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by Jake Mogul on January 31st, 2010

Creative block: You sit down in front of the computer and you’ve decided that you are going to write. Or maybe you need to write. That assignment, that report, that screenplay, that short story needs to get written. It needs to happenĀ and there is not much time left and you need to do it now. You had an idea, which seemed brilliant this morning when it first graced your grey cells, but now that it has been around for a few hours and you have had a chance to compare it with other ideas, you are no longer sure it is worth pursuing. In fact, you are quite sure that it will be a fruitless waste of time and a mediocre piece of work at best.
And you just sit there, staring at the flashing cursor on the screen.
This will be a situation familiar to virtually everybody who has ever tried to write for long periods: You feel like you just can’t come up with anything to write about. And the harder you try, the worse it gets. And it doesn’t have to be writing. It can happen the same with music or magic or comedy or inventing or anything that involves creativity (even blogging!). You just can’t come up with anything. Sure, you get tired and frustrated thinking about it, but you just cannot seem to conquer the blank page.
Idea evaluation is a technique that I have begun using which has allowed me to produce the content I have been required to produce at the time I have been required to produce it. And in this article, I’m going to share with you how I do it. Read the rest of this entry »
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by Jake Mogul on January 21st, 2010
Sometimes things just don’t work out. It is a fact. No amount of coaching, training and self help literature can make any of us impervious to the eventuality that whatever we are doing, however well laid the plan is, sometimes things just don’t work out the way we want them to. And in the face of failure, staying motivated, keeping the faith, plough through and continuing to take action can be difficult.
I guess the motivational cliche is the quote of Thomas Edison, American inventor, scientist and business man who invented the light bulb … eventually. It famously took him more than a thousand attempts to create the device that we all know today. And after one thousand attempts, the press of the time accused him of failing, to which he famously answered, “I did not fail. I have successfully found 1000 ways not to make a light bulb.”*
Talk about reframing! To be unsuccessful at your goal one thousand times and still be undeterred from acheiving it would take an enormous amount of self belief and confidence. Most people do not have that much.
The important thing to remember at times of deferred success is that failure is a stepping stone to success provided that you learn from your failure, figure out why it was a failure and do not make the same mistake next time. There are only a finite number of mistakes you can make when trying to achieve a goal. As long as you attempt the task n+1 times, success should be guaranteed!
*I’m a stickler for correctness of information, so I’ll state from the outset that this quote may not be word for word correct. It has been requoted and misquoted so many times that it was impossible to find a source of the quote that I could rely on. Nonetheless, the meaning conveyed is the same.
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by Jake Mogul on January 11th, 2010

If you want more money the most obvious thing to do is get a job. But the vast majority of jobs involve trading time for money. If we do not enjoy the jobs we do, if they are not a calling for us, then the trade of time for money is more than just a trade, it is a sacrifice and a sacrifice that the vast majority of people make because they think that there is no choice. But in today’s modern world there are several ways in which you can generate income without making such a sizeable sacrifice of your time. Read the rest of this entry »
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by Jake Mogul on January 4th, 2010

Last week marked the beginning of a new year and a new decade. In the first 24 hours of 2010 the usual torrent of text messages came from virtually everybody in my phone book. One of them referred to the next ten years as “the teenies”, in the same vein as the twenties and thirties.
I want to begin 2010 the same way I begin every year: with a manifesto; a wish list, a list of action items and ambitions, and this year I’m going to post that manifesto on my blog (because now I have a blog. Last year, I did not).
Recent years have required me to do things that were not really me so I want 2010 to be all about reclaiming myself and my life. Getting back in contact with childhood dreams and being true to myself. And as hairy-fairy as some of that sounds, I believe it is true that to be truly happy, you have to be the person that you would be if there was nobody else to judge you for it.
So, here we go, in priority order… Read the rest of this entry »
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by Jake Mogul on January 1st, 2010

It’s that time of year again! After a couple of weeks of turkey and TV, it’s time to look forward to the year ahead and think about how we intend to improve ourselves and our lives over the coming year. Every year millions of people make New Year’s Resolutions to change personal behaviours, kick habits and realize dreams. But every year, after less than 60 days, most people have surrendered to the world, admitted defeat and put it off until next year.
Whether you aim to stop smoking, exercise more, lose weight or just simply enjoy life more, in this article, I’d like to share with you some killer techniques I’ve gathered over the years on first, how to make a New Year’s Resolution and second, how to maximize your chances of keeping it. Read the rest of this entry »
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