An Extraordinary Collaboration (Free Prize Inside!)

Let’s work together and create something that will help us all …

Note: submissions have been closed.

This is an updated repost from this exact time last year. The result last year ended up as Extraordinary Insights Volume 1, over 6,000 words of answers/ideas/advice/suggestions. It was a lot of fun. Let’s do it again!

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Here’s what this looks like:

  • You ask a question (or questions) about anything that you think I might have insight into. Basically anything I write about here is fair game, and since I write about almost everything here, almost everything is fair game. The more specific the question the better.
  • The only caveat is that said question/answer must be something others can benefit from as well. This way you’re forced to think about others when formulating your questions.
  • I answer each question as thoroughly as I am able to. I don’t claim to be an expert about anything. More and more I’ve been trying to answer questions with “I don’t know” instead of theory. But as far as this goes, “I don’t know” doesn’t count as an answer.
  • I’ll compile all the questions/answers into an eBook that will be available for a short while for free, and then through the Kindle Store for $0.99 (the Kindle version will include Volumes 1 & 2). Among other things, this is an experiment in collaborative Kindle publishing. (To be sure you don’t miss the free release subscribe to the RSS feed here.)

Why am I doing this?

2 reasons.

1) This is my way of saying thank you even though I know I’ll get a lot out of this as well.

2) I get a lot of e-mails with a lot of questions that I think others would benefit from.

Sometimes I can steer the e-mailer in the right direction via a blog post I’ve written or the Freedom Fighters email course, but a lot of times it’s a new question that I actually have to think about. (I love when that happens!) This is an opportunity for us to collaborate as Freedom Fighters and build up a massive collection of information for the benefit of all of us.

If you haven’t already read Extraordinary Insights Volume 1 please check it out. But feel free to ask the same or similar questions because my answers/ideas/advice may have changed.

(Submissions have been closed.)

The Unexpected

In which I discuss lots of recent unexpected events …

The past two weeks have been a strong lesson in going with the flow, taking things as they come, and dealing with the unexpected.

I bought a car for Roller Coaster Tour just 10 days before tour started. It was in the shop almost every day. Nothing major. Little, annoying things. The A/C. The ignition cylinder. The driver’s side lock cylinder. I didn’t think it could possibly continue so I started the tour on Saturday May 21 as planned.

Everything went well. Until it didn’t.

I woke up Sunday to drive to Indiana, which was cancelled because 2 coasters were closed. Oh well, I could make that up later since Indiana isn’t far from my tour end point in Ohio. So then I decided to head to Chicago where my friends The Swellers were playing a show. It was a hot day. 80F+ and sunny. The A/C broke again. Driving with the windows down is all well and good for an hour. But for 5 hours? It’s not so fun. Oh well, I’d figure it out Monday morning before going to Six Flags.

Monday morning I headed to the car repair shop and they fixed the A/C for $150. As I was turning out of the repair shop my turning signals stopped working. What?! So I headed back. Estimated repair cost? $600. I had already spent $2k+ fixing the car. This was my breaking point. I called my Dad, who had offered to swap cars before the tour started, and we met on Exit 39 of I-94 in Michigan, ~200 miles from Six Flags. Thanks Dad! :)

Sunday was a wasted day. Monday was a wasted day. Finally Tuesday tour began again and things were looking up!

Unexpected Exhaustion

What I didn’t expect was that driving hundreds of miles every day, going on roller coasters, and then writing about the experience would be so exhausting.

“You know what?” I thought to myself. “Don’t post anything to RidiculouslyExtraordinary on Thursday. It’s going to be crap because you’re stressed beyond belief. Relax a bit from all these early tour SNAFUs.”

And so I didn’t post anything that Thursday. Even though I currently have 67 draft articles in various stages of completion and could have easily posted one of them. I decided to give The Insider’s Guide To Building Your First Road Bike some extra front page exposure. As I’d determined previously, skipping one day of posting isn’t a big deal. Except when one day turns into two turns into more.

Thursday came and went. And then Monday started creeping up. But I had driven 700 miles on Sunday and didn’t feel like writing anything for Monday. I did have some notes from the road, but nothing coherent.

“Ehh, I’ll just write tomorrow,” I lied to myself. Because “tomorrow” was another 500 miles of driving and I knew I’d be exhausted. And then I remembered Monday was a US Holiday. “Ehh, don’t post on a Holiday, it’s not going to get any traffic. Post Tuesday instead.”

“Tomorrow” is much like “some day.” And we already know, based on Life Lesson #11, that some day never comes. Sure enough, Tuesday came and went.

The First Big Tour Scheduling Conflict

Yesterday (Wednesday) I headed towards Federal Way, WA and Wild Waves theme park. It was raining, but I now know that parks keep rides going unless there is lightning. I called Wild Waves about getting a free ticket and they called me back to say “Hey Karol, this sounds great, but we’re not open this week.” Oops! A scheduling conflict was bound to happen and I put buffer days into my schedule for such a thing, but there was no buffer for Wild Waves. I would be heading to Portland for a conference immediately after.

What did I do? No sense getting upset. “Ehh, there is nothing I can do about this now. What can I do today instead?”

“Seattle, Seattle, Seattle … what to do in Seattle? Experience Music Project!”

As you may or may not know I started playing guitar because of two people. Kurt Cobain and Tony Iommi. The first song I ever learned was All Apologies by Nirvana, before I even owned a guitar. And so I headed to Experience Music Project, not expecting anything besides a Jimi Hendrix museum. I got there and what did I see?

What a nice, unexpected, surprise!

I already had a plan to go to Aberdeen, WA (Kurt Cobain’s birthplace) on my way to Portland on Thursday. This added something a little extra to it.

The Big Takeaway

Does dealing with the unexpected make us stronger? I don’t know. Maybe. Maybe not. It’s very rare that things go as planned, but I believe everything will go exactly as I plan it anyway. There isn’t much sense in expecting things to go wrong.

I don’t believe in “expect the unexpected.” Expecting things to go well feels better. If something goes wrong I can deal with it then, but at least my mind isn’t occupied with negative “what if” scenarios.

I don’t know what tomorrow holds, but I do know one thing. I expect everything will be just fine. ;)

How To Get Hired When “Nobody” Is Hiring

If you do this you will get hired …

The masses seem to believe getting hired these days is like winning the lottery. They’re thankful when it happens, but their chances are astronomical.

This is simply not true. If you want a job, they’re out there. If you want a job with someone who’s doing things a little differently, the jobs are definitely out there.

But that’s not good enough. That’s not actionable. Based on conversations with myself (don’t worry, I don’t *usually* have them out loud or in public) and some of my entrepreneur friends, here is how to get a job in any job climate:

Step 1) Stop thinking like the masses.

The masses believe getting hired is difficult because the masses go about it just like everyone else, which is why they’re “the masses.” It’s difficult to stand out from a crowd when there are hundreds or thousands of applicants for a single position. You might be thinking, “Well, that’s how the job application is set up. What am I supposed to do?”

That’s a great question. Lots of companies are still living in the 1900s and aren’t interested in hiring exceptional people in an exceptional way. It’s your choice whether you want to work for a dinosaur or not. (And even if you do, I still think my thoughts in this article are relevant.)

If you look at thought leaders like Seth Godin or Ramit Sethi, do you think they hire people in the traditional way? Not a chance.

Even big companies like Viacom are getting the picture. Last year Jen McCoy wanted to move from Florida to New York City to work for a company doing social media. She had no prospects lined up and didn’t have many contacts. What she did was create a website stating her plans and within weeks MTV (owned by Viacom) hired her to run their MTV News twitter as well as write articles for their website. Was that position listed on Monster or any other job seeker website? Maybe, but probably not. As far as I know Jen created that job out of thin air by being creative …

Which brings me to my next step …

Step 2) Get creative, even if you’re not.

I hate it as much as anybody when somebody tells me to “get creative” or “think outside of the box.” For the most part those are baseless, empty, useless statements from someone who has nothing of value to say. Also, I’m not a particularly creative person so when somebody says that it particularly irks me.

The beauty of the masses is they make it easy for you to get creative because they’re so incredibly, uncreatively, lame.

How does the following look for the regular job hunt? Search online, submit resume, wait. Search online, submit resume, wait. Search online, submit resume, wait.

Does that work? Yes, sometimes. Is it creative? Not at all. Does it put you in any kind of position of power? No way.

Another example of getting creative: Susan Lewis wanted a job. Nothing special there, right? But Susan Lewis got creative, and instead of “looking for a job” she decided to “hire a boss.” Much more fun, right? Beyond that, she created the website SusanHiresABoss.com, got the word out, and guess what? She found a boss.

Here’s the simple reason why any smart entrepreneur or manager will always hire people like Jen or Susan: they need creative people who take action! Which brings me to …

Step 3) Get off your ass and do something.

If nobody knows you exist nobody will hire you. Setting up a website and reaching out to people publicly seems like a daunting task, but you can break it down into smaller, less-daunting tasks. Just get it done.

Bonus: Do This and I Guarantee You Will Get A Job Within The Next 60 Days

This is definitely not for the masses. This is for the bad asses. Work for free.

Not forever, of course, but for a single project or X amount of time. A “trial run” so to speak.

Example:

Let’s say someone came to me (or created a website or blog post) and said:

Karol, I want to be your affiliate manager. I don’t have any experience right now so I’d work for free for 60 days. Here is what I would do in those 60 days:

  • Point 1
  • Point 2
  • Etc.

After the 60 days are up we can discuss if you’d like to hire me on for the future. If not, we go our separate ways with no hard feelings.

How likely do you think I would be to hire someone who put together a risk free proposal such as this? I’ll give you a hint: I’d hire them.

Am I even looking for an affiliate manager? Not necessarily. But I’d be dumb not to accept a well thought out proposal that has virtually no downside to me.

By the way, this same type of thing will work for almost any position, not just an affiliate manager. Just think “what’s in it for them?” What can you offer the potential employer? How can you increase their business or save them money or save them time? Smart business people want all of that and more.

Working for free also gets you over the biggest stumbling block any entrepreneur or hiring manager has: “Will this person be a good fit?” It’s impossible to answer that question before hiring somebody. Once someone is hired it’s a big mess to fire them. But if you put all the risk on your shoulders it’s completely up to you if you keep the job.

What’s it gonna be? Are you going to complain there are no jobs or are you going to create the job you want?

BTW, here’s a proposal I wrote for HowAboutWe.com today. This isn’t exactly what I’m talking about in this article, but then, I’m not looking for a job. Update (11:25am): They already got back to me. They said they’ll support the project on their site, but won’t pay for any of it. :)

If you like this article, spread the Facebook love:

The Art of Breaking Free

Sometimes you need to change your routine …


As of today, and for the next 3 weeks, I am officially unavailable. No e-mail (I will check it randomly for emergencies since I will be overseas and won’t have a phone), no twitter, no facebook.

Last month I asked for guest post submissions. Those will be posted for the next 3 Thursdays. I’ve also scheduled 3 more of my own articles for the next 3 Mondays.

This is NOT a digital sabbatical. I will have my computer with me. I will have my Kindle because I enjoy reading. I’m still going to go on Skype to call my Parents. :)

This is what we’ll call Breaking The Pad: Experiencing Creativity By Fucking Up The Routine.

Why am I doing this?

After reading Chapter 9 (Relaxation) in Transcend I realized I need to break free from commitments, if only for a short while. My upcoming Roller Coaster Tour, while fun, will be very stressful. Lots of driving, lots of video taking, lots of logistics.

“Taking breaks from your routine works wonders when it comes to stress management.” – Excerpt from Chapter 9 of Transcend.

In general, my level of stress is very low. I have enough money to do whatever I want, I have awesome friends, I put quality food into my body, this blog is thriving, and I’m almost always in a good mood. I actually like to say I live the most stress free life in the world. But I still have a routine and commitments.

It got me wondering. What would happen if I stepped away from the routine and the commitments for a short while?

Then I saw this video from Stefan Sagmeister called The Power of Time Off. Every 7 years he shuts down his design company and takes 1 year off to explore his creativity and anything else he desires.

I was a little bit envious when I first watched that video. “Wow, that is so cool. What a bad ass!”

Then I remembered: “Wait! I can do that! I have Ridiculously Extraordinary Freedom!”

When an opportunity came up to spend 3 weeks with old friends I had to take it. This wasn’t an easy decision as I had a few other options. If you’ll recall my Making Decisions article, this is the decision that I ultimately decided on (although I was much more vague in that article).

Does this mean I’m not working?

Yes and No. Much like Stefan, I’m going to do a lot of creative stuff.  A lot of writing and reading and singing and playing guitar and exploring and talking and not talking. The difference is I’ll be on a 3 week rock tour of the UK with my friends The Swellers. (Note: I won’t be playing with them, I’ll just be hanging out on tour.) If you’ve been here since the early days you’ve probably already read my article about What It’s Like To Tour With A Rock Band. That article also featured The Swellers when I toured with them for 3 weeks around the US in 2008.

We’ll be hitting England, Scotland, and Ireland! I’ve never been to the UK so this will be a great time to explore and spend time with some of the most creative people I know.

Interestingly enough, it has been exactly 6 months since I arrived back on US soil. I almost can’t believe I’ve been in the country that long.

Where am I headed?

  • 03.28 – Austin > Chicago > London
  • 03.29 – Oxford
  • 03.30 – Liverpool
  • 04.01 – Cork
  • 04.02 – Dublin
  • 04.03 – Belfast
  • 04.05 – Glasgow
  • 04.06 – Edinburgh
  • 04.07 – Newcastle
  • 04.08 – Manchester
  • 04.09 – Birmingham
  • 04.10 – Norwich
  • 04.12 – London
  • 04.13 – Bournemouth
  • 04.14 – Plymouth
  • 04.15 – Falmouth
  • 04.16 – Cardiff
  • 04.17 – Nottingham
  • 04.18 – London > Chicago

After we get into Chicago I’ll head to Michigan, where I’ll work on getting things finalized for when Roller Coaster Tour begins on May 21. :)

Meet Ups In The UK?

Probably not. Like I said, I won’t be checking e-mail or twitter. And I won’t be on my own schedule. If you want to come to a punk rock show then feel free. I’ll be the tall guy hanging out somewhere. :)

Comment Moderation

I was unsure what to do about this, but I’m going to turn off comments on my articles and leave comments open for the guest articles that will appear for the next 3 Thursdays. I won’t personally respond to any comments for 3 weeks.

It Won’t Even Look Like I’m Gone

I’ll be using Twuffer to schedule out my Tweets of articles and hopefully Facebook feed integration will work. :)

Thanks for being awesome. If you need to get in touch please wait until I’m back in the US, unless you’re interested in sponsoring RollerCoasterTour.com. ;)

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Of note: I decided to stop the one day per month Mind Control Method: Goal Setting For Smart People sale. It was a fun experiment, but too much work coordinating one day per month. So now Mind Control Method is available forever! To pick it up just click here.

Announcing The Future! RollerCoasterTour.com

1 man (me!), 3 months, 13,000 miles, every roller coaster in the United States …

Let's do this! Click the image to go to RollerCoasterTour.com

I’ve been dropping hints on twitter and facebook, but it’s time for the big reveal: RollerCoasterTour.com is aaaallllliiiiiivvvvvveeeee!

Beginning May 21 I’m going on a massive tour of the United States where I’ll ride every roller coaster in the land … and then end in Abu Dhabi at the fastest coaster in the world! It goes almost 150 miles per hour so it’s fitting that it’s located at Ferrari World.

If you’ve read How To Live Anywhere you already know I had this planned for a long time, but the logistics never worked out. A roller coaster tour must happen between late spring and early fall. Before or after that and too many parks are closed. May 21 seems to be like “opening day” in the roller coaster world.

Usually I’d have other plans that would make it difficult to fit a 3 month commitment. And normally I wouldn’t want to spend my Summer driving 13,000 miles. But I cleared my Summer and this road trip will be special.

I’m buying a 1986 Cadillac Hearse (which I will then sell or otherwise get rid of, maybe auction for charity?) so I can relive my childhood fantasies of being on The Munsters. I’ve always felt a connection with Herman Munster. He was tall, awkward, weird, misunderstood, and drove a hearse. He was awesome. :)

Logistics and Planning

If you know me you probably know I’m not a fan of planning. Well, figuring out the logistics of this tour took weeks (spread out over the past few months). I’ve probably spent close to 80 hours dissecting park websites and roller coaster databases. This is something I could have outsourced, but part of the fun in doing an adventure like this is getting down to the nitty gritty. Copying/pasting hundreds of coasters into a spreadsheet is not really a good use of time … but you learn a lot about what’s happening and where you’re going when you’re involved in the details.

More than that, I feel like I appreciate what I’m doing more because I know what a massive undertaking this is.

I’d like to especially thank UltimateRollerCoaster.com for being around. I don’t have any contact with them, but I used their database exclusively to figure out which coasters I’d be riding.

There were a lot of snafus along the way. For example, Google Maps (and every other major map site) has a limit of only 25 map points. I needed about 70. (Although I pared it down to 59 because some of the parks I let slip through the cracks had really weak kiddie coasters that were not worth visiting.)

I paid $29.95 for 250 map point credits at MyRouteOnline.com to get the job done. The map looks pretty good (you can see it here) and all I had to do was upload my spreadsheet to calculate the route and the total mileage. According to the site my route is actually 12,951.27 miles, but I’m sure you won’t kill me for rounding up to 13,000. In actuality, I’ll get lost at least 17 times and my mileage will end up being 26,000. ;) (Don’t worry, I will use a GPS.)

Another problem was figuring out the beginning of the tour. I wanted to start as soon as possible and get to Portland, OR in time for World Domination Summit (June 3-5). But certain parks aren’t open every day in late May, so I had to contact a few parks to figure out open days and work around that. More snafus will probably present themselves along the way, but I’ll deal with those as they arise.

I Can’t Do This Without Your Help!

As you can imagine, my estimated costs for this tour are not small. While I can pay this out of pocket, I’d much rather find an amazing sponsor who will subsidize the cost of the tour in exchange for a crazy amount of promotion via RollerCoasterTour.com, videos (of every coaster I go on), t-shirts (I’ll be wearing a Tour shirt on every coaster), and a car (err, hearse!) wrap.

If you work for an awesome company that would like to sponsor the tour please get in touch. If you know somebody that might work at an awesome company that would like to sponsor the tour, also get in touch! More info about sponsorship can be found here: http://www.rollercoastertour.com/sponsors/

South By Southwest!

I’ll do my best to connect with companies without being an annoying asshole over the next week at SXSW (I’m leaving for Austin tomorrow!). For the first time in a long time I actually have business cards. RollerCoasterTour.com business cards, but business cards none-the-less!

If you’ll be there we should meet up. I’ll be at a ton of events. Just look for the tall dude who looks like me. That will be me!

More More More

I could talk your ear off here (wait, wouldn’t it be “write your eyes off”?), but all the information about the tour is at RollerCoasterTour.com so go check it out.

Thanks for reading this decidedly abnormal article. Back to regularly scheduled programming on Monday.

Who The Fuck Am I? This Is About You

Because sometimes it’s easy to miss the point …

I closed off The Guest Post Not-Contest a few days ago and it was interesting reading the e-mails and comments over the previous three weeks.

One person commented to me that it was “a great opportunity, but your rules are like that of a 4th grade school teacher.” He said some other stuff, but I deleted it before getting bogged down with the loser mentality. That person completely missed the point of the not-contest. (I’m actually pretty sure they don’t regularly read this site. Mostly because it’s not written for them and there is purposefully nothing of value here for that person.)

The point of the not-contest was NOT to get a guest post here.

Seriously, who the fuck am I?

  • Some dude with a site that gets a mid-level amount of traffic.
  • 1 of almost 7 billion people on Earth.
  • A guy who knows what it takes to be successful and what it takes to be a failure. Yay! I’ve been both!

And that last part is where the not-contest was coming from.

You want a chance to make it to the NBA? Train with people who have trained other NBA players.

You want to have almost no chance of making it to the NBA? Train with your neighbor. The fat one who watches TV and eats McDonald’s all day.

You want to run a successful restaurant? Apprentice with a successful restaurateur.

You want to run an unsuccessful restaurant? Learn from someone who has never owned a successful restaurant. (Probably one of your business school teachers.)

You want a successful blog / online business that you can run from anywhere? Learn from the people who do exactly that. Maybe their lessons are created for a reason.

Here was my thinking:

Make it seem difficult by having lots of rules and details. I wanted to scare you into not submitting, because if all it takes is a few pesky details (which, honestly, were not tough) to stop you from creating your best work then you’re in for a massive surprise in the future. And it’s this: you will never be successful. It might not hit you today, or tomorrow, or even any time soon. But some day in the future you’re going to think “I know what Karol was talking about now! How can I possibly expect to be successful if I scare myself out of taking action?”

Bonus: read this story and then this one about how Derek Sivers was “born with singing talent” after only 15 years of practice and doing the crazy exercises his teacher demanded.

The rules were in place because that way I would only read articles by people who ship no matter what. People who if not already incredibly successful today, will be. Without all the rules I would’ve received an overwhelming amount of articles, many of which would not have been your best work.

There’s that phrase again, your best work! We’re onto something …

Anybody who followed the directions and dug deep created a piece of their best work. Whether I post that work here or not you know what happens when you know you can create great work? Your synapses start firing like never before and you achieve a bit of clarity. You know you can create more great work.

You know what happens when you continuously create great work? People. Fucking. Notice.

I think everybody who submitted got it because along with most submissions were comments like “Even if you don’t choose this, it was worth it. I really pushed myself and it feels amazing.”

Although I can’t accept all of the submissions I will choose 3 that I did receive. Everybody I don’t accept will get a link to their site with a paragraph about themselves in a special post on April 18. Boom! Everybody wins.

I alluded to this in tweets and on facebook. “Less than [X amount of time] before the guest post not-contest ends. You ship or you fail.” Thanks to everybody who submitted.

If you thought about submitting and talked yourself out of it, it’s OK. You failed this time. Reframe it, learn from it, and use it to light a fire under your ass. Get pissed at me, get pissed at yourself, do whatever it takes to create.

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Very special announcement on Thursday. I’ve been sending out cryptic tweets with maps and other malarky over the past couple weeks, but the big reveal is coming. It’s going to be a fun ole time. :)

Extraordinary Insights Volume 1

In which I answer dozens of your questions in 6,500 words …

Last month I opened up a Q&A where you had the option to anonymously ask me any question about anything you thought would help you and others. I received a lot of responses and this post is well over 6,000 words. Many of the questions were similar so I did my best to edit them into a single question and I also didn’t answer a few of the questions at all because they didn’t fall within the realm/spirit of what this is about.

Before we get to it, I would like to thank Roy Naim for formatting the questions for me into categories. :)

Let’s get to it …

Business / Blogging – 15 Questions

Knowing what you know now, if you had $1,000 to start your life of Ridiculously Extraordinary Freedom over, how would you allocate it?

This question could be taken a myriad of ways, but I’ll do my best.

Considering I started my first 6 figure business for less than $200 and this blog for less than $200 (as far as revenue, also a 6 figure business) I wouldn’t do much differently. We can always think about “I should have done this” or “I could have done that” or “I wish I did X this way” but none of that is particularly useful.

The simple procedure I’ve taken for everything that I’ve done successfully has been along the lines of:

  1. Decide on a niche, even if it’s not particularly well defined.
  2. Give that niche what it wants.

Is that too basic? Too pared down? No, it isn’t.

If you focus on giving people what they want then you will get what you want. There are no ifs, ands, or buts about it.

Which might lead to another question: “Well, what do people want?”

Health, wealth, and happiness.

In whatever niche you’re in this is what people are looking for.

Say you write a blog about fitness. What is your audience looking for? They probably want to lose weight and get fit so they feel good about themselves when they’re out and about in their daily lives. What does that mean? They want health and happiness.

It’s not complicated. Most people overcomplicate business and achieving success. That’s not to say that it’s necessarily easy to dominate or establish a foothold in your niche, but it is possible and the general process is not complicated.

How do you decide on particular niche markets? What filters do you use and how systematic can you make it for beginners?

Find the cross section of what you love and what people pay for. Again, it’s not complicated. Most of us have multiple interests. Take stock of those interests.

Which would you be happy to be involved with 5-10 years down the line?

That’s a good start. If you don’t see yourself in any particular market 5-10 years down the line then you’re not business focused, you’re money focused. That’s what day jobs are for.

Once you’ve envisioned one of your interests 5-10 years down the line, it will take a little research to see if it’s a viable market. In other words, can you make money?

To do that look for other blogs, books, eBooks, courses, seminars, webinars, and websites in the market. Is there anybody making money in your prospective market? If yes, good. Are there multiple people making money in your prospective market? If yes, great.

Are there not very many websites on your topic? It’s probably too small and it would behoove you to choose one of your other interests.

Do you use in-the-back stuff like keywords and backlinks to increase traffic? I know you use great content to secure followers and affiliate links to increase income, but how great a role do the less-visible elements play?

Backlinks that come naturally from other websites linking to me? Yes. Everything else? No.

My SEO sucks. How did you get good at it?

I don’t focus on SEO at all. Thesis Theme (the wordpress theme I use) is set up out-of-the-box to have great on-page SEO and 15% of my traffic comes from Google without focusing on Google whatsoever.

I’ve done absolutely nothing else. I don’t research keywords (although maybe I should). I don’t do article marketing (although maybe I should). I don’t spam with crappy article spinning (ugh, please never do this; if you don’t know what I’m referring to then all the better).

I’ve witnessed your site (and business, in general) grow from TALKING about being extraordinary, to truly BECOMING extraordinary. What were the most integral steps to making that happen?

I’m not entirely sure what this means, to be honest.

What I will say is nothing new though: give people what they want, be honest, show your true self (flaws and all), and people will connect with you.

The reason you see this advice repeated is because it works.

Another reason you see this advice repeated is because the general question is fairly common.

Successful people aren’t successful because of luck or necessarily even skill.

They’re successful because when they get advice (like give people what they want, be honest, show your true self) from someone who is successful they take action on it.

There are no secrets. No magic pills.

Napoleon Hill said (paraphrased): “If you can conceive and believe, you can achieve.”

What he left out was “Get off your ass and do something.”

I’m a bit overwhelmed with the mechanical aspects of starting my own website. Can you offer a little insight into what you use to run Ridiculously Extraordinary? Google Analytics? Themes? E-junkie? Feedburner? Widgets?

I have a very uncomplicated setup although if you’re just getting started then it will seem complicated.

Web host: BlueHost

Content Management System (CMS): WordPress (very quick install when you use BlueHost)

WordPress Theme: Thesis (I hung out with the creator Chris Pearson a couple times in Austin. He’s a really smart guy and I’m happy to support entrepreneurs who kick ass.)

Traffic analytics: Google Analytics

Shopping cart: E-junkie

Credit card processor: Paypal (usually) and Google Checkout (sparingly)

RSS subscriptions: Feedburner

E-mail course: Aweber (The #1 factor for your long term business success is having an e-mail list. Ignore this at your own peril.)

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– WP Super Cache

I have quit my day job 4 months ago and am trying to make money online since. I have a vision to earn small amount of $500 – $1000 monthly – that is my ‘enough’ line. I intend to then share my knowledge to others because I believe everyone should know an easy way to make a basic living without much work. This is probably very hard question but anyway, what would you do to achieve my goal? Or is it utopia?

Unfortunately you did it backwards. The idea is that you start making money first, then you quit your job. It’s very rare that somebody can quit their job and then figure out how to make money for themselves. There is just too much pressure.

As far as your idea of sharing your knowledge about how to make a living without much work: it doesn’t exist. And it’s actually a trap a lot of people get into.

How many bloggers write about how to blog without having a successful blog of their own? How many bloggers write about how to make money online without making any money online for themselves? How many bloggers write about traveling the world and working from anywhere without actually knowing a thing about travel? Too many. Some, unfortunately, are successful and spread messages and theories that don’t work. Thankfully, most are not successful.

Don’t think about how you can make money showing people how to make money. Add value to other people’s lives and you will make money. That value will not come by showing somebody how to do something that you do not know how to do.

Regarding branding for a blog: Do you think it’s better for the domain name to be the author’s own name, or a word/phrase that relates to the niche the blog is about?

There are just too many great examples for me to say you can’t use your name.

ChrisGuillebeau.com and TylerTervooren.com being two of them.

That said, you’ll see a common thread amongst the bloggers who blog with their names as the domain: they all give their blogs a unique name.

Chris’s is The Art of Non-conformity.

Tyler’s is Advanced Riskology.

As long as you come up with a good hook, the small details don’t matter.

For me, the pivotal moment that brought me wholeheartedly into your camp was the You Are Not A Number post. You have a great capacity for being welcoming and connecting with your readers, and it’s very much appreciated. How do you keep up with all of that and still have time for all of your writing projects and the other things that are important to you? How can new bloggers learn to focus without getting sucked in to the blogosphere to the exclusion of all else?

It’s not an issue of having time or making time. It’s what I do, so the time is there. In other words, there is nothing to keep up with because it’s what I do.

The way you approach blogging and connecting is important. If you take it seriously you’ll make it happen.

As for not getting sucked into the blogosphere: don’t have more than 10 subscriptions in your RSS feed and don’t spend all your time pretending to connect with people on Twitter. These subscriptions and follows can change over time (i.e. remove one, add one, remove two, add one, remove one, add two, whatever). Simple. Do it or don’t.

How do you decide whether or not to write about other people, say friends and family, in your blog? Do you ask permission or change names? I realize that you don’t do it very often and that your blog is about your goal to help your ‘right people’ realize their personal definition of freedom, so other folks don’t show up very often in your posts. Even so, if you have an answer, I’d love to hear it.

I write about whatever I want to write about. I don’t worry about repercussions because any repercussions you might be imagining are in your head. Nothing truly bad will happen by being honest with yourself and those in your life. Will some relationships fizzle or strain? Maybe. But isn’t it better to live with a free conscience and let your friends/family know how you truly feel? If it does bother you just don’t write about people.

Is it realistic to build your own online business in three months with 5-figure income coming in at the end and quit 9-5 job?

No.

I have a product I am trying to sell but I’m having a hard time connecting with people in my industry through email. I try to come off friendly, offering value, in a short, personal email, but largely these emails go ignored. I know these individuals are pitched all the time and my low pressure friendly tactics don’t seem to be working. Do you typically build a friendship first or just try and get to the point? Is it really a friendship if your looking for business?

If you’re just looking for business, then no it’s not friendship. That doesn’t mean it can’t work, or that you won’t become friends, but it’s an uphill battle.

How do you get around it? Connect with people you’re a fan of. It doesn’t matter if they’re in your industry or not. Most of my friends are not in my industry. Most of the people I know online are only in my industry in a roundabout way because we’re bloggers and Internet entrepreneurs.

If you’re trying to sell someone on an initial contact then you’re not coming off as friendly or offering any value. You’re focused on what you can get not what you can give. Give first. Give what you think may be too much. You’ll get more than enough back.

To better set and track my goals of world domination, what is a vague/approximate number for “small army members” per annual dollar in revenue? For example, if you have 10K people who occasionally check out your site, 2K people who buy your cheaper stuff & click on affiliate links and 500 people who buy your flagship project, this produces an annual income of x number of dollars. (I’m shooting for a goal of $2k in income per month from my online business and wanting to know what milestones I need to set to accomplish this goal.)

This is literally impossible to answer in the way you’re thinking about it because every single business, without fail, is different and produces different metrics.

If you want $2k/month this is how it’s broken down:

If you have a $10 product you need to make 200 sales to make $2,000. If you need to make 200 sales and your conversion rate is 1% then you need 20,000 visitors.

If you have a $100 product you need to make 20 sales to make $2,000. If you need to make 20 sales and your conversion rate is 1% you need 2,000 visitors.

You have to look at the numbers specifically for your business and reverse engineer what you have to do to make the numbers work.

Is it a possibility that privatization of the internet, anti net neutrality legislation (or the government’s refusal to protect net neutrality in the US) will have a negative effect on Freedom Fighters who are trying to pursue an online freedom business lifestyle?

Do what you do, don’t worry about what could happen. Live for today, not for tomorrow. Nobody can take today away from you. If you’re worrying about tomorrow then they’ve already taken everything you will ever have.

I am new to the internet business world. I have decided to set up a team to move forward with some of my ideas. My question is, how do I best identify potential partners whom I can trust will be on topic with my vision? I do not have a lot of local access, my inner circle is not as savvy as I am, which is not saying much.

The first question I have to ask is, why do you need a team? Start small, start with just yourself, when you need to add someone to the team (you might not) then worry about it. At this point you just need to get started and ship something. You’ll know when a potential partner is a good fit based on how you feel and when you know exactly what you need them for.

How do you think the minimalist lifestyle and business model applies to those gifted in and drawn to the artisan crafts or fine arts?

Can you live a minimalist lifestyle and still produce artisan crafts? Yes. I’m assuming you’re asking since you’ll need a lot of gear to make certain crafts. Minimalism is about having exactly what you need and nothing more. It’s not about owning 100 things.

Follow up to the last question: Can you achieve freedom as a leather craftsman?

Yes, but it depends on your definition of freedom. Truthfully, only you can answer this question because you are in the fantastic position of defining your own freedom.

Personal Development – Fear, Habits, Passion – 8 Questions

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There are many great blogs out there talking about how to monetize your passion. My question is what about those of us who don’t really feel passionate about anything? I find that since I decided to stop “striving” for pointless achievements I feel lost in limbo. I “like” many things, but nothing I would call “passion.” On behalf of the passionless what is your opinion/experience with this?

That’s a great question. If you’re passionless it’s a symptom of something greater, like depression. I know what that’s like. I spent years in a seemingly endless pit of despair.

That said, to find your passion, a great place to start is with the things you like, but you don’t believe you’re passionate about. You may surprise yourself once you begin focusing on something.

It’s similar to the way I approach fitness and working out. Lots of people say they hate working out or they start a workout program and quit because they don’t like it. Fair enough, there is a lot not to like.

The key isn’t to force yourself into a workout program you don’t enjoy. The key is to keep searching until you find a workout that you do enjoy.

The same can be said for passion. Which of your “likes” can you see yourself working at 5-10 years from now?

How do I combat my fear of not being perfect or good enough and just get started doing and living extraordinarily?

Nobody is perfect. The fear holding you back is most likely fear of failure. But we already know failure doesn’t exist. Resistance, to use Steven Pressfield’s word, is also holding you back. But it holds all of us back. Know that every successful person in the world deals with the same issues as you. Sure, once somebody has a bit of success it begets more success, but that doesn’t mean that Resistance isn’t trying to keep us back. If there’s something you want to do sit down for 1 minute, just 60 seconds, and start doing it. Once you start you will build momentum. If that doesn’t work then you’re working on something you’re not at all interested in.

(If you’d like to know how to achieve perfection click here.)

I find myself wanting to just stay away, be alone with my own thoughts for fear that I may lose my uniqueness. This may sound weird but this is one of the reasons I don’t read a lot, unless is something specific I want to know about. With so much information out there, how do you keep your thoughts/ideas from being contaminated with those of other people?

Here’s the reality: nobody is truly unique. Every thought you have came from somewhere. Every thought I have has been influenced by someone or some thing. I welcome my thoughts being “contaminated” by other ideas. This is how we grow. I know what I believe, but I’m also open to change. In actuality, reading a lot will expand and reinforce many of your ideas. And it might even change some of them for the better. :)

When an individual finds someone who inspires them, it can be easy to fall into a “what would Karol do?” mindset, at least initially. You are great at shifting the focus from you and your ideas to us and our potential. Human beings are in general self-centered, and shifting the focus from inward reflection to outward desire to help others is so valuable. How did you learn how to do that, and how can we learn it, so as to help others with our particular gifts?

When I’m writing on my blog or other public writing it is usually directed to one person, or maybe a few people. That helps me remove focus from myself and shift it to you. It’s a very conscious process. And in that respect it’s very easy to learn. If you want to share your gifts with someone simply focus on them when you’re writing or speaking. Don’t think about helping the masses, think about helping one individual, or a few individuals with similar traits.

One of your big things is “it’s not a race.” What’s your best advice for new readers of RidEx and Freedom Fighters who desperately want to leave the rat race, and have a hard time pacing themselves and dealing with the concept of delayed gratification? How do they temper their urge to hurry, so as to get the most out of the valuable process of life changes without losing momentum?

I will share with you the truth: you have no choice. You can pace yourself and succeed or you can rush through things and virtually guarantee failure. Knowing this doesn’t necessarily make delaying gratification any easier, but at least you know the outcome of whatever you choose to do. As for momentum, if you’re working towards something that you feel in every fiber of your being then you won’t need motivation to keep it up.

Somebody once asked me why I’m an entrepreneur. It’s because I have no choice. I can’t work a 9 to 5. It’s not simply due to freedom or because I hate corporate structure or whatever else everybody says. I simply have no other choice because I am not a hire-able human being. Don’t give yourself any other choice. No backup plans. No “ehh, if X doesn’t work I can always do Y.” If you want something get it. It’s there for you to take. Opportunity is everywhere, but most people waste it because they’re too busy road raging, watching Dexter, and sucking down quarter pound grease-ball burgers from McDonald’s (hat tip to Denis Leary for that line).

Sometimes a seemingly random event can be the thing that tips one over the edge toward determination to live a more extraordinary life. It can be as simple as a line in a song or a conversation with a neighbor. What’s one of yours? What are some ways people can think constructively about them, and take the needed steps and do the work to expand on them?

Well, I don’t believe things happen for a reason. We just happen to live with a lot of coincidence. Which is great. We can still hone that and use it for the greater good. I get a lot of inspiration from music. A line I’ve been quoting for years now is from a Down song called “Never Try” and it goes like this: “Never try, either do it or don’t waste your time.” Any time I’m not sure about something or I feel a bit unmotivated that usually perks me up. Or it forces me to make the decision to quit what I’m doing because it’s not something I’m really interested in pursuing.

Actively pursuing these “random events” isn’t worth the time or effort so there’s nothing I can recommend as far as taking certain steps or expanding upon them. You need to put your success on your shoulders instead of randomness or coincidence and make things happen.

I seem to fall off the wagon at the 5 day mark when changing a new habit. Days 1-3 I’m full of enthusiasm, 4 and 5 I use willpower to make sure I’m doing what I’m supposed to, but then I forget that I’m supposed to be changing my behavior. Any advice on that?

There are various studies that say you need 21 or 28 or 30 days to form a new habit. To be honest with you, I don’t bother with looking at numbers like that very often. Every day is Day 1. If there is something you need to do, do it. If you make it to Day 4, stay in the moment and think of it as Day 1. If you miss a day, start at Day 1. No guilt. Changing yourself for the better is an imperfect process, it doesn’t happen overnight, and it’s not a race. Eventually momentum will take over and it will be easier. There’s a reason I write every day. It’s not necessarily for the practice or even because I enjoy it. Both of those things are true, but it’s because I’m constantly fighting momentum, Resistance. If I skip a day it’s pretty easy to start back up. If I skip 2 days it gets more difficult. If I skip 3 I might as well forget it.

As an example: this document was supposed to be completed about a month ago. Do you know what happened? I let Resistance win. I let momentum win. I skipped a day because I didn’t make the time (due to traveling or some other commitment). Then I skipped another day because “hey, what’s one more day?” Today (note: date of writing = January 11, 2011), a full 3 weeks after the last time I even looked at this document, I decided I’d work on it for just a few minutes. It’s now 2 hours later and I’m raging through it. I may not finish it today, but I’ve started the snowball effect. Tomorrow I’ll be much more likely to tackle more questions. In a few days this will be complete.

We all struggle with this. It’s important not to let guilt or shame or any other negative feelings stop you from achieving what you want to achieve.

How does one get over an injustice?

Injustice is a part of life. There is not much you can do to control outside forces. You can, however, control how you react. The best way to react is not to react. Let it be, let it pass. Move on.

Lifehack – 7 questions

How can you get affordable health insurance working for yourself?

I wrote about this here.

Don’t smoke, don’t drink a lot, exercise, be healthy. Then choose a plan with a high deductible and a Health Savings Account (HSA), which allows you to put money aside in a bank tax free to be used only for medical expenses.

When I first began buying my own health insurance it was about $50/month. 6 years later it’s $100/month. For absolutely no reason (besides corporate greed) since I very rarely go to the doctor. The health industry needs a drastic upheaval, but politicians are too weak to make positive change happen. The best thing you can do is not rely on shady politicians (in other words, every single politician; yes, even that one) or the backwards insurance industry. Get healthy. Use high deductible insurance as “catastrophe” insurance in case of an accident or something else major.

How do you move around and find affordable apartments / housing for 2 to 3 months in a foreign location? I mean, in a way that doesn’t just rely on the internet or craigslist.

Why the aversion to relying on the Internet? We live in an amazing time that makes our traveling lives immeasurably easier than just a few years ago.

I’ve found all of my apartments via the Internet, except in India where I found it in a guidebook. CouchSurfing.org, Craigslist.org (not my favorite, but it works), GumTree.com (where available; Europe, Asia, Australia), and Google searches for “short term apartment + [city]” will help you find what you need. In a pinch you can use something like AirBNB.com, but apartments there have been incredibly overpriced every time I’ve searched.

How can we as Freedom Fighters bridge the gaping holes in the education system so that future leaders and creators don’t fall through the cracks? I realize there are as many answers to this as there are people in the world, so this question is for everyone reading this. What do you think about it?

The educational system is horribly flawed. It is not there to create thought leaders, but to churn out numbers; cogs in the machine. What you can do is influence the younger generation through writing, speaking, and mentoring. You won’t reach everybody, but even if you only reach one youngster you will have changed someone’s world. The more often this happens the more amazing our future will become.

Please comment on travel and living from anywhere for a person who is sight impaired. Are accommodations for the disabled better or worse outside the USA?

Honestly I have no idea how well the world is accommodated to the sight impaired. That said, I’m sure there is lots of information out there if you ask around, specifically at organizations that you probably already have contacts with. Even though this is a horrible answer I’m hoping maybe somebody has more insight and will answer in the comments. :)

I’m not a travel virgin, but I’m getting ready to plan a couple of much bigger trips (1 solo across the country, and 1 overseas to Europe) and I was wondering how do you plan your trips?

Congrats on your upcoming voyages! I don’t plan much except where I’m flying into and possibly when I’m leaving. But even this depends on a lot of factors. For example, when I went to India last year it was to learn how to build a guitar. I knew I’d be there for at least those 3 weeks, but I planned on staying for approximately 3 months. I didn’t enjoy it very much so I left after 2 months and headed to Thailand. In Thailand I could only get a 30 day visitor on arrival visa and I didn’t want to keep doing border runs (I did one and it was a waste of a day), so I stayed for 40 days and went to Poland for 4 ½ months. If your trip is open-ended you should leave room for a lot of flexibility because you never know how you’ll feel about certain places.

Any advice for tackling sleep onset insomnia? The kind where your body is tired enough to fall asleep but your brain won’t shut off?

Interestingly, Tim Ferriss’s new book 4-Hour Body has a whole section on sleep onset insomnia. I used to have it as well. There are 2 things that helped me: I stopped being depressed and I started writing every day. I have one of those “won’t shut off” brains, but by consistently getting words out of my head and onto paper (or a computer) it has helped a lot.

What are your techniques for getting the basics of a new language down quickly? How do you adjust when you are in a new language situation? What successes have you had in language learning that can inspire others?

I don’t shoot for anything but the basics so there is no real strategy I use. There are a few things you should always learn: hello, thank you, please, goodbye, how much, where is the toilet. Once you’ve got that all down (it should take an hour or two) it’s all a matter of just getting out there and expanding as you see fit.

When I’m in a new language situation I use a lot of Traveler’s Sign Language along with the above words/phrases. TSL is universal and there’s no correct way to use it. Point and smile, point and smile. :)

I don’t think my language learning will ever inspire anybody. I took 2 years of Spanish in High School from a teacher who probably never left the United States and probably couldn’t hold a conversation in the language. I know approximately 27 Spanish words. As for Polish: I can speak fluently but that’s because I grew up with it and went back to Poland recently with the specific task of not sucking at speaking Polish anymore. I’ve always considered myself fluent, but it was always really slow and broken and awkward. It’s a lot better now, and I’m going to make regular trips back to Poland to keep me on my toes.

Personal – 11 Questions

How are you managing family relationships with the people that do not follow you around the world?

I have a small family and I haven’t lived near them in 7 years so I do what I’ve always done: phone or skype. I also visit at least once per year.

That said, as I recently wrote, relationships are the most difficult part of traveling.

How did you really feel after the Everything Matters post? And a couple of days after the whole TV discussion?

You’re assuming I felt differently than what I’ve previously expressed.

Those who got it, got it. Those who didn’t, didn’t. It’s really nothing more than that. I find it sad that people will defend their TV watching (TV is set up to keep you from reaching your dreams), but it doesn’t bother me because those are most likely not my right people. That said, my right people choose me, I don’t choose them. I might draw the line in the sand, but you choose which side you’d like to stand on. Or maybe you just say “fuck the line” altogether. :)

What do you regret? Or what are your thoughts on regret?

I don’t think about regrets. I do, however, think about “if I don’t do X then I’ll regret it.” In that way, I don’t create future regrets.

Do I have regrets? Sure, but it’s of no use thinking about them except to acknowledge that they were there. There is absolutely nothing you or I can do to change the past, so no sense in having any negative feelings (such as regret) about the past.

How do you take criticism or deal with criticism? How do you take it constructively and not let it get personal?

Great question with a fairly simple answer: I don’t read hater e-mails, comments or reviews. As soon as I get a comment or an e-mail that is hateful (it’s easy to spot) I delete it. I know the writer is sad or lonely or depressed and probably just needed to get something off their chest. They probably don’t feel any better after doing it and I’m sure not going to add fuel to the fire by responding or even reading. In other words, “fuck ’em.” ;)

I wasn’t always like this. I used to get really depressed with criticism until I realized it wasn’t a problem with me, it was a problem with them.

As an example, I was recently having a pleasant conversation with a cute girl at a bar. She said something insulting so I told her “you can go back to your friends now.” If you just read that it might make me sound like an asshole, but I just don’t have time to waste on personal attacks of any kind. You shouldn’t have time for them either. You can let certain people walk all over you or you can show them the door. The power is in your hands, not theirs. It’s your choice.

This also holds true if the criticism is coming from people close to you. You must stop associating with them. Avoid the unhappy and unlucky. Think you can’t do it? Read what Jennifer Gresham wrote in “Why I Fired My Father (And Maybe You Should Too)” about why she quit her relationship with her father.

You deserve positive, encouraging, inspiring, helpful people in your life. Don’t accept anything less.

In the Luxury of Less you mentioned that you had some depressive moments in your life back in the days. What has contributed to turning around this dark period of your life? When was the “click” moment that you felt that it was time to do something? Have some helped through this process or did you do all by yourself? What would you say to the ones that are living those hard moments right now?

My answer to this question changes every time I am asked. Mostly because it wasn’t any one thing. I knew I wasn’t going to kill myself because that was stupid to me, so I could either choose to be happy or choose to be depressed. Being depressed is no fun, being happy is fun. It was a simple choice when I boiled it down to its essence. If I had to pinpoint it then the “click” began when I started going out and meeting people through CouchSurfing. It was like “oh, wow, there are cool people out there who like me for me!” and we got along very well. In that way it was a group effort, but internally it was a solo effort.

If you’re living those hard moments right now I would say this:

1) Find something you love so much that you wouldn’t leave it by killing yourself. For me that was my cat Jessie, but it can be anything, even an inanimate object. Hell, even a TV show. :)

2) Get professional help. This was my mistake. If you’re on the brink right now, in the US you can call (800) 273-8255. We want you here.

3) Start slowly, but get out of your comfort zone. In Luxury of Less I talk about Solo Social Activities. Don’t be afraid to go out and do things that most people do in groups even if you don’t have a group to do them with. Learn to love spending time with yourself. An interesting thing happens when you do this: you’ll actually find people who love spending time with you as well.

Do you finish what you start?

Yes and no. Yes, if I want to. No, if I don’t. For example, if I’m reading a book and it hasn’t captivated me in the first 50 pages there is no way I will continue reading it. My time is too important to waste. If I’m working on a project that doesn’t seem to be going anywhere and I can see pushing through that dip isn’t worth it (sometimes it is worth pushing through the dip) then I quit.

So the question remains: how do you know if something is worth pushing through the dip? Well, Seth Godin wrote a whole book about this (The Dip), which I recommend you read. You intuitively know when you’re working on something that will change your world. And you also know when you’re working half-assed towards something. Either put your all into it or don’t bother. Otherwise you’re wasting your time and everybody else’s time as well.

One of the things that inspires me most about your lifestyle is the small number of possessions and clothing that you own/carry around with you. Which for me begs the question: what do you wear while you’re doing laundry?

Ha! Right now I have 4 shirts, 4 pairs of socks, and 4 underwear. So on Day 4 I do my laundry and I have clean stuff to wear on Day 5. When I wash my pants (not very often) I wear my shorts. It’s all very simple really. :)

I want to hear more about when you became vegan. What prompted the decision? Did you go vegetarian first? How old were you? What did/do your family and friends think?

What prompted the decision is knowing that I was ruining the world and myself by directly contributing to and supporting the torture and rape of animals simply so I could get fat and lazy at McDonald’s and Taco Bell and “that awesome local restaurant OMG!” I was first exposed to vegetarianism when I was 19 and dated a vegetarian. Since that time I began incorporating more vegetarian meals into my diet. I never liked cooking with meat so at home it wasn’t an issue. If I was out and about the raw meat was sight unseen so it was easier to deal with. Eventually, consciously thinking about what I was eating sickened me so much I couldn’t even do it when I was out at a restaurant. Yes, I went vegetarian first, for about 2 months. I was 27. My family/friends thought I was insane. Insanity is believing it’s OK to brutally kill (it’s never quick and painless, it is brutal, don’t fool yourself into believing otherwise) billions of living things when there are alternatives. I don’t expect most people to understand this because most people don’t live life on purpose. I’m actually working on something to inspire people to at least make the step to not eat animals 1 day every week. That’s so easy to do. While it may not have a massive impact, a small positive impact is better than no impact.

And because I get a followup question a lot: what about hunting? If you’re going to go out and kill your food in the wild (not canned hunts) like a conscious, sane, member of the ecosystem I don’t have an issue with that. If you’re human enough to kill/prepare/dress the meat (no cop outs, anybody can murder) like our ancestors then you deserve to eat it. Most people will never do this because it sickens them, and yet … ?

Do you meditate with a phrase? I like “May you be filled with loving kindness. May you be well. May you be peaceful and at ease. May you be happy.” I like this one a lot and it helps to center me. Do you have a phrase or mantra that helps you and could maybe help others?

I don’t meditate, but I hope for anybody who does they get something out of your mantra. :)

Did you find a way to deal with the scarcity mindset you described in this post and was it actively working towards the solution or just letting it go away?

Writing that post actually did the trick. :) In that way it was an active solution, but it was also realizing that every successful person deals with scarcity and resistance and tons of other mental blocks. It’s OK that you feel them. Let them be, let them pass, continue on your path.

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Whew! There we have it. Extraordinary Insights Volume 1. I enjoyed doing this and I hope you got a lot out of it. I’m thinking I will probably do something like this once or twice every year.

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7 Reasons Living Anywhere Sucks

Because living everywhere isn’t always everything it’s cracked up to be …

There are a lot of benefits to being on the move constantly and living in new places every few months. You get to explore new places, meet new people, experience vastly different cultures, try new things, step out of your comfort zone (you have no choice in this matter; fight or flight), amongst many other things. But I’ve received a lot of e-mails/questions asking if there’s anything I don’t like about it. Are there things I would change about this lifestyle? Do I ever want to quit and settle down somewhere permanently?

The truth is living anywhere is not all double rainbows and chocolate cake. There are downsides to being on the road in perpetuity …

  1. Less Than Stellar Beds
    I haven’t slept on an extra firm bed in 18 months. For whatever reason most people believe the softer the better. Not for me. I like a bed that is just shy of a wood floor. Like maybe a wood floor with some really thick shag carpeting. :) What I usually get I’d liken to a big soft sponge that gives me a wake-up back ache (which only lasts a few minutes, thankfully). It is true that I could buy a new bed in every country I move to, but that’s a little extreme. I will, however, consider it the next time I decide to stay in a place for ~6 months.
  2. It’s Difficult To Maintain Relationships
    When you’re regularly in different time zones and anywhere from a few hundred miles to tens of thousands of miles away from friends it’s not easy to maintain those relationships. Yes, there is facebook and the like, but that’s really passive and it’s bare minimum maintenance. Just check out why Sam deleted his facebook account. I really commend him for taking that step to consciously improve his relationships. I’m not sure it’s feasible to cut myself off from everyone on facebook at this point since I’m usually not in a geographic position to maintain those relationships otherwise. Or maybe that’s just a lazy excuse.
  3. Creating New Relationships Isn’t Always Easy Either
    As you travel more it becomes easier, but starting from scratch with new friends every few months isn’t exactly the best way to form strong bonds with people. If everybody knows “this is going to end in X amount of time”, but still stays in the moment then that helps, but it can be a drag none-the-less. This largely depends on your personality as well. If you’re able to shut off your emotions and become a robot then you’ll do much better with leaving the friends you make in every new town. Most of us can’t do that. Sometimes I worry that I have become too good at it.
  4. Getting Settled Takes Time
    No matter how many times I do it, getting settled takes a bit of time. I know I adapt much quicker now than before, and the whole process of figuring things out and getting settled is an adventure, but that doesn’t mean it’s easy. What I’m specifically referring to is learning the pulse of a city. Where things are. The fun places to hang out. The good places to eat. Where to buy a pillow. :)
  5. Finding A Short-Term Furnished Apartment Is Usually A Frustrating Experience
    I wrote about exactly what I do to find places to live in How To Live Anywhere. Each time I do it it makes it easier, but that doesn’t mean that it’s not frustrating. Finding any apartment anywhere is already a frustrating experience without the short-term fully furnished requirements. When you need a furnished apartment for a short amount of time and don’t want to pay astronomical corporate housing rates it’s exponentially more difficult. That said, it has been most difficult in the United States than elsewhere. We’re just not set up for travelers and nomads here.
  6. Missing Certain People
    You’d think this is similar to maintaining relationships, but it’s not quite. When you travel you make a lot of connections without always making plans for keeping in touch. That can be for a variety of factors, but there are people I sometimes miss and I know I’ll never see them again.
  7. Is It Too Much To Ask To Want A Blender At All Times? :)
    Yes, it might be, but I want a blender at all times. Hummus, smoothies, the options are endless. And a good juicer would be sweet as well. ;)
  8. Maintaining A Workout Routine Can Be A Hassle
    Sure, you can do pushups and things like that anywhere, but let’s say you like to ride a bike. (I rode my bike for 2-3 hours/day when I lived in Poland.) That means you’ve got to first find a bike to buy and then sell it or get rid of it otherwise at a later date. It helps if you’re a runner. I’m not. And if you’re in a cold weather place most outdoor activities go out the window anyway. If you’re a gym rat it’s easy enough. You can find no-contract gyms everywhere, but gyms are not my style.

As you can see three of the bullet points above deal specifically with people. The reason is that people = life. You don’t need a lot of awesome people in your circle to have an awesome life, but you need a couple. And it dramatically helps your sanity if you are able to maintain and grow those relationships. We’re living in a very exciting time in that the Internet does make it easier to establish and grow relationships all over the world, but it’s definitely not an end all and be all replacement for actual human interaction.

This all begs the question, what’s the point of the nomadic existence?

For every negative reason up above I can come up with 10 positives. Maybe I’ll do that in the future but, if nothing else, know this:

I wouldn’t change a single god damn thing in my life.

If you can say the same then it doesn’t matter what you’re doing, you are on your right path.

Are you on your right path?

The “My Life Is Better Do What I Say” Conundrum

There is so much to say here that I may very well go on 1,349 tangents and hide my actual point in a metaphor or 3. If you don’t want your brain to do backflips maybe read twice before decoding what I’ve actually written.

Life is like a box of chocolates … kidding, that’s not my metaphor. ;) (Run Forest!)

Also, I’m not going to use any metaphors. Let’s make this simple. :)

Recently Norcross wrote an article called Designing The Hate Lifestyle about his issues with this whole lifestyle design / minimalist thing. A lot of people are entering this niche and talking down to others who aren’t living their lives in a very specific way.

I have many of the same issues as Norcross. I’ve always refused to call myself a lifestyle designer and I don’t think I’ve ever used it in writing here. (P.S. I also dislike location independent; don’t believe I’ve used that one either.)

My specific issues with those phrases are exactly what Norcross pointed out: they’re just buzzwords. Essentially meaningless. Location independent? WTF does that really mean? I’m fully dependent on my location (wherever that happens to be). Otherwise I guess I’d be a ghost. As for “lifestyle design”? Don’t we all design our lives? Unless you’re a robot or a slave you already design your life. Maybe it’s not your ideal life, but you still design it.

Can this whole thing still be a positive, world-changing movement? Can we still have Freedom Fighters? Can we still seek our ideal lives?

Yes. Consciously improving your life will never be a bad thing.

Are all the people who use the buzzwords bad people doing bad things?

No way. I’m friends with quite a few of them and they rock.

And that’s the issue I brought up in the comments to Norcross’s article:

From my own experience and from the experiences of a lot of people I know, many of us *were not* satisfied with life. That’s not to say that *you* can’t be satisfied just because you own more than X number of things and don’t constantly travel. If you are happy, that is awesome, but the vocal majority (different than the statistical majority) doesn’t seem to be very happy. And when we write we speak to those who are seeking their ideal lives not those who already have it.

I hate the exploitation and the “I’m not making any money, but I’m going to show people how to make money and be location independent anyway” type of thing that’s happening as much as anybody. It’s really sad when that happens because people aren’t being true to themselves and lots of people are being led astray.

If you are currently caught up in something that isn’t you and isn’t true to your values there is no reason you can’t stop and change directions right now. The cool thing about humans is that we’re, in general, very forgiving beings when we’re dealing with an honest person exposing their dishonesty.

But my favorite point that Norcross made doesn’t have anything to do with “lifestyle design” and it’s one I haven’t always done an exceptional job of embracing myself. That is “connect outside your bubble.” Some people call this “incestuous blogging.”

It’s like a Phil Anselmo lyric: “live in a hole, stay close to my kind.” And that’s an utterly foolish way to live or run a business.

You could even say it’s “safe” in the most unsafe way. You surely have varied interests and you’ll learn a lot from other perspectives.

Am I going to stop enjoying Hilah Cooking just because I’m not going to eat a lot of the meals? Nope. I’ll just infiltrate the show and make vegan chili! ;) Am I going to stop hanging out with friends in bars just because I go through 6 month phases of not drinking? Nope. I can enjoy a water just as much as a beer and still party as hard as the rest of ’em.

I’m glad I got through this without any metaphors or tangents. I did have to throw away ~1,500 words, but we’re all the better for it.

What do you think? How do you feel about the location independent lifestyle design niche? Does it make you run and hide or do you embrace the good points and the good people and shut out the rest?