Friday, March 18, 2011

5 Simple Solutions Ramp Up Your Productivity.




Start a Treadmill Journal: Easy solutions to up your productivity. 

That's what I thought to. What in the world is a treadmill journal? It's an excellent idea and it sort of incorporates your To Do list into a get 'er done list.  What you do in this journal is make 5 simple entries every day. Ready?
1.   .   Date and Time

2.    .   How long will you work today? [Just think if you work 3 hours a day for 6 days that will be 18 hours and imagine the pages you can pile up. The completed projects you will or could have done in that time. If you are writing a novel you can probably write at least 2 if not 3 pages in that time. In a week you would have 54 pages. Won't take long to finish a novel at that rate will it?
3.       
3.3.  What do you plan to work on? [This is all about focus. If you know what you are going to work on you won't have to fiddle with selection. All you'll have to do is start at your appointed time.]

4.     .  How did it go? [What did you accomplish – was it smooth sailing, did you hit a snag? Reflecting on the day can help you plan a better day tomorrow or a repeat performance if that is in your mind.]

5.     .  When will you work tomorrow and for how long? [This gets your focus back to what you'll do tomorrow and while you sleep your subconscious mind will be plotting where you are going for you.]

So reve up your mind and get producing.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Have You Ever Suffered Loss, Real Loss

Husband, job, home and all?
We've all have bad days...
Donna had it all.
Then she had a series of bad days.
Donna lost her mother, her man, her money
and then her health.
Some people would give up... but Donna
chose a path that will insprire you.
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From Your Past, Build The Present, and
Transform Your Future' Donna Marie Thompson
will give you a blueprint to learn from
life's lessons.

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Founder of SelfGrowth.com and bestselling author

“Life can be challenging and Donna Marie was hit hard physically, emotionally, and financially. For those who have experienced loss, her journey from despair to victory can be helpful to you.”
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Inner Bonding, Healing Your Aloneness and Author of Do I Have To Give Up Me To Be Loved By You?

"Bouncing Back From Loss will truly help you bounce back. Healing is a process. The light at the end of that process is your own peace of mind, joy, and happiness. Are you ready?"
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Author of From Heartbreak to Happiness, Founder of The Grief Coach Academy

“What a story! What a recovery! What guts! I deal with this sort of thing a lot in my practice and I can completely relate to what Donna Marie is saying. So much so that I recommend Bouncing Back From Loss to my clients. Donna Marie's personal story is heartbreaking but she refuses to stay down, she gets right back up. Donna Marie refuses to see herself as a victim, she is a victor. It is positively encouraging and inspiring.”
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Sunday, March 13, 2011

3 Cosmic Rules of Writing

"You don't build a story you allow it to explode." Ray Bradbury
Writing Wider, More Exercises in Creative Writing (Writing Wide, Exercises in Creative Writing)
(The book cover image is different in this Kindle Version but it's the same book as available from Magellan books as an ebook.)
There are rules to write well – Oh you knew that. Well Dennis Palumbo gives us "3 Cosmic Rules of Writing" they are:
1.    1.   You are enough.  I love this one because I think most authors lack self-esteem because they thing there must be some magic to being a top-notch, best-seller – Patterson, Koontz, Cornwell – yes, they all write well and I bet they didn't always think they could. But that is the key – from Henry Ford – If you think you can't you can't if you think you can, you can – slightly paraphrased there but you get the message. You can, you are enough! (yes and I hate exclamation points but this one deserves it.)

2.     2.  Work with What you're Given –that ads to the you are enough. Your experiences are great fodder for a start. You have a unique life history that no one else can possibly have – you are the only one – of you in this moment in time—you are enough and you have been given all you need to work with. No Excuses as Wayne Dyer and Joe Vitale both say in their recent books. 

3.    3.   Writing Begets Writing – Now that's just plain awesome. It's true. The more you write, the more you'll find out you can write. A brain surgeon doesn't close his text book and open a person's skull and begin cutting any more than you can write one sentence a year and expect to be a great writer. Okay, that's a bold faced exaggeration. But the truth is if you write every single day – whatever amount of time you can spare – you will be a writer. To be a writer you have to write. 

toTo write a book, one page a day would give you 365 pages in a year. I guarantee you if you follow Julia Cameron's 3 long hand pages in your journal a day, advice – you will see the pages add up and you will all of a sudden realize – if you were working on your book – look at the pages you will have accumulated in a few months or a year.

EyEye on the target – write like your fingertips are on fire – write like the wind in whatever mode it is today. Get those words on the page, they don't need to be perfect—that's what the revision is for RE –VISION your work.
Next the "Treadmill Journal" – I absolutely love this phrase – and the method behind it is even more interesting. Gregory Martin came up with the idea – more tomorrow.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

March - The Unpredictable


"I've felt that dissatisfaction is the basis of progress. When we become satisfied in business, we become obsolete."
-- J. Willard Marriott Sr., hotel executive 


March 11, 1888 was the beginning of what would go down in history as "the Blizzard of '88." It began as light rain and turned into heavy snow in the northeast U.S., paralyzing major cities for days. More than 400 people died as a result of the storm.  

Makes people in the Northeast a bit leery I'm sure as that date approaches while there are storms threatening across the country. 

Here in Wisconsin we had a fine, fine snow all morning and it has now changed to light mist-like rain as our temperatures reached 33 degrees. The sky is a summer dark. Clouded, gray skies have that gloomy, storm nearby-look, with the kind of heavy lead-like looking clouds that signify something is on the horizon. 

Late tonight snow warnings are posted for us. We expect up to 8 inches of the heavy, wet, white to fall.  Winter refuses to believe what the ground hogs said about spring coming early this year.  We can't all be right all the time, can we?

You have to admit it's beautiful though isn't it? The picture is from friend and photographer Sherri Palm.

And weather can add something to your writing from angst - a feeling of claustrophobic isolation to the warmth of a roaring fireplace while the North Wind rages outside. Think about it...it plays part in my candlelight series...Death by Candlelight and Candlelight and Shadows.

**See the new covers - for print books the new covers will ship for electronic the old covers will be included with download. {author's note}

Friday, March 4, 2011

An Amazing Man - An Interview With Sandy Sims


Sandy Sims, Indomitable Entrepreneur, Author, Leader
Thank you For agreeing to visit my blog Printed Words. I had a wonderful time devouring your book How Frank Lloyd Wright Got into My Head, Under My Skin and Changed The Way I think About Thinking. The book was amazing I truly could not put it down.
Talk about starting over and re-inventing yourself, you have become a master at that. Tenacity and perseverance are two words that seem synonymous with your name.  The Einstein quote (only one of many in the book that resonated your message/life) "The important thing is to not stop questioning. Curiosity has its own reason for existing." Yours, led you down some amazing paths.  What would you say to readers about your ability to see what you wanted and to find a way to get it – however creatively you needed to move to that goal? Can they do the same?

(Sandy)Like anything else, it takes practice. Little bits at a time to build confidence. That is what I did. And like the moment before you go on stage there are butterflies in your stomach when ever you step out into the unknown.  I certainly get them. Yet, this seems to be the gift that is built into our equipment. We can all access it and do it. I wrote this book to say that this is what happened to the guy next door (me) and it can happen to everybody.

Our first peek into your creative ideas came when you focused on your military obligation. The Military draft was still a factor in a young man's life in the United States and you were not one to shirk obligation or duty.  As far as you knew, you would have to be in some branch of the military.  Give us some insight into how you developed a strategy to both serve your country and serve your idea of what you hoped to achieve in your early life.

(Sandy) I think like anything else, I wanted at some deep level a creative way to solve the military enigma. I did not want to be drafted and I did not really want to go to Viet Nam.  At the time I did not understand that I was giving the universe an order to find just such a solution.  When I ran across the the bartender,  the previous navy club officer, he represented the solution. I merely needed to act. At that time I  had not connected those dots that later I would realize was really manifestation on my part, and that is what I wanted to bring out in my book.  What happens to us a great deal of the time is something we have been the architect of without recognizing our part in bringing those conditions into play. For example it was easy for me to see that I had a role in going to OCS, and signing a deal with the Navy, but it was not within my consciousness at the time that I had created the opportunity with the bartender.

Part of that Military adventure brought you to Hawaii and a dream to live there that never left.  In one place in your book you write "People say that the Island of Hawaii draws you here to face your issues. It is raw creative energy expressing itself in a perpetual state of eruption." Certainly that seemed to fit your life there at one point. Do you still feel that way about Hawaii having lived there for as long as you did? Why or why not?

(Sandy) I think that here you have touched at one of the great mysteries of life, the meaning and unconscious draw to something. I touched on the idea that I like to think that we have invisible partners and perhaps part of their job is to send us those signals that we feel are intuitive hits. Maybe at some deep level we have agreements about things we want to experience and team work conspires to produce it. I did not feel good about going to the Island of Hawaii during the military, but then when the volcano( Halemaumau) erupted with that once in a hundred year episode I felt that I was so privileged to have been there.  Later I came back to build a house. It in one sense cost me a marriage, but it was a compelling urge I had to follow. The loss of the marriage gave me that great understanding of forgiveness and non-judgment, something I could have read about a million times without truly grasping.  Now I do not feel that same urge. It is the idea of living more lightly now and feeling at home where ever I happen to be.

It's like the energy you say is evident in the Frank Lloyd Wright architecture and the fact that buildings he built survived the 1990's earth quake in Japan – when everything else collapsed. You used that innovative, imaginative, creative thought process throughout your life. You seemed to emulate Wright's ability to think, as they say, "outside the box" at every turn. Do you think that like minds are drawn to each other? 

(Sandy) I think that once we recognize how powerful our curiosity can be, that the desire to meet interesting people is a natural by product.  We are fascinated with what and why they are thinking about and how it is going or has gone for them. I feel that it is part of the natural re affirming process that this is the way things work. Let’s say I want to meet you in person after hearing about you. Well, I put that out there and who knows whether it will be  weeks, months or years. But at some point when it happens, there will be that little “aha” that makes a note of how long it has taken. I do think that like minds tend to add fuel to the fire. You know how excited you are when you meet a colleague who is into the same thing you are. There can be an energetic high. So, yes, from that point of view, I think we do at least subconsciously put that order out there.

When you, as you put it, "…plowed through" Frank Lloyd Wright's autobiography you admitted you had to drag yourself through it but it sparked something in you.  Later we follow your desire to build a tribute to Frank Lloyd Wright.  Synchronicity seemed to work both for and against you and that first idea never panned out. But you remained undaunted…what was your mindset, your thoughts at that point about the dream you held to build that complex of homes designed by Mr. Wright? 

(Sandy) I felt that other forces had played out. The Taliesin Associated Architects had gotten into a bit of a financial jam by wanting to become developers. They were in debt. This one job of building the clubhouse, brought them a large get well commission. So what forces were really at work? Maybe my strong urge was in response to their strong desire. I don’t think we know enough about how these things actually work ( Maybe a Noble prize winner will have that answer later in the century.). I do know that when the bubble burst in Japan I did not feel as  strong  a drive as  I had  previously felt to keep going on the collection, but I did have a desire to see one of the homes go up,  and if that would have sparked a renewed potential, that would have been great.  Again I feel that the simple message is that we do what we have energy for. From where or why that energy flows is beyond our conscious comprehension.

Walking on glowing coals from a raging bonfire, in real life at a seminar you attended, and facing the scorching coals of interrupted ideas could be one in the same…you walked over those coals do you think that allowed you, or showed you the mindset it would take, to focus with unfaltering vision on your goals of building your Frank Lloyd Wright home and not doubting that it would come to fruition? 

(Sandy) There is no doubt that that was a contributing factor in developing confidence. It showed  me and a lot of others that we have untapped capabilities and once the model appeared, was tried, and succeeded it was an empowering force.  I think however these are two different issues. The coals were to understand that by following a model completely we could have the same success the model had produced in the first place. The willingness to proceed on the home even when money was not on the immediate horizon was about summoning other forces in the universe to bring about this desire.

Another quote from your book by Wayne Dyer, who I have admired for many years, seems another mantra of your life. "By banishing doubt and trusting your intuitive feelings, you clear a space for the power of intention to flow through." Is this the meaning that was instilled in you by your father when he told you to do it [live] for him and you?

(Sandy) I think that my father felt that he had failed to answer the call in his own life regarding what he felt was his gift and purpose. That had left him in a remorseful state. He wanted to encourage me not to do the same and that by truly following a dream whatever happens will leave no regrets. I think that I was not conscious of the power Wayne Dyer referred to for the early part of my life even though I was doing it. After my meltdown, so to speak, I became conscious of it, and that created a self awareness about my personal power. I of course had lots of doubt and taking the baby steps was the basic idea.

There is a spot in your book when you are in the Frank Lloyd Wright house where you are watching the fire in the massive fireplace. You say "fires can transfix, seduce, capture and transport us to places we forget about in our daily lives. Large fireplaces are like large movie screens, enveloping us completely into the story." Does this reflect back on walking over the burning coals with Tony Robbins or would you say it is something else?  Is reflection necessary to think creatively about what's ahead? Does reflection inform the future?

(Sandy) It is something else. It refers to the fact that fires have the way of hypnotizing us or causing us to get lost in the flame itself bringing about moments where our mind is stilled and we can receive as if in a meditative state or reflective state. You could say that in this kind of reflective state clarity about the future occurs. So yes, “ informs” would be a potential.

Ralph Waldo Emerson said "The reward of a thing well done is to have done it." Is that your philosophy when you look back on the things you created from living in Hawaii at all, to your Real Estate Agency, to having built a home from the ground-- up using your mentor/idol/spirit guide-- or whatever you would call your connection to Frank Lloyd Wright—from blue print to furnishings—is that satisfaction enough for you?

(Sandy) I think you meant the ad agency in the question. I feel that the significance of this quote is that when we are propelled to do something for the sheer joy of doing it, for the experience as an end in itself, and not as means to something else, that is what makes our lives more eminently satisfying and that is for me satisfaction enough.

Is there anything that I haven't asked that you might want to tell my readers about you, your experiences, even your book?

(Sandy) Perhaps that I did not set out to write this book as anything more than a cathartic experience. As I got involved, one thing led to another. An editor took a look and made some suggestions. Later another editor whom I met in San Miguel, told me that it was a good story and he agreed to do a line by line edit. In a sense the process grew organically. I had worked with a designer in the ad agency who had been part of the Frank Lloyd Wright collateral team. She designed the book.  Once this took place I realized I was trying to make the book a satisfying experience for the  reader as well as me. The writing and marketing of the book is a metaphor for the process I have been writing about. The right people have been showing up along the way and I have been fortunate enough to have their assistance.  One of my consultants suggested I do a guidebook. This led to thinking about a few ideas that could be of use to people without overwhelming them. Kerry, the psychiatrist, who was pivotal, in the book, agreed to collaborate and that is how the guidebook emerged. I have found energy to stay involved and that seems to be the most important element we can identify for what seems purposeful to any of us.

Thank you so much for taking the time to let us see more of the man, Sandy Sims, behind the book and a life to be admired and emulated. Where can we purchase the book and the work book?

(Sandy) Thank you for reading the book and guidebook and taking the time to become involved. Currently the book is available on Amazon in both the paper back and kindle form. The guidebook is also available on Amazon. I hope to have it out on kindle in  three or four weeks. The books are being distributed through Ingram. So I don’t know when they will appear elsewhere.

For more information about Sandy Sims and How Frank Lloyd Wright Got Into My Head, Under My Skin And Changed The Way I Think About Thinking, A Creative Thinking Blue Print For the 21st Century, visit http://creativethinkingbook.com/ and visit this page to get the Amazon links http://creativethinkingbook.com/buy-your-copy/.    


Thursday, March 3, 2011

Sandy Sims A Creative Thinker Genius - Frank Lloyd Wright's Influence


 Let's welcome Sandy Sims today...Sandy please tell us what ever possessed you to begin to write this book. I found it amazing how you reinvented yourself at every turn, but how you internalized the energy and creativity of Frank Lloyd Wright was amazing. Please fill us in.
 
Why I Wrote – How Frank Lloyd Wright Got Into My Head, Under My Skin And Changed The Way I Think About Thinking, A Creative Thinking Blue Print For the 21st Century –The book... Comments from Sandy Sims
Originally I knew this would be a story of interest to people who follow architecture. After reading Wright’s autobiography I had been struck by the idea that not only was he famous but his drawings at the time were selling at auction for the same price as those of Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo.  He had designed over 1,000 designs but some 500 remained unbuilt. In an “a ha” flash I imagined that a collection of Wright’s unrealized designs built in Hawaii would be stunning.
The pursuit of this idea was so compelling, that I innocently and naively began the journey, and what a journey it was. I was cordially invited into many of Wright’s private homes, to meet their owners, and to hear their stories.  I became friends with those in the Taliesin Fellowship, some of whom were the earliest apprentices to Frank Lloyd Wright. It was a rich journey. While in the beginning I was attracted to the financial rewards that might have accrued, I later became fascinated by the idea of what it would be like to live inside of the space created by both a mystic and a genius. I found out
 ==
Here is a little look into Sandy and what makes him tick. When you get the book, and you will I'm sure - he and it are fascinating...you will learn so much more. Now this from Sandy Sims Bio –

Sandy Sims was raised and educated in the South.  After serving as Naval Officer and finishing graduate business school, he followed a dream to live in Honolulu where he built one of Hawaii's most successful advertising  agencies.

The crisis of personal health and business setbacks opened the way to larger spiritual dimensions including a long association with the Caddy family, founders of the Findhorn Spiritual Community in Scotland His book,”How Frank Lloyd Wright Got Into My Head, Under My Skin And Changed The Way I Think About Thinking, A Creative Thinking Blue Print For the 21st Century,” is a memoir of his journey culminating in a 20 year project with the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation.

He has collaborated with Psychiatrist, Kerry Monick MD, and authored Creative Thinking For The 21st Century, An Experiential Guidebook. Accepting the science that our intention does indeed affect the material world, it addresses what to be thinking about, how to shape these thoughts, and what might be the best way to avoid unintended consequences.

When not travelling, Sandy resides in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico where you can find him writing, playing tennis, poking around with his camera and embracing a new culture.
 =====================

 For more information about Sandy Sims and How Frank Lloyd Wright Got Into My Head, Under My Skin And Changed The Way I Think About Thinking, A Creative Thinking Blue Print For the 21st Century, visit http://creativethinkingbook.com/ and visit this page to get the Amazon links http://creativethinkingbook.com/buy-your-copy/.