Subject: Are You Always Someone Else's Slave?
I have been in the past.
I was brought up to believe that if I worked hard, that I would succeed.
That the key to success lay in how much effort you constantly put in.
So that's what I did.
Didn't really matter what it was, I put all of my effort into it.
And this gets you noticed.
It wasn't long before I was known as someone who worked incredibly hard.
Whether it was in school, university, at home, or in any of my projects - I was a workhorse.
The problem is, it's easy to overdo it.
Especially if you hold the world view that you need to work harder in order to succeed.
And this can lead to cataclysmic burn out.
And that's exactly what happened to me.
I was slaving away for my ungrateful boss - essentially running his business for him, renovating a house (where I was doing all the work myself), and trying to find a business of my own to do.
It didn't matter where I turned, there was always something that needed to be done, or someone that wanted something.
I felt like I was always somebody's slave.
And I hit the wall.
It's never fun when something like this happens.
Lucky for me, I happened to discover a principle of success that I gleaned from my "rich slacker boss."
And it turned everything around for me.
For more details on what it was and how it works, click here:
Secret of the Rich Slacker Boss
Your Minister of Capitalism,
Brett Davison
I was brought up to believe that if I worked hard, that I would succeed.
That the key to success lay in how much effort you constantly put in.
So that's what I did.
Didn't really matter what it was, I put all of my effort into it.
And this gets you noticed.
It wasn't long before I was known as someone who worked incredibly hard.
Whether it was in school, university, at home, or in any of my projects - I was a workhorse.
The problem is, it's easy to overdo it.
Especially if you hold the world view that you need to work harder in order to succeed.
And this can lead to cataclysmic burn out.
And that's exactly what happened to me.
I was slaving away for my ungrateful boss - essentially running his business for him, renovating a house (where I was doing all the work myself), and trying to find a business of my own to do.
It didn't matter where I turned, there was always something that needed to be done, or someone that wanted something.
I felt like I was always somebody's slave.
And I hit the wall.
It's never fun when something like this happens.
Lucky for me, I happened to discover a principle of success that I gleaned from my "rich slacker boss."
And it turned everything around for me.
For more details on what it was and how it works, click here:
Secret of the Rich Slacker Boss
Your Minister of Capitalism,
Brett Davison