pump at the base of the chakra system that helps energy rise and flow. If this base pump is weak, work done on the other chakras won’t be as effective.
So look out for these signs, and work on strengthening your First Chakra using the guide below:
Five Signs Your First Chakra is Weak
  1. You feel a general lack of physical energy and vitality resulting in a lackluster will to create.
  1. Your sense of well-being is highly dependent upon external circumstances. So long as everything is going smoothly and to your liking, you feel OK, but when circumstances aren’t to your liking, you feel insecure.
  1. You feel a general lack of confidence in dealing with anything outside your comfort zone.
  1. You believe that money creates security and that there is an amount of money that if attained, would guarantee your security.
  1. You experience any of the following physical symptoms on a frequent or recurring basis: eating disorders, adrenal fatigue, foot and leg pains and injuries, rectal or colon problems, immune disorders or bone disorders.
Five Things You Can Do To Strengthen Your First Chakra
  1. Make a list of everything you tend to think of as providing your sense of security. Now cross off any items on that list that could be taken away from you without your permission. What is left? Anything? Now, make another list titled, “Things That Can Never Be Taken From Me.” You might have to reflect a little more on this list – but it’s worth the time to do so. These are the true source of your security.
  1. Reconnect your body to the earth in some physical way. Walk barefoot in the dirt or go outside and sit beneath a large tree, resting your back against the trunk. Spend time reflecting on all the ways you are supported like nature.
  1. Sing the word “grow”, holding out the “oh” sound as long as your breath allows. The word grow provides the proper vowel sound and has meaning related to the First Chakra. As you hold out the “oh” sound, bring your attention to the base of your spine and feel it vibrating and glowing red, sending life and health to your entire lower body.
  1. Do the “Mudra Lock” breath. From any sitting position, inhale deeply into your lower belly. Now hold the breath in and tightly squeeze everything from your navel to your buttocks. Hold the squeeze for a few counts. Exhale, and with the breath held out, repeat the squeezing and holding for another few counts. As you are squeezing, try to feel the energy rising up your spine and reaching the crown of your head.
Perform the “Seated Pelvic Rotation” yoga asana below:
 5 Signs Your First Chakra Is Weak
Sit in a cross-legged position and grab your knees with your hands. Slowly rotate your hips and waist in a clockwise circle. Imagine that your navel is tracing as wide a circle around your seated center position as possible.
Use your arms as leverage (as shown by figures 2 and 3). Keep the movement slow and steady, breathing naturally but without trying to synchronize your breath with your movement. Breathe through your nose if you can.
Continue this clockwise movement for twenty to thirty seconds. Now reverse the direction and begin in a counter clockwise direction, for another twenty to thirty seconds.
The existence and functionality of the chakra system is the basis of many ancient practices such as acupuncture, martial arts, reiki and yoga. Each of us have seven major chakras that begin at the base of the spine and extend up the spine through to the crown of the head. These areas store energy and send it out through the meridians (a path through life-energy or your “qi” flows)  to service the entire physical body.
Chakras can wax and wane in their strength and vibrancy. They can even become blocked and stagnant like ponds that don’t have enough flow. So it’s not an exaggeration to say that complete health of body and mind begins and ends with the health of the chakras.
Each of the seven major chakras deal with different aspects of the body, the mind and the soul, although all seven chakras are interconnected and interdependent.
The First Chakra
Probably the most common chakra to be in a weakened state is the First Chakra. Sometimes called the Root Chakra, the First Chakra is located at the very base of your spine. It deals with issues of physical survival, safety and security and is blocked and weakened by fear and insecurity.
Which is why it deserves some extra love and attention, because the First Chakra acts as a pump at the base of the chakra system that helps energy rise and flow. If this base pump is weak, work done on the other chakras won’t be as effective.
So look out for these signs, and work on strengthening your First Chakra using the guide below:
Five Signs Your First Chakra is Weak
  1. You feel a general lack of physical energy and vitality resulting in a lackluster will to create.
  1. Your sense of well-being is highly dependent upon external circumstances. So long as everything is going smoothly and to your liking, you feel OK, but when circumstances aren’t to your liking, you feel insecure.
  1. You feel a general lack of confidence in dealing with anything outside your comfort zone.
  1. You believe that money creates security and that there is an amount of money that if attained, would guarantee your security.
  1. You experience any of the following physical symptoms on a frequent or recurring basis: eating disorders, adrenal fatigue, foot and leg pains and injuries, rectal or colon problems, immune disorders or bone disorders.
Five Things You Can Do To Strengthen Your First Chakra
  1. Make a list of everything you tend to think of as providing your sense of security. Now cross off any items on that list that could be taken away from you without your permission. What is left? Anything? Now, make another list titled, “Things That Can Never Be Taken From Me.” You might have to reflect a little more on this list – but it’s worth the time to do so. These are the true source of your security.
  1. Reconnect your body to the earth in some physical way. Walk barefoot in the dirt or go outside and sit beneath a large tree, resting your back against the trunk. Spend time reflecting on all the ways you are supported like nature.
  1. Sing the word “grow”, holding out the “oh” sound as long as your breath allows. The word grow provides the proper vowel sound and has meaning related to the First Chakra. As you hold out the “oh” sound, bring your attention to the base of your spine and feel it vibrating and glowing red, sending life and health to your entire lower body.
  1. Do the “Mudra Lock” breath. From any sitting position, inhale deeply into your lower belly. Now hold the breath in and tightly squeeze everything from your navel to your buttocks. Hold the squeeze for a few counts. Exhale, and with the breath held out, repeat the squeezing and holding for another few counts. As you are squeezing, try to feel the energy rising up your spine and reaching the crown of your head.
Perform the “Seated Pelvic Rotation” yoga asana below:
 5 Signs Your First Chakra Is Weak
Sit in a cross-legged position and grab your knees with your hands. Slowly rotate your hips and waist in a clockwise circle. Imagine that your navel is tracing as wide a circle around your seated center position as possible.
Use your arms as leverage (as shown by figures 2 and 3). Keep the movement slow and steady, breathing naturally but without trying to synchronize your breath with your movement. Breathe through your nose if you can.
Continue this clockwise movement for twenty to thirty seconds. Now reverse the direction and begin in a counter clockwise direction, for another twenty to thirty seconds.

15 Things You Should Give Up To Be Happy


Here is a list of 15 things, which, if you give up on them, will make your life a lot easier and you’ll feel much, much happier. We hold on to so many things that cause us a great deal of pain, stress and suffering – and instead of letting them all go and allowing ourselves to be stress-free and happy, we cling on to them.
Well, not anymore. Starting today, we will give up on all those things that no longer serve us, and we will embrace change. Ready? Here we go!
1. Give up your need to always be right. There are so many of us who can’t stand the idea of being wrong – wanting to always be right – even at the risk of ending great relationships or causing a great deal of stress and pain for us and for others. It’s just not worth it. Whenever you feel the “urgent” need to jump into a fight over who is right and who is wrong, ask yourself this question from Dr. Wayne Dyer: “Would I rather be right, or would I rather be kind?” What difference will that make? Is your ego really that big?
2. Give up your need for control. Be willing to give up your need to always control everything that happens to you and around you – situations, events, people, etc. Whether they are loved ones, co-workers, or just strangers you meet on the street – just allow them to be. Allow everything and everyone to be just as they are and you will see how much better will that make you feel.
“By letting it go, it all gets done. The world is won by those who let it go. But when you try and try. The world is beyond winning.” Lao Tzu
3. Give up on blame. Give up on your need to blame others for what you have or don’t have, for what you feel or don’t feel. Stop giving your powers away and start taking responsibility for your life.
4. Give up your self-defeating self-talk. Oh my. How many people are hurting themselves because of their negative, polluted and repetitive self-defeating mindset? Don’t believe everything that your mind is telling you – especially if it’s negative and self-defeating. You are better than that.
 “The mind is a superb instrument if used rightly. Used wrongly, however, it becomes very destructive.” Eckhart Tolle
5. Give up your limiting beliefs about what you can or cannot do, about what is possible or impossible. From now on, you are no longer going to allow your limiting beliefs to keep you stuck in the wrong place. Spread your wings and fly!
“A belief is not an idea held by the mind, it is an idea that holds the mind.” Elly Roselle
6. Give up complaining. Give up your constant need to complain about those many, many, maaany things – people, situations and events that make you unhappy, sad and depressed. Nobody can make you unhappy, no situation can make you sad or miserable unless you allow it to. It’s not the situation that triggers those feelings in you, but how you choose to look at it. Never underestimate the power of positive thinking.
7. Give up the luxury of criticism. Give up your need to criticize things, events or people that are different than you. We are all different, yet we are all the same. We all want to be happy, we all want to love and be loved and we all want to be understood. We all want something, and something is wished by us all.
8. Give up your need to impress others. Stop trying so hard to be something that you’re not just to make others like you. It doesn’t work this way. The moment you stop trying so hard to be something that you’re not, the moment you take of all your masks, the moment you accept and embrace the real you, you will find people will be drawn to you, effortlessly.
9. Give up your resistance to change. Change is good. Change will help you move from A to B. Change will help you make improvements in your life and also the lives of those around you. Follow your bliss, embrace change – don’t resist it.
“Follow your bliss and the universe will open doors for you where there were only walls.” Joseph Campbell
10. Give up labels. Stop labeling the things, people or events that you don’t understand as being weird or different and try opening your mind, little by little. Minds only work when open.
“The highest form of ignorance is when you reject something you don’t know anything about.” Dr. Wayne Dyer
11. Give up on your fears. Fear is just an illusion, it doesn’t exist – you created it. It’s all in your mind. Correct the inside and the outside will fall into place.
“The only thing we have to fear, is fear itself.” Franklin D. Roosevelt
12. Give up your excuses. Send them packing and tell them they’re fired. You no longer need them. A lot of times we limit ourselves because of the many excuses we use. Instead of growing and working on improving ourselves and our lives, we get stuck and lie to ourselves, using all kind of excuses – excuses that 99.9% of the time, are not even real.
13. Give up the past. I know, I know. This one’s hard. Especially when the past looks so much better than the present and the future looks so frightening. But, you have to take into consideration the fact that the present moment is all you have and all you will ever have. The past you are now longing for – the past that you are now dreaming about – was ignored by you when it was present. Stop deluding yourself. Be present in everything you do and enjoy life. After all, life is a journey not a destination. Have a clear vision for the future, prepare yourself, but always be present in the now.
14. Give up attachment. This is a concept that, for most of us, is so hard to grasp and I have to tell you that it was for me too (it still is), but it’s not impossible. You get better and better at it with time and practice. The moment you detach yourself from all things (and that doesn’t mean you give up your love for them – because love and attachment have nothing to do with one another. Attachment comes from a place of fear, while love… well, real love is pure, kind, and selfless; where there is love there can’t be fear, and because of that, attachment and love cannot co-exist) you become so peaceful, so tolerant, so kind, and so serene. You will get to a place where you will be able to understand all things without even trying. A state beyond words.
15. Give up living your life to other people’s expectations. Way too many people are living a life that is not theirs to live. They live their lives according to what others think is best for them; they live their lives according to what their parents think is best for them; to what their friends, their enemies and their teachers, their government and the media think is best for them. They ignore their inner voice, that inner calling. They are so busy with pleasing everybody, with living up to other people’s expectations, that they lose control over their lives. They forget what makes them happy, what they want, what they need… and eventually, they forget about themselves.  You have one life – this one right now – you must live it, own it, and especially don’t let other people’s opinions distract you from your path