Sad to Hear About Jim Rohn Passing Away
Resolve says, “I will.” The man says, “I will climb this mountain. They told me it is too high, too far, too steep, too rocky and too difficult. But it’s my mountain. I will climb it. You will soon see me waving from the top or dead on the side from trying.”
Time is more valuable than money. You can get more money, but you cannot get more time.
If you learn to set a good sail, the wind that blows will always take you to the dreams you want, the income you want, and the treasures of mind, purse, and soul you want.
I used to say, “Things cost too much.” Then my teacher straightened me out on that by saying, “The problem isn’t that things cost too much. The problem is that you can’t afford it.” That’s when I finally understood that the problem wasn’t “it” – the problem was “me.”
If you don’t like how things are, change it! You’re not a tree. You must get good at one of two things: sowing in the spring or begging in the fall. The soil says, “Don’t bring me your need, bring me your seed.”
Walk away from the 97% crowd. Don’t use their excuses. Take charge of your own life. You must take personal responsibility. You cannot change the circumstances, the seasons, or the wind, but you can change yourself.
Your paycheck is not your employer’s responsibility, it’s your responsibility. Your employer has no control over your value, but you do.
If you wish to find, you must search. Rarely does a good idea interrupt you.
I find it fascinating that most people plan their vacations with better care than they plan their lives. Perhaps that is because escape is easier than change. If you don’t design your own life plan, chances are you’ll fall into someone else’s plan. And guess what they may have planned for you? Not much.
Dear Facebook.

I Actually *Do* Enjoy Work. Weird.
I actually DO enjoy my work. I nearly fell off my chair when I realised this today. I've been bored and miserable most of this weekend (my wife is away on business) and then... I sat down to work!
Some good music (everything ranging from Jazz to Hard Rock and Metal), a good coding challenge and some hot beverage (coffee/tea) and I'm happy and feeling good again. Weird. I was convinced I didn't like this stuff :P
For maximum enjoyment, I should be working on one of my personal projects (of which there are many) or working with a nice-guy client who pays on time and doing something a little different to what I've done before.
Perhaps another contributor to enjoyment is the knowledge that there will be a reward for my efforts somewhere down the line. It's very depressing to work on a personal project that flops but clients pay, whether or not they make money. (I'd rather they make money but the point remains the same.)
There's a philosophical point to be made here and that is: As long as we're achieving something, depression and boredom have nothing to hold onto.
And another: Work with clients who value you enough to pay enough and to pay on time.
And yet another: Work on personal projects and businesses where you've DONE the market research and figured out what it will REALLY take to make a success of it.
And lastly: Have patience with your own projects. Nothing guarantees success like persistence.
Some good music (everything ranging from Jazz to Hard Rock and Metal), a good coding challenge and some hot beverage (coffee/tea) and I'm happy and feeling good again. Weird. I was convinced I didn't like this stuff :P
For maximum enjoyment, I should be working on one of my personal projects (of which there are many) or working with a nice-guy client who pays on time and doing something a little different to what I've done before.
Perhaps another contributor to enjoyment is the knowledge that there will be a reward for my efforts somewhere down the line. It's very depressing to work on a personal project that flops but clients pay, whether or not they make money. (I'd rather they make money but the point remains the same.)
There's a philosophical point to be made here and that is: As long as we're achieving something, depression and boredom have nothing to hold onto.
And another: Work with clients who value you enough to pay enough and to pay on time.
And yet another: Work on personal projects and businesses where you've DONE the market research and figured out what it will REALLY take to make a success of it.
And lastly: Have patience with your own projects. Nothing guarantees success like persistence.
Figure Out Your Guitar Modes A Little Easier
About 1 or maybe even 2 years ago, I created a site about guitar modes. At the time, I was just coming to grips with the concept so creating a blog in which I taught people what I learned made good sense and helped cement the ideas in my head.
Along with my blog, I also created a little widget which gives you a bit of a shortcut to remembering the formulas for the modes and also gives you basic tips on when and where to use them. Check it out:
If you'd also like this on your blog, go to my guitar modes blog post where I show you the code. Copy and paste the code into your blog and you're done! Enjoy :)
We Have ADSL - At Last!
Imaginet.co.za is cooking with gas. I signed up online and had connection login details within a minute. I phoned their support team 3 times and, each time, a knowledgeable techie helped me as far as he could. The problem finally turned out to be Telkom-related but, to be fair, Telkom sorted it out in 3 minutes as well.
So I'm a happy camper.
iBurst has been giving me headaches for quite some time. I suppose I delayed the move to ADSL because I thought it would be painful and take forever but, boy, was I wrong!
I opted for a 384kb line and, I have to admit, it feels on-par (or perhaps slightly slower) than iBurst. When it comes to downloads, the speed difference is quite noticeable but, for normal browsing, Gmail, Google Calendars, etc, it's fast! And, best of all, consistent.
iBurst really lives up to its name - you get "bursts" of speed. With ADSL - it seems to be one fairly constant stream of decent speed.
However, the real test will come tomorrow, when I try and work using this connection. I'm confident it'll be fine but I'll try to avoid counting these chickens before that hatch. (Whoops - too late!)
So I'm a happy camper.
iBurst has been giving me headaches for quite some time. I suppose I delayed the move to ADSL because I thought it would be painful and take forever but, boy, was I wrong!
I opted for a 384kb line and, I have to admit, it feels on-par (or perhaps slightly slower) than iBurst. When it comes to downloads, the speed difference is quite noticeable but, for normal browsing, Gmail, Google Calendars, etc, it's fast! And, best of all, consistent.
iBurst really lives up to its name - you get "bursts" of speed. With ADSL - it seems to be one fairly constant stream of decent speed.
However, the real test will come tomorrow, when I try and work using this connection. I'm confident it'll be fine but I'll try to avoid counting these chickens before that hatch. (Whoops - too late!)
It's NEVER as Hard as it Seems
Fear has robbed me of many achievements. I don't get started on things because they look boring or difficult to do. And I tend to blow things WAY out of proportion. And I know I'm not the only one - we all do it at some stage.
Sometimes when we're faced with something we don't feel like doing, we create excuses for ourselves that make the task seem impossible.
For example, I had 3 things to do for a client this afternoon. I was supposed to have done this last week already but I didn't feel like it and I made it seem like a huge task. After sitting down for 45 minutes, I've completed 2 out of the 3 tasks and it took WAY less time and energy than I'd imagined.
In fact, fixing the 1st problem automatically fixed the 2nd. The 3rd will probably take me another 15 mins so we're talking about ONE hour of work that I've put off for over a week.
It's always easier than it seems! But I get fooled every time. I end up having to kick myself in the nuts (not literally!) and remind myself that it's NEVER as hard as it looks. Then, eventually, I find the courage to give it a shot.
Once I manage that, I get a lot done and, miraculously, discover that it really was way easier than I thought ;) Go figure!
Sometimes when we're faced with something we don't feel like doing, we create excuses for ourselves that make the task seem impossible.
For example, I had 3 things to do for a client this afternoon. I was supposed to have done this last week already but I didn't feel like it and I made it seem like a huge task. After sitting down for 45 minutes, I've completed 2 out of the 3 tasks and it took WAY less time and energy than I'd imagined.
In fact, fixing the 1st problem automatically fixed the 2nd. The 3rd will probably take me another 15 mins so we're talking about ONE hour of work that I've put off for over a week.
It's always easier than it seems! But I get fooled every time. I end up having to kick myself in the nuts (not literally!) and remind myself that it's NEVER as hard as it looks. Then, eventually, I find the courage to give it a shot.
Once I manage that, I get a lot done and, miraculously, discover that it really was way easier than I thought ;) Go figure!
Passive Income Se Gat!
My new catch word is WORM. Write once, read many. You do the work once and earn from it multiple times.
Like writing an article, and then tweeting about it, and then Google picks it up and you start getting a steady stream of traffic to that article and you continuously earn money from the AdSense ads (or affiliate links) on that page - it's WORM.
I don't say passive income any more because it's not actually passive - you have to work at least once for it. But it can definitely be WORM. You do the work once and earn from it many times.
Or maybe it should be WOEM - write once, earn many!
Or even DOEM - Do once, earn many. I'm DOEM'ed ;)
Like writing an article, and then tweeting about it, and then Google picks it up and you start getting a steady stream of traffic to that article and you continuously earn money from the AdSense ads (or affiliate links) on that page - it's WORM.
I don't say passive income any more because it's not actually passive - you have to work at least once for it. But it can definitely be WORM. You do the work once and earn from it many times.
Or maybe it should be WOEM - write once, earn many!
Or even DOEM - Do once, earn many. I'm DOEM'ed ;)
Printable Checklists for Increased Productivity
This post is in both "Self Development" and "Wealth Creation" and I'll tell you why. Checklists are one very powerful way to ensure you cut the crap and get on with the important stuff.
I've just created a checklist called "Site a Day". It's designed to guide me through the process of creating a very small, very effective, keyword-focused web site - every day. By reducing the steps involved to a simple 7-step checklist, I keep myself focused and the process of ticking each step off is a great motivator.
If you're a Michael Gerber fan, you will already have learned about checklists. You may even have a few checklists for important processes in your business, that you require your employees to tick off. Good on you!
If you're looking for a faster way to make printable checklists, then look no further than the awesomeness that is http://printablechecklist.org. It's intuitive, lightning-fast, doesn't require registration and, when you're done, you can just print to PDF. With your new PDF, you can print as many copies as you like as often as you like. More recent versions of Firefox support printing to PDF so this really couldn't be simpler! Enjoy :)
I've just created a checklist called "Site a Day". It's designed to guide me through the process of creating a very small, very effective, keyword-focused web site - every day. By reducing the steps involved to a simple 7-step checklist, I keep myself focused and the process of ticking each step off is a great motivator.
If you're a Michael Gerber fan, you will already have learned about checklists. You may even have a few checklists for important processes in your business, that you require your employees to tick off. Good on you!
If you're looking for a faster way to make printable checklists, then look no further than the awesomeness that is http://printablechecklist.org. It's intuitive, lightning-fast, doesn't require registration and, when you're done, you can just print to PDF. With your new PDF, you can print as many copies as you like as often as you like. More recent versions of Firefox support printing to PDF so this really couldn't be simpler! Enjoy :)
What SABC3 Should Have Said Instead
This is what the SABC3 had to say about the Survivor blunder:
Kaizer Kganyago
This is what Gmail said, the next day, about a widespread outage that affected people everywhere:
First, and foremost, recognise and express your understanding that your mistake was big enough to cause people some sort of pain or unhappiness. Then express how seriously you take the situation and then apologise and then tell us how you're investigating what went wrong / or tell us that you've already investigated the problem and have a plan to try and prevent it from happening again.
Sure, things go wrong but own up, apologise and don't play-it-down. The SABC3 has a lot to learn about PR!
"Thank you very much to the people watching the SABC. When things go wrong they're quick to complain, but they don't congratulate us when things go right."
Kaizer Kganyago
This is what Gmail said, the next day, about a widespread outage that affected people everywhere:
Gmail's web interface had a widespread outage earlier today, lasting about 100 minutes. We know how many people rely on Gmail for personal and professional communications, and we take it very seriously when there's a problem with the service. Thus, right up front, I'd like to apologize to all of you — today's outage was a Big Deal, and we're treating it as such. We've already thoroughly investigated what happened, and we're currently compiling a list of things we intend to fix or improve as a result of the investigation.
First, and foremost, recognise and express your understanding that your mistake was big enough to cause people some sort of pain or unhappiness. Then express how seriously you take the situation and then apologise and then tell us how you're investigating what went wrong / or tell us that you've already investigated the problem and have a plan to try and prevent it from happening again.
Sure, things go wrong but own up, apologise and don't play-it-down. The SABC3 has a lot to learn about PR!


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