Are Your Finances Stuck In A Vice?
Written by:
Kevin Bury
Article Overview: Many people feel their finances are being squeezed. Their dreams will remain dreams never to be realized. But thanks to the internet, there is a way out.
 |
Free Download - Hold On Tight As We Prepare for the Biggest Transfer of Wealth since the Industrial Revolution By Kevin Bury
|
Are Your Finances Stuck In A Vice?
Are your finances stuck in a vice? Do you, like so many others, feel your finances are being squeezed on every side? Do you feel like the dog trying to catch his tail and regardless of which direction or how fast you go you just can not "catch" it? If so, you are probably working for someone else who is buying your time, trading time for dollars. There is a good chance, that in this economy, your wages have been frozen. At the same time cost of groceries, utilities, credit card interest rates, gasoline continue to rise. I played that game for years as a restaurant manager working long and crazy hours while filling up the owner's bank account - not mine.
Do you dream of the day you wake up with no financial worries? Would you like to make that impulse buy without having to cut back on necessities next week? How about having the time to take an exotic vacation next week because you just learned of its existence on TV last night?
When you come back to reality, do you think your dreams of financial freedom and lifestyle are unobtainable? Don't sell yourself short. Not long ago, I had the same mindset. Then I was introduced to the world of online network marketing. What a life changer.
I went from an out of work restaurant manager to online marketing business entrepreneur overnight. I am now on my way to financial freedom and living the lifestyle of my dreams. If I did it, you can to. There are tons of opportunities out there. If you choose to avail yourself of this viable alternative to the traditional brick and mortar job be careful. Be sure to do your due diligence. I got lucky early on and was introduced to an incredible online marketing system. I now am able to mentor others be able to achieve the lifestyle of their dreams.
Related Articles
Stuck In a Rut? - An Ounce of Action is Worth a Ton of Theory!
Stuck In A Rut? - The Best Way To Escape Your Problem Is To Solve It!
Five Ways to Have Fun with Finances this Fall
How Being Stuck Can Cost You Time, Money and Quality of Life!
#1 Strategy to Achieve Financial Success in Biz
Article Tags:
carbon copy pro,
entrepreneur,
kevin bury,
online marketing business,
online network marketing,
restaurant manager
Referred by: http://jaykubassek.com
Related Forum Posts
Update: Jigsaw
- I like to do a lot of email marketing and have found Jigsaw to be pretty good. It's a little expensive compared to some other systems but they are very targeted. If you're looking to find the Vice President in charge of ______ at a certain company, it's a good place to look.
good luck!
And the speakers for the Nov 1 event
- Inspiring speakers will share their stories of launching, living and dreaming.
Speakers include:
Kathleen Matthews: Executive Vice President Global Communications and Public Affairs, Marriott International, Inc. and former award-winning producer, reporter and news anchor who covered news in Washington, DC for 25 years
Mei Xu: Founder and creator of CHESAPEAKE BAY CANDLE and Blissliving Home
Julie Lenzer Kirk: President of Path Forward International and author of The ParentPreneur Edge: What Parenting Teaches About Building a Successful Business
Jennifer Buddin: Co-founder of "The Little Black Book for every busy woman"
Victoria Colligan: Founder of Ladies Who Launch
Frances Crespo and Nicolette Pizzitola: Ladies Who Launch Washington, DC Leaders
Educational workshops and information gathering
Invaluable exchanges, introductions, business contacts and referrals
Exclusive discounts, free consultations and access to original products and services
Lunch and spa services
An opportunity to become a "Featured Lady" on Ladies Who Launch
Valuable GIFT BAG guaranteed with pre-registration
Ladies Who Launch Nov 1 event in Washington DC
- Top 10 Reasons to Pre-Register for WASHINGTON, DC LIVE EVENT on November 1st!
A Thursday in the fall:
What could be better than an investment in yourself?
Leave your briefcases and at home. Take one day to focus on YOURSELF.
You may ask, is Ladies Who Launch LIVE for me? For those of you who tinker all day in a cubicle, may we honor you with a day to explore your feminine entrepreneurial and creative potential? For those of you who have launched a business, might a day of connecting with like-minded women be just what you need? And for those of you with wanderlust contemplating just when-oh-when you will ever get off your derriere and start that creative project you've been dreaming about - sit no more and join us - the dynamic group of fun, fabulous women at Ladies Who Launch LIVE who will share their stories on how they dumped their day job or launched on the side, harnessed their ingenious ideas, created a business, idea, or creative project....to live the life they imagined. Married, single, mother, or free-wheeling girl about town, this day is all about YOU.
Join us on November 1st, and see where it takes you.
Click here to view the invitation and register.
Here are the TOP TEN reasons why you should pre-register for The Ladies Who Launch LIVE event:
10. You are guaranteed our cool, chic gift bag with special surprises with the price of admission. Only guaranteed to first 300 pre-registration!!
9. You will be part of the welcome package that will be emailed out before the event...you can promote your business, creative idea and even offer a special discount or free consultation to generate buzz.
8. You'll get in...we have limited space and are filling up quickly.
7. You'll save $ 40...enough for lunch and drinks with a new friend that you meet at the event.
6. It is going to be at the unique Cold War Gallery - Building #70, Navy Museum, Washington Navy Yard, FREE shuttle service from two metro stations: Navy Yard (Green line) and Eastern Market (Blue and Orange line). Visitors entrance: M and 6th St. SE
5. We are serving light breakfast and lunch.
4. You will receive a free posting on Launch Pad, the Ladies Who Launch classified listings ($30 value) that is distributed to over 40,000 women. What a great way to get your product or service out there!
3. You will be eligible to be selected as a Featured Lady story on the free weekly Ladies Who Launch newsletter that is sure to gain you national exposure.
2. Our speakers will inspire, motivate and entertain you. Speakers include Kathleen Matthews: Executive Vice President Global Communications and Public Affairs, Marriott International, Inc. and former award-winning producer, reporter and news anchor who covered news in Washington, DC for 25 years, Mei Xu: Founder and creator of CHESAPEAKE BAY CANDLE and Blissliving Home, Julie Lenzer Kirk: President of Path Forward International and author of The ParentPreneur Edge: What Parenting Teaches About Building a Successful Business, Jennifer Buddin: Co-founder of "The Little Black Book for every busy woman", Victoria Colligan: Founder of Ladies Who Launch, Frances Crespo and Nicolette Pizzitola: Ladies Who Launch Washington, DC Leaders.
1. Because it is an investment in yourself...and tax-deductible.
Profile: Julia Cameron: journalist, screenwriter, poet, nove
- Julia Cameron will be one of our featured speakers at the Ladies Who Launch NYC Speaker Series taking place on April 28. Click for more info.
Julia Cameron is an accomplished journalist, screenwriter, poet, novelist, and playwright. But mention her name in conversation and inevitably it will be linked with The Artist's Way, a workbook for those looking to discover or re-discover their creative selves, which was initially published in 1992 and has sold over 3 million copies.
Cameron grew up in Chicago and began her career writing for the Washington Post and Rolling Stone (where she met director Martin Scorsese, whom she married in 1975 and later divorced). While married to Scorsese, she worked on the screenplays for two of his major films: Taxi Driver and New York, New York. Cameron's first musical, Avalon, was staged in 1998.
At 60, Cameron continues to follow the advice she espouses in The Artist's Way: jotting down her thoughts daily in her "morning pages" and channeling her artistic vision into a variety of projects.
Below, read how Cameron fends off writer's block (yes, even she suffers from it sometimes), calls on friends for guidance, and dispels the myth that writers need to be miserable to be good.
what we learned from julia: "If you're good at doing one thing, you should keep doing it. In England, writers are novelists, playwrights—the word 'writer' covers a wider spectrum of activity." She also said to take a bet on yourself; she did, and it's paid off.
her true calling
"I was born to write. All my brothers and sisters—there are seven of us altogether—are in the arts. My father was in advertising and mom had a master's degree in English and wrote poetry. By the time I was in sixth grade with Mrs. Klopsch, I was already writing short stories and poems."
investigating journalism
"My goal was to write short stories. When I was offered a job at the Washington Post, it seemed like a good way to kill two birds with one stone. I enjoy writing in any form. I was proud of my Rolling Stone pieces. I wrote one about E. Howard Hunt's children. I remember getting in trouble with William F. Buckley. He called my house in Chicago because he thought it was a terrible thing I'd interviewed the children—he was their godfather. My first taste of celebrity was getting a good scolding. During my 20s I was a blind beginner. In my 30s I was a lot more conscious about what I wrote."
screenwriting savvy
"My early screenwriting was for my husband at the time, Martin Scorsese. I worked on Taxi Driver and on New York, New York. When Marty and I got divorced, I had a screenwriting career to pursue. I sold movies to Paramount. They bought the movie but didn't make it. I was frustrated, so I took the money I earned writing for Miami Vice and made a feature film in Chicago."
sobering experience
"1978 is the year that I got sober. My wild ways came screeching to a halt. I needed to find a way to write sober. I had always associated writing with drinking. We have a mythology around creativity that's destructive. We think you have to be broke, alone, neurotic, addicted. None of these things is true. When I got sober, I had to find a way to work soberly. I was 29, and I had a daughter who was a year old."
do it for love, not money
"I've never had to be paid to write. I published two novels. I have a musical opening in Chicago in the fall. Last year I had a play in L.A. The trick is to not need a guarantee and to be willing to write no matter what. Right now I'm writing a sequel to [my novel] Mozart's Ghost, which came out on Valentine's Day. I did the novel without a contract. I bet on myself."
the power of friendship
"It helps if you have friends who believe in you. My friends read my first drafts. A lot of times they will believe in a project when I'm getting rejected. We underestimate the importance of having one strong friend. The telephone is a wonderful ally to combat the isolation of being a writer, as is e-mail. If you know what your friends are doing, it's harder to feel lonely. I also think writing is its own companion. You're not lonely when you're actually writing."
a typical day, the artist's way
"I get up late. If I can, it's noon. I write my morning pages first thing. I ask for guidance and sit quietly and see if there's anything I need to be doing. I usually work on the music [for my upcoming musical]. I have a collaborator, Emma Lively, and we've written three musicals together. We work for a few hours. Then I put in a couple hours of prose writing. I sometimes don't get out of the house until 5:30. I try to get a walk in every day."
overcoming writer's block
"I use the same unblocking tools that I teach my students. They make you much more alert to the signals. I grapple with writer's block right away. Morning pages [three pages of writing about anything that comes to your head] are one such tool. I've been writing them for 25 years. In The Artist's Way, I also write about "blasting through blocks." By listing any angers, fears, and resentments related to a project, that often clears the decks right away.
Emma and I have been hired to write music for a one-woman show. I feel blocked around it. I take a look at my ego—I'm not used to working FOR people anymore. I need to be a beginner again. Hopefully once I surrender my need to be the boss, it'll work out."
favorite books
"Tim Farrington is my favorite writer. He's written two books—The Monk Downstairs and The Monk Upstairs. He's so funny and deft, and he was the inspiration for me to write Mozart's Ghost. I dedicated the book to him."
daily must-reads
"I read a little teeny book called Twenty-Four Hours a Day that was put out by Hazelden. It's a meditation book. I also read Creative Ideas by theologian Ernest Holmes, which was originally published in 1934. They just re-released it, and I wrote the intro. Right now I'm reading My First Five Husbands by Rue McClanahan and Drinking: A Love Story, a memoir by Caroline Knapp."
most rewarding career moment
"I think I'm sort of singular in that I like book tours. I meet people who say I used your tools and they changed my life and this is what I did with them."
scariest career moment
"Watching my first musical go up in 1998. It's scary. I just heard the music so beautifully in my head that it was hard to deal with some of the compromises of getting it on the stage. I was sitting in the back of the theater saying, 'It's brilliant. It's awful."
on networking
"I think it's most important that we do the work and then have something to network about. Sometimes people want networking to be a shortcut or a guarantee. Networking gives you a sense of the possible. I have a number of women friends in their 70s and 80s and they are a tremendous source of inspiration. One runs a horse ranch. One got a master's in poetry at 75. One is in her 80s and is still an active actress. I believe that other women are inspirational."
parting thoughts...
-"I am happiest when ... I'm writing."
-"Success to me means ... creativity."
-"The public figure I wish most would read The Artist's Way is ... Warren Beatty. I don't know if he has."
-"I will always think of myself as ... a good horseback rider."
-"My business would not have happened if ... I waited for guarantees."
-"The most important thing I do every day is ... stay sober. I have 30 years without a drink."
This Featured Lady was profiled by Michele Shapiro, a writer living in New York City.
Recommended Article for You
close
Share this article with your friends. Fund someone's dream.
Leave a comment below or share on the left and you'll help support entrepreneurs in Africa through our partnership with Kiva.
Over
$50,000 raised and counting -
Please keep sharing! Learn more.