Which part what?
Which part of your life is the most exciting?
Which part of your life is the most challenging?
How do you balance the two?
Disney Creativity and Innovation Keynote Speaker
One million+ people globally while at Disney Institute.
Which part what?
Which part of your life is the most exciting?
Which part of your life is the most challenging?
How do you balance the two?
We are never so poor we don’t have something to give.
We are never so rich we don’t have something to receive.
Ever thought about that?
For me, not too much, until our Priest shared it on Sunday. But I wrote it down, it was that powerful, in that moment.
Later, it hit me. It reminds me of who we are as human beings.
And then, humbly, it helped me process why writing five-a-day daily blogs is now an important part of my life.
Are you doing all you can?
“Why did you create five blogs in the first place, knowing that you’d never be writing in all five everyday anyway?”
Two logical reasons:
Mid Life Celebration is about balancing life’s big choices, and there are four:
This fifth blog, jeffnoel.com, was created because I thought there should be an “office” or “headquarters”, so to speak – one that didn’t have a theme and wasn’t part of the model.
And when the previous jeffnoel.com didn’t renew after having that domain, www.jeffnoel.com for seven years, it was a natural choice to pick my given name as a dot com.
That’s it. That’s how it happened. And now, I can’t stop myself.
In a sea of blogs that drone on about whatever, I’m carving out a space among the few who have five-a-day, droning on about whatever.
… continued from yesterday.
So that’s what happened, mostly, I wrote five blogs daily, for 100 days. Started late February or so and by June 1, the goal was accomplished.
Whew. It was hard some mornings. Easy other mornings. At the end, I was counting every day.
On the 101st day, I scaled back to three-a-day for the next week. The two I didn’t write in were the two that had the fewest visits. Made sense, right?
Guess what? They made a difference in the big picture, meaning that overall web site stats went down more than you might have thought they would.
The solution? Start back up writing five-a-day.
Could I do it?
Should I do it?
Was it worth it?
Would anyone even care?
Well, I did it.
And have never stopped. It’s been ten months and 1,500 blog posts later.
Okay, so this begs a question no one has asked yet. “Why did you create five blogs in the first place, knowing that you’d never be writing in all five everyday anyway?”