A prescription without a pill?
- ESD: Beyond the Habit
- Today is a whole lot easier to see as yesterday than as tomorrow.
- Because “Every other day plus weekends is too complicated.”
- If you could practice more, would you?
- You do it even when you don’t want to do.
- You’ll never again say, “Oh well. Another day where I didn’t get it done.”
- This is how you live to be 103 years old.
- Study Every Single Day
- Every Single Day launches on October 17, 2017!
- Yes, you can force the Flow State. Here’s how.
- You know those things you never seem to get done? What if you could get them done?
- Meditation is the single thing that has helped me create Every Single Day for the past 1,698 days in a row.
- How do you know if you’re ready to make “The Leap”?
- This is what happens when you don’t take ESD.
- When you hear about how a person changed her life, it changes your life.
- When you’re a practitioner of Every Single Day, the “how” no longer matters.
- Sneak Peak: Every Single Day Table of Contents
- How has “Every Single Day” changed your life?
- The gift of the technique comes when we transcend it.
- Don’t have time? Here’s how to make time.
- The ESD Avatar — Who is the Every Single Day reader persona?
- The secret about that “big burst of creativity” you’re waiting for.
- It’s probably not a good idea to upload my book to Amazon while I’m in the train. Unless, of course …
- “Every Single Day” is available for pre-order on Amazon
- Mr. Pantser, meet Miss Plotter.
- 100 Reviews in 30 Days
- A prescription without a pill?
- From shame to lame to blame to aim to fame to game
- Can we become more creative?
- The Conundrum of Comfortable
- Every Single Day: Weight Loss
- If you think you need to do more, it might be time to do less.
- Very little stability in my life at the moment. Oh, yes, well, except for that. #creativelystable
- 2019 is going to be different. AKA: the mountain goat.
- Today I will do what others won’t, so tomorrow I can accomplish what others can’t.
- Ghost with a Toast
Somehow with a pill, you think it’s going to do something, to work, to fix something broken.
If someone advised you to take a pill every day to lose weight, would you do it? Or what if they said that taking a pill every day for a year would make you a better writer? A stronger runner? Better at your job? More focused?
Sounds easy, right? Maybe, in fact, too easy?
“But I don’t like pills.”
“What are the side effects?”
“Has this been tested?”
All valid questions.
What if there were a prescription that you believed in as strongly as you did a pill, but there was no pill?
This is a well-known phenomenon called “The Placebo Effect.” There are countless studies of people taking a placebo or fake pill all the while thinking that it’s the “real pill” yet it’s nothing more than sugar with amazing results. Here are a handful of examples:
- 10 Crazy Facts About the Placebo Effect — from Listverse. “You can placebo yourself into inebriation.”
- The Power of Nothing — from The New Yorker. “An injection of saline, for example, that has been described as a drug not only will reduce symptoms of Parkinson’s disease but can help a patient produce more of the dopamine that the disease destroys.”
- The placebo effect: Amazing and real — From Harvard Medical School. “The word “placebo” comes from Latin and means “I shall please.” And “please” it does. In study after study, many people who take a placebo show improvement in their symptoms or condition.”
Let’s just forget the pill.
If someone offered me, back on, oh, say, November 1, 2012, to take a pill and I would soon be able to (1) close my company, (2) move my family to Europe, (3) make more money than I ever had before while (4) working less and (5) do the work I’ve been dreaming of for years, I might have arm wrestled the bottle of pills out of his hand and chugged them all down with Gatorade.
But what if that same guy said, “Do this for 30 days and it will change your life. Drastically. Oh, and forever.” I would, for completely idiotic reasons, be skeptical. Why is that?
Why might we believe more what a pill could do or a doctor or a guru might say more powerfully than what we might be able to do ourselves? What if that guy said that there was no pill, no secret sauce, no big sacrifice, but just to change a tiny habit and keep at it for 30 days that it would have such bone-rattling effects?
I’m pretty sure I didn’t believe a word that guy said back then. But I took him up on his little scheme.
30 days later, I was a believer.
100 days later, I was on my way to a transformation.
365 days later, I was unstoppable.
1,798 days later, which is today, I’m not the same person I was on Day One.
What was it? What happened? No, I mean, exactly? Step by step, explain it to me so I can do it too.
I get that a lot. Which is partly why I wrote the book “Every Single Day.”
As the book’s launch date (Oct. 17, 2017) approaches and I hone my marketing plan and tweak the book’s description, I think more and more about who this book is for. It really comes down to this: it’s for anyone who is truly ready for change.
Every Single Day Target Audience — Could This Be You?
- You are open to new ways of doing things–even if they are to reach the same goal.
- You’re willing to perhaps do the hard work for a while if you know the outcome will be worth it–or at least probably.
- You combine your passion towards your goal with the perseverance to make it happen and the intelligence of patience to allow it to happen.
You could also just ask yourself, “How much do I really want it?”
Only you can be the honest judge of yourself. Your mother’s intentions only go so far. Your husband’s dreams are his own. Your sister has done it, knows how, but you have to do your own thing.
So, ready for Every Single Day?