Category Archives: Goals

SUCCESS: This is a great article… “How to [Actually] Improve from Self-Improvement Materials” >> http://bit.ly/b34BGX

SUCCESS: This is a great article… “How to [Actually] Improve from Self-Improvement Materials” >> http://bit.ly/b34BGX

Really excited to see Richard Branson’s presentation in Moncton tomorrow >> http://bit.ly/bpLmOA

Really excited to see Richard Branson’s presentation tomorrow >> http://bit.ly/bpLmOA

“A clear vision, backed by definite plans, gives you a tremendous feeling of confidence and personal power.” — Brian Tracy, Author

“A clear vision, backed by definite plans, gives you a tremendous feeling of confidence and personal power.” — Brian Tracy, Author

Living a Full-Capacity Life

This is an excellent article written by Michael Masterson, a highly successful executive (has started up dozens of businesses, New York Times Bestseller author, etc.) concerning personal health & fitness and how having both will support your business & career, and how he does it.  Caveat: some of what he writes may turn what you believe about fitness & nutrition right on its head.  I also highly recommend the Early To Rise newsletter — www.earlytorise.com.  I’ve been reading it for the last 7 years and some of the ideas I’ve read about I’ve implemented and it’s propelled my own growth and made a big difference in my own life.

Living a Full-Capacity Life

Today, I’d like to talk about health. My health. Your health. The prospect of having a richer life by enjoying better health.

I’ve been told that I shouldn’t write about health. I’m not a doctor. I’m not a nutritionist. I can’t claim to be an expert on health in any way. But I do know something about accumulating wealth and living well — and what I know is directly related to health.

Because without my good health, I couldn’t have accomplished nearly as much as I have in my career. That includes the bestselling books I’ve written, the multimillion-dollar businesses I’ve developed, and all the money I’ve made.

I work like a madman, enjoy a busy social life, drink wine, smoke cigars, and I compete athletically (in Jiu Jitsu) with men half my age.

I can do these things because I wake up each day bounding with energy — and I maintain that energy from 6:00 in the morning till 10:00 or 11:00 at night.

In the past 10 years, my energy level has increased. At an age when I should be slowing down, I’m speeding up. Six months ago, I took a battery of tests to determine my “biological fitness.” In every category, I was much younger than my chronological age. In lung capacity — arguably the most important determinant of longevity — I was rated as a 26-year-old.

Other than a bout of malaria when I was living in Africa, I have never had a serious illness. I get the yearly cold and have my share of sports injuries, but I’m able to perform at 100 percent capacity 90 percent of the time.

I attribute my health and fitness to three things:

1. How I eat

2. How I exercise

3. How I heal myself

None of my “secrets” are difficult to do. All are based on good science. You can adopt one or all of them easily into your current routine.

How I Eat

I used to avoid red meat, eggs, butter, and ice cream. I used to eat grains with every meal — as the government told me I should. That seemed to work when I was young. But when I hit my forties, my weight ballooned up to 235 pounds.

Then I began to work professionally with Dr. Atkins. I consulted with him on his publishing ventures and spent time at his clinic in New York City. I read his books and talked to him. What I discovered was that there was very little science behind the government’s recommended diet. In fact, there were very few scientific studies done on nutrition.

Dr. Atkins was a pioneer in studying the effects of a high-carbohydrate diet. His research suggested to him that the argument against cholesterol and saturated fats had no basis at all. Its advocates were groups funded by the wheat and margarine industries. He conducted clinical trials of his own and discovered that, in general, people who ate a high-protein, low-carbohydrate diet were leaner, healthier, and more energetic.

Based on what I learned from Dr. Atkins, I made some changes in my diet. And I noticed an immediate improvement in my health. My appetite decreased. My post-lunch drowsiness disappeared. And muscles started popping up where I thought none existed.

Years later, I began a working relationship with Dr. Al Sears. He took Dr. Atkins’s work to a higher level. Dr. Sears told me that most of the meats I was eating were laden with hormones and omega-6 fatty acids. He had discovered that grass-fed beef actually has a better fatty-acid ratio than salmon!

When I switched from supermarket meat to grass-fed meat, my lean body mass increased. I also followed Dr. Sears’s recommendations to eat more organic vegetables, avoid fruit juices, and limit sugar-laden desserts. Again, I noticed an improvement in the way I felt right away.

When Dr, Sears began reporting his findings 10 years ago, nobody else was talking about a “primal” diet. Today, it is recognized by many as the healthiest diet in the world. People are jumping on the bandwagon in droves. And that’s a good thing.

How I Exercise

I used to lift weights and jog. My muscles were always sore, and I had a hard time getting stronger, however much I tried. But I’d had such good results with Dr. Sears’s recommendations concerning my diet that I decided to give his PACE workout a try too.

And within a few weeks, I dropped 20 pounds of fat.

When I started PACE, something quite remarkable happened. It felt like my lungs were ballooning in my chest. I could even see a difference in my chest when I looked in the mirror. I seemed to be able to take in twice as much oxygen, and I had more energy.

Dr. Sears told me that lung capacity is the best indicator of “all-cause mortality.” That’s doctor-speak for all the ways you could possibly die. In other words, the bigger your lung capacity, the longer you’ll live. And I don’t doubt it. The extra oxygen I’ve been getting has given me not only more energy but an unshakable feeling of optimism.

The PACE workout is truly revolutionary. It is based on the way our bodies were programmed to exercise over thousands of years. In that regard, it is compatible with the “primal” diet.

Dr. Sears’s studies have shown that PACE produces:

  • Expanded lung volume
  • High-speed fat loss
  • Reserve capacity in the heart
  • A higher metabolic rate with increased insulin sensitivity
  • New muscle growth
  • Better sexual performance

And if you get the same results I’ve been getting, you will:

  • Build strength and reserve capacity in your heart and lungs
  • Avoid heart attacks and cardiovascular disease
  • Develop a powerful and disease-resistant immune system
  • Dramatically increase your energy levels
  • Burn fat, even while you rest

How I Heal Myself

Since I am active in Jiu Jitsu, a very physical sport, I am subject to athletic injuries on a regular basis. But I’ve reduced them drastically in the past two years by doing four things:

1. 15 minutes of yoga each morning

2. 30 minutes of Pilates twice a month

3. An hour of massage once a week

4. Acupressure when I have an injury

Yoga is an amazing thing. It will make you limber and strong in ways you can’t imagine unless you do it.

I used to have trouble touching my fingers to my toes. Now I can put my palms on the floor and my nose to my knees. When you practice yoga for 15 minutes a day, like I do, you need to be sure to stretch your body in four directions. Forward, backward, and to each side.

Pilates is in many ways the opposite of yoga. The breathing is different and so are the movements. While yoga teaches you to relax and breathe with your lower belly extended, Pilates teaches you to keep a tight core and breathe with your stomach sucked in.

The combination of yoga and Pilates is a perfect yin-yang. There are plenty of yoga and Pilates programs available, but if you’d like to do both at the same time, I know of one that is designed specifically for that purpose.

I get a deep-tissue massage once a week. It keeps my hips and shoulders loose (the two most important joints for athletic performance) and helps repair my tissues quickly when I am hurt.

Most massage therapists are next to useless. They don’t know anything about physiology. They simply rub you down. Find someone who understands how to go deep and break up scar tissue. Find someone who is willing to work hard on the areas of your body that need work. You will know immediately when you have found someone who is very good. You’ll feel significantly better 24 hours after the massage.

Acupressure has recently become a big part of my health routine.

It is related to acupuncture, which you may be more familiar with. Both are ancient Chinese therapies for curing almost anything that ails you by liberating blocked “chi” at key points in the body. But where acupuncturists do it by inserting fine needles into the trigger points, acupressure practitioners do it by applying pressure with their fingertips.

These therapies are 5,000 years old. That makes them more than twice as old as Western Medicine.

There is more than enough historical documentation to make acupuncture worthy of consideration. And, indeed, millions of Americans have tried it and many of them have reported good results.

But recently, studies at Western universities have confirmed that acupressure, too, works.

In fact, the World Health Organization published a review of controlled trials using acupressure and concluded that it is effective for the treatment of 28 conditions. There was also evidence to suggest that it may be effective for several dozen more.

I tried acupuncture several times and was impressed with the immediate results. But my schedule was too busy to do it regularly. So I kept it in the back of my mind as therapy for when I have an acute injury.

Then, a few months ago, a friend of mine introduced me to a woman named Laura Devlin who teaches people how to use acupressure to treat themselves.

She explained that the pressure is applied to places on the skin that are especially sensitive to bioelectrical impulses in the body and conduct those impulses readily.

Stimulating these pressure points triggers the release of endorphins, the petrochemicals that relieve pain. As a result, pain is blocked and the flow of blood and oxygen to the affected area is increased. This causes the muscles to relax and promotes healing.

What I especially like about acupressure is that I can use it in my office or any public place, and nobody even notices that I’m doing it. (I often give myself an acupressure treatment four or five times a day.)

So that’s my three-part program. None of it is difficult or time consuming. My morning yoga routine takes 15 minutes as does my afternoon PACE workout. I spend an hour a week doing Pilates, and just a few minutes every day with my acupressure treatments.

I do Jiu Jitsu training for an hour a day, but that is my sport. It’s a pleasure for me. It certainly helps me stay stronger than the average person, but it’s not necessary for my health so I don’t recommend it to you unless you think you might enjoy it.

If you are not in perfect health or lack the energy you need to keep your career on the right trajectory, I strongly recommend these practices. I am certain they will improve your life.

When they do, please write to me and tell me exactly how they worked for you (just send an email toAskMichael@ETRFeedback.com). I want to know about your specific experiences, good or bad. I want to answer your questions. I want to hear your ideas.

There is no reason why you should work at less than full capacity regardless of how old you are. But you won’t know how true that is until you start one of the programs I just told you about. Then you’ll see for yourself… and be motivated to gradually adopt them all.

I wish you happiness, wealth, and wisdom. But you won’t get your full share of what you deserve without maximum health.

[Ed. Note: You’ve just read about Michael Masterson’s exercise and recovery program. And the good news is you can follow the same program quite easily. For more information on Dr. Sears’s PACE program go here. And you can go here to find out more about acupressure.]

This article appears courtesy of Early To Rise, a free newsletter dedicated to making money, improving health and secrets to success. For a complimentary subscription, visit http://www.earlytorise.com.

Unprecedented Rate of Change: Are you dismissing social media as a fad?

Unprecedented Rate of Change: Are you dismissing social media as a fad? >> http://bit.ly/aLSEi4

How to Love What You Do and Feel That It Matters

I read this article by Alexander Green this morning and thought it was excellent — in fact it contained within one of my favourite quotations concerning our working lives, with some interesting corollary ideas and conclusion, and I wanted to re-print and share it with you…

Are You Losing Your Soul?
by Alexander Green
Dear Reader,

I recently bumped into an old acquaintance I hadn’t seen in years. “Are you still managing money?” he asked.

“No, I write investment advice now,” I said.

“Well, it must not be panning out too well,” he said with a wink, “or you wouldn’t still be working!”

I’ve heard variations of this line over the years. And while it’s always offered in jest, it hints at a particular mindset: Why would anyone continue to work if he didn’t have to?

Yet I’d be bored to death without a job – and even more of a pain in the neck to everyone around me, I’m sure. (Warren Buffett and Bill Gates – two gentlemen who have a few dollars – apparently feel the same way.)

Yet according to over 40 Gallup studies, three quarters of us are disengaged from our jobs. The most recent U.S. Job Retention Survey found that more than 60% of employees are currently searching for new employment opportunities.

It’s odd that we spend most of our waking hours at work – in occupations often chosen by our younger selves – and yet seldom ask ourselves how we got there or what our occupations really mean.

When we meet someone new, for instance, the question we most frequently ask – after discerning where they’re from and whether we have any common acquaintances – is what he or she does. Our work,to a great extent, defines us.

It wasn’t always this way.

Three hundred years ago, Voltaire argued that work exists to save us from three great evils: boredom, poverty and vice. But, as a society, we have since put our belief in two great ideas: romantic love and meaningful work.

Historically, our faith in these grew up together. We started to think that we should marry for love at roughly the same time we started to think that we should work not only for money but for self-fulfillment.

These are two beautiful ideals, but rarely does either go long without hitting a rough patch. And the pain can be immense. When we are without work – as 29 million Americans are today – we lose more than income; we are cut off from an identity. We can’t explain any more what we do – and hence who we are.

It’s always a shame to see a person’s talents wasted. And that’s just as true for those who are employed but disengaged.

Ideally, your work should allow you to take the best of what’s in you and express it to the world. It should give your life dignity and meaning, whether you’re writing software, fixing teeth or just raising happy, productive kids.

No matter how you spend your days, you have a clear choice. You can think of your work entirely in terms of responsibilities and obligations. Or you can view it as a contest, a challenge, an opportunity. Because if you don’t enjoy what you’re doing, there’s little chance your work will please or impress anyone else.

I have a sneaking suspicion that a lot of folks who are unhappy at work tend to equate a “good job” entirely with money, benefits and security, rather than whether it allows them to express their talents.

Big mistake. Yet even those who recognize the dead-end nature of their current position are often reluctant to change. Why? Reasons vary, but some are so caught up in the pursuit of status, display, and material possessions that they’ve put themselves in a bind.

Choosing meaningful employment often means accepting at least a temporary pay cut. But that isn’t always possible if you have a big mortgage, hefty car payments or a lifestyle that keeps you two payments from the edge. Ironically, giving up the dream of “having it all” is often the first step in the right direction.

The other reason so many remain stuck in unsuitable work – whether they admit it to themselves or not – is fear.

Fear whispers that, even if you reduce your overhead, you won’t be able to make it work financially. Fear betrays you, insisting that you’re being unrealistic, that you don’t have the heart, the talent or the discipline to see it through, that doing work you love is reserved for someone else.

It’s not true. One of the best prizes that life offers is the chance to work hard at something worth doing. Think enthusiastically about how you spend your days and you’ll put a touch of glory in your life.

This is true for retirees, too. A life of meaning generally comes from finding a way to either increase the pleasure or decrease the suffering of your fellow humans, whether you’re compensated for it or not.

If you’re still in the workforce and – due to circumstances – tied to a job that is less than fulfilling, there are still ways to use your talents in meaningful ways.

A few years ago, for instance, the AARP asked some attorneys if they would offer basic services to needy retirees at $30 an hour. They said no. But then AARP’s program manager had a brilliant idea: He asked the lawyers if they would offer their services to needy retirees for free. Overwhelmingly, they said yes.

How could zero money be more attractive than $30 an hour? The original offer seemed insulting to some, a request for legal services at below-market wages. But when the request was reframed as volunteer work – and therefore meaningful – most were happy to oblige.

In Zen and the Art of Making a Living, Laurence G. Boldt writes, “Without self-expression, life lacks spontaneity and joy. Without service to others, it lacks meaning and purpose … Conceiving of ourselves as artists in whatever work we do gives us a metaphor for a life of integrity, service, enjoyment, and excellence … I know of no better nutshell statement of the path to finding one’s true calling in life than the simple formula given by Aristotle: ‘Where your talents and the needs of the world cross, there lies your vocation.’ These two, your talents and the needs of the world, are the great wake-up calls to your true vocation in life. To ignore either is, in some sense, to lose your soul.”

You’ll find that the happiest, most engaged individuals are those who are deeply involved in their workplace or community (or both), even if their time is unpaid.

Work is the natural outlet for our energy and enthusiasm. What could be more enjoyable than to love what you do and feel that it matters?

After all, the highest reward for your work is not what you get, but what you become.

Carpe Diem,

Alex

Have “Two Cents?” Just send your thoughts, ideas or comments toeditor@spiritualwealth.com.

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Change Your Perspective, Change Your Life

Alexander Green Alexander Green is the Investment Director of The Oxford ClubThe Oxford Club Communique, whose portfolio he directs, is ranked among the top 5 investment letters in the nation for 10-year performance by the independent Hulbert Investment Digest. Alex is the author of The New York Times bestseller “The Gone Fishin’ Portfolio: Get Wise, Get Wealthy… and Get On With Your Life” and, more recently, “The Secret of Shelter Island: Money and What Matters.” He has been featured onOprah & FriendsCNBCNational Public Radio (NPR)Fox News and “The O’Reilly Factor,” and has been profiled by The Wall Street Journal,BusinessWeekForbes, and Kiplinger’s Personal Finance, among others. He currently lives in Charlottesville, Virginia and Winter Springs, Florida with his wife Karen and their children Hannah and David.
Copyright © 2010 by The Oxford Club, L.L.C
Contact: Spiritual Wealth Member Services
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I recommend: “Job-hunting toolbar and resources will help you organize and take action on your goals, free download”

I recommend: “Job-hunting toolbar and resources will help you organize and take action on your goals, free download” http://bit.ly/cjjmy4

Advance Confidently

“If one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams,

and endeavours to live the life that he has imagined,

he will meet with success unexpected in common hours.”

– Henry David Thoreau

One of my all-time favourite quotations, Thoreau’s words have a simplicity, beauty and truth to them.  Yet upon closer examination, he put forth provocative and compelling ideas when he wrote those words so long ago.

In the century that they were written, the great man’s words quietly rang true.  And much like we find in the best writings of the ancients, Thoreau’s maxim is timeless and fitting in any age, including our own — and hugely applicable in every life.

Thoreau’s words above have given me a great deal of satisfaction and solace over the years, in fact I carried a business card-sized copy of the quotation in my dash for years when I was a sales rep.  I found it particularly useful in those moments when I needed to place a disappointment into the proper context.  And yet at the same time it has served to challenge me both to think and to take actions congruent with my goals.  Because if we don’t create objectives in our lives and move towards them, we’re lost and sentenced to walk our days aimlessly in mediocrity and disappointment.  Sadly, most people in my opinion have given up on their dreams and have forgotten to live the lives they imagined, and hence are stuck in unwitting ruts lasting years, and even more tragically, entire lifetimes.

Do you agree?   Based on my experience, introspection, and observations made from interviews with many hundreds of businesspeople, I believe it to be case.

But if we set challenging, worthwhile objectives — ones that fill us to the brim with energy at the thought of realizing their attainment — and we commit to look at them every day and compel ourselves to move forward towards their realization, then we’re setting the course for our own lives, and we’re creating our own destiny.

Sure, Thoreau’s words have a certain poetic quality to them, so simple is his overall message.  But when you really slow down for a moment and read each of the lines, holding one after the other up to the light in the room, and then contemplate what these things have meant in your own life — and the hope that the ideas contain — then you’ll undoubtedly come to see the inherent wisdom.

I think that my favourite part of all has to be that fascinating last line where he implies that we unexpectedly — almost surprisingly — meet with greatness.  That to me is the promise, and it certainly is a promise, that Thoreau makes to us.

But it’s up to each of us as individuals to ensure that the bond of those lines, steeped in profound insights, is kept.  And keeping that promise of moving towards our dreams, and of quietly keeping our word to own future selves — that is what allows us to continue advancing confidently into the sunlit uplands.


All the best,

Andrew

*****

Copyright © Andrew Scollick

Andrew leads professionals forward in their careers to opportunities that add value and improve their lives.

Connect with him at:

http://ca.linkedin.com/in/andrewscollick

https://twitter.com/AndrewScollick

or Facebook Professional: http://bit.ly/bRMuw7


Tracking Your Success: Why You Should Keep a Daily Journal

By Michael Masterson

It may seem a self-centered pastime, but keeping a journal is actually an excellent goal-setting tool. It can help you figure out a direction for your life, and then guide you where you want to go.

A journal you use for that purpose – recording, revising, and recommitting yourself to your goals – becomes a log of your successes, observations, achievements, problem-solving skills, and best ideas that you can refer back to again and again. But you can also include less serious subjects.

In my earlier years, I kept journals sporadically, usually when traveling or involved in some interesting project. I kept a journal for two years when I lived in Africa teaching English and philosophy at the University of Chad. I kept a journal twice during summer vacations – once in the French countryside and another time in Rome.

But when I started writing ETR, about 10 years ago, I began keeping a journal every day. I have done so pretty much nonstop since then.

Before my thumbs became arthritic, I wrote my journals in a book with a fountain pen. Now I do it on my computer. I liked the feel of writing out my words. And I drew illustrations, indulging my artistic fantasies. I can’t do that anymore, but I can import illustrations from the Internet.

I use my journal to get my day started. As a writer, I face the same blank page/screen every writer faces each morning. Rather than wait for the proverbial flash of inspiration, I begin by opening up yesterday’s journal entry, reading it, and using it as a springboard for the writing I will do that day.

My first effort is a sort of obsessive-compulsive account of the hours that have passed since yesterday’s journal entry: what I’ve eaten, what exercise I’ve done, what work I’ve done, etc. This is not meant for anyone else to read. (I’d be embarrassed if anyone did read it.) It serves to rev up my idling mind and limber up my fingers. I spend five minutes doing this, which is usually enough.

Next, I edit something that I wrote the day before. Often, it’s a poem or short story. But sometimes it’s an essay for ETR. This requires a bit more mental acuity. After a half-hour of that, I can feel the creative engine kicking into third gear.

Then I start my real writing. Fiction or non-fiction, this is the most important part of my writing day.

My journal is also the place where I track my health information – my weight, my blood-sugar levels, my doctors’ appointments and results – as well as the progress I’ve made on other goals in business and my personal life.

I used to keep my goals, objectives, and daily task list separately on a notepad. This past year, I’ve begun to include them in my journal, and that has worked out very well.

My sister A, who is an art director for theater and film, e-mails her family copies of her daily journal when she is on set. These are filled with photos and comments about her unusual life. I’ve never used my journal as a communication tool, but I can see from her example how it could be done.

To me, a journal should be like your house. It should be filled with interesting things that reflect the person you are. I hate houses that are designed by professional decorators. You walk through them and they all look the same. You know the people who own them, but you can find no evidence of their personalities where they live.

Keeping a journal can help you change your life. As I said, it can help you do better work, achieve your goals, communicate with friends and family, and get your working day moving. And it’s a terrific way to leave behind a record of who you were and what you were doing during your voyage through life.

If you are keeping a journal or thinking about starting one, here are three ways to make that journal work for you.

3 Powerful Ways to Benefit From Your Journal

1. Keep track of your goals.

Every month, I consult my list of yearly goals and create a list of monthly objectives. I keep both my yearly goals and monthly objectives on notepaper – a throwback to my handwritten days. But then, based on my monthly objectives, I put together my weekly and daily task lists – and those are input directly into my journal.

I highlight my priorities on my daily task list in yellow, and try to accomplish them all early in the day. And as I complete each task, I change its color from red to black on screen (the equivalent of scratching it out). This is a technique I’d recommend to you. The point is to give yourself a little psychological reward for completing your work.

At the end of each day, I note which tasks I’ve completed and which I’ve failed to complete. I also note how long it took me to complete each task. This helps me get better at estimating time commitments in the future.

The goal-setting aspect of my journal has become the most productive part. It may not always be the most fun, but it’s critical to the success of my long-term plans.

2. Stay creative and keep your writing fresh.

Writing in your journal every morning gets and keeps your creative juices flowing. You can record ideas for new products or services… draft memos to your team or letters to colleagues… jot down outlines for books you want to write… even practice your copywriting.

Copywriter John Forde recommends writing three pages of sales copy a day. He says it will keep your imagination in top form. I believe he’s right.

3. Remember things you’ve learned, books you’ve read, and observations you’ve made.

We all have great thoughts now and then. And what do we do with those thoughts? Scribble them on scraps of paper and then lose them, right? Nowadays, whenever I get a good idea, I make note of it by entering it in my journal and putting NTS (note to self) in front of it, highlighted in yellow. It is easy to spot these highlighted entries, so I can be sure they will be put on my goal list and not forgotten about (like so many of my good ideas were before I kept a journal).

I also record interesting facts and figures from my reading. (I make it a point to locate at least one useful fact or idea in every newspaper or magazine or business book that I read.) And I use my journal to list recommendations that I read or hear about: a new wine to try, a new book, a new CD from a favorite singer, a new restaurant, an exotic destination that I want to travel to.

It’s amazing how much good stuff you can accumulate once you get into the habit of putting things that interest you into your journal and highlighting them for future use.

So those are three important benefits of keeping a journal – but there are many more. A journal can also be a place to:

• record snippets of conversations that you can use later when writing your next (or first) novel or screenplay

• list reasons why you deserve a big salary increase (or reasons why you shouldn’t be let go during your company’s upcoming layoffs)

• identify all your assets and their locations, so your spouse or children can get to them in an emergency

• index your favorite recipes, quotations, images, etc.

• record the good deeds you’ve done and the blessings you’ve received

Keeping a journal takes about 5 to 30 minutes a day – well worth it when you consider the payoff: It will help you make better plans and accomplish more with your time.

And when you get much older, a journal can give you an unexpected bonus: hours and hours of fun, reminiscing about your rich, rewarding, productive life.

This article appears courtesy of Early To Rise, a free newsletter dedicated to making money,improving health and secrets to success. For a complimentary subscription, visit http://www.earlytorise.com.

“Don’t Take a Chance on Luck”

How we achieve and sustain personal success…

“Don’t Take a Chance on Luck”… http://bit.ly/b30C16