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Are you tired of feeling like an imposter, questioning your abilities, and holding unrealistic expectations? Do you have these myths floating in your head, like - Everyone else has it all figured out, Success means never doubting yourself, and Competence requires perfection? In this episode, our guest expert, Dr. Valerie Young, co-founder of the Impostor Syndrome Institute, will debunk these myths and share the truth about building realistic expectations and accepting self-doubt. Dr. Young is widely considered the leading thought leader on impostor syndrome and its impact on individuals' lives. Her expertise and insights have made her a highly sought-after speaker and author, and she continues to make significant contributions in the field. Through her work, Dr. Young discovered that at the core of impostor feelings lies the presence of unrealistic and unsustainable expectations about competence. Armed with this knowledge, she embarked on a mission to help individuals recognize and challenge these beliefs, ultimately empowering them to overcome self-doubt and embrace their true capabilities. Whether you struggle with imposter syndrome or know someone who does, this episode is a must-listen. Dr. Young's wisdom and guidance will help you gain self-awareness, build realistic expectations, and navigate the challenges of impostor syndrome. So grab your headphones and get ready to be inspired and empowered. Visit www.gobeyondbarriers.com, where you will find show notes and links to all the resources referenced in this episode, including the best way to get in touch with Dr. Valerie Young. Highlights: 00:01:00 - Dr. Young's Journey 00:07:08 - Overcoming Fears and Limiting Beliefs 00:10:05 - Becoming a Humble Realist 00:14:38 - Competence Types 00:17:08 - Overcoming Impostor Syndrome 00:18:59 - Perspective on Competence 00:21:10 - Feedback and Failure 00:28:35 - Imposter Syndrome and Women Supporting Women 00:42:35 - Staying in Contact and Following Dr. Young Quotes: Don't wait until everything is perfect. Half-ass is better than no-ass. Get version one out the door and course-correct along the way. - Valerie Young Recognize that people who don't feel like imposters are not any more intelligent or competent than the rest of us. They just have a realistic understanding of what it means to be competent. - Valerie Young The only way to stop feeling like an imposter is to stop thinking like an imposter and become a humble realist. - Valerie Young Lightning Round Questions: What book has greatly influenced you? ● “Making a Living Without a Job” by Barbara Winter and “Games Mother Never Taught You” by Betty Lehan Harragan What is your favorite inspiring quote or saying? ● “Being realistic is the most traveled road to mediocrity.” – Will Smith What is one word or moniker you would use to describe yourself? ● Determined What is one change you've implemented that made your life better? ● Recognizing and wanting to have control of my life to the degree possible. What power song would you want playing as you walk out onto a stage? ● “Girl on Fire” by Alicia Keys About Valerie Young: Dr. Valerie Young is co-founder of the Impostor Syndrome Institute. Widely considered the leading thought leader on impostor syndrome, she has spoken at over 100 colleges and universities including Harvard, Stanford, MIT, Wharton, and Oxford's Said business school. A former manager at a Fortune 200 company herself, she's also shared her highly relatable and practical advice at such diverse organizations as Pfizer, Google, Boeing, P&G, Siemens, Space Telescope Science Institute, Intel, BP, YUM Brands, Microsoft, JP Morgan, Federal Reserve of Kansas City, Diageo, Trane, Molson Coors, NASA, the National Cancer Institute, and the National Basketball Association to name a few. Valerie's work has been cited around the world in publications such as Time, Newsweek, Psychology Today, Science, The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Irish Independent, Sydney Morning Herald, Globe & Mail, on BBC radio and the Ten Percent Happier podcast. She's author of the award-winning book The Secret Thoughts of Successful Women: And Men, Why Capable People Suffer from the Impostor Syndrome and How to Thrive in Spite of It with Crown Business, published in six languages and is a contributor to an upcoming book on impostor phenomenon published by the American Psychological Association. Valerie earned her doctoral degree from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst where she studied internal barriers to women's achievement. Although her research subjects consisted of a racially diverse group of professional women, much of her original findings have proved directly applicable to anyone with impostor feelings. Links: Website: https://impostorsyndrome.com/valerie-young/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/valerieyoung/
Episode 369: A Tribute to My Cherished Mentor, Barbara Winter Episode Notes I participated in an online Celebration of Life for Barbara J. Winter on May 20th, 2023. Barbara crossed over to the other side on October 28, 2022, at age 80, after suffering from a long illness. Our paths had overlapped many times since our first luncheon in 1994. This is my tribute to my cherished mentor, Barbara Winter. Barbara will forever be known as the pioneering self-employment advocate, writer, and teacher who spent decades pondering the question, “Why aren't we all self-employed?” Her optimism and ferocious curiosity will live on in millions who read her books and newsletters and attended her seminars. Her legacy will be carried on through her daughter Jennie Hinrichs and her three grandchildren: Zoe, Zach, and Noah. “I want my grandchildren to know that Grandma's house is always a safe place to share their ideas,” she said in our Portfolios of Ideas podcast conversation. Tears are spilling down my cheeks as I listen and think of how much her grandchildren miss her. Her spirit will always be with them. Barbara is one of those people I wish had defied death. In 1994, I noticed Barbara lived in Minneapolis after reading the book she authored in 1993, Making A Living Without A Job: Winning Ways For Creating Work That You Love. The book was revised and reprinted in 2009 and is still relevant today. She agreed to have lunch at one of her favorite spots, and now mine, the Good Earth restaurant at the Galleria in Edina, Minnesota. She would bring ten books in a brown paper bag each month and share stories with advice tucked in. We did this lunch and book routine until she followed her daughter to Valencia, California, where she lived until her death. I would buy her books and give them to clients. When I taught at two private Universities for 13 years in entrepreneurship, her book was mandatory reading. Barbara named a seminar after her book, Making A Living Without A Job. It became her most popular seminar. She never envisioned teaching this seminar worldwide and holding annual joyfully jobless jamborees for decades, but she did. She said she would wake up on each seminar day and think that someone's life is going to change today. Her enthusiasm was her litmus test to keep going. She added other newsletters and seminars to her repertoire: Winning Ways monthly newsletter, Joyfully Jobless, Establish Yourself As An Expert, and I wouldn't say I like Marketing. The celebration of life event fit Barbara's desire to educate. She was a massive fan of creating tip lists. Barbara always taught the nine lessons below. Her colleagues and friends, Terri Belford and Marianne Cantwell shared them with us, and in turn, I would like to share them with you. 9 Lessons for Leading and Living by Barbara Winter Be Playful. Barbara was a big proponent of approaching work as play and having a sense of humor, especially around absurd situations and or being playful at your work. She was a great role model. “An acid test for if you are in the right place,” Barbara would say, “is when the work becomes more interesting the longer you do it.” Treat what you do with a sense of adventure and lightness. She made everything an adventure wonder. She shared her passion for the artist Chu Huly with everyone. She had a lifetime of missions that took her all over the world with friends and colleagues. Let yourself be an apprentice. Have a beginner's mindset and learn from those who have gone before you. We learn by doing. Do the thing that others wouldn't do. Roll up your sleeves and get to work realizing your dreams. Barbara always said that entrepreneurship is not a spectator's sport. Small is beautiful. She helped me see the beauty in everything and every small business, including mine. Barbara believed in the quality of small-group learning and small business. She didn't want a huge audience or to do a TED Talk.
The security forces, police and political leaders take a close interest in Australia First members. After WWII is declared the Publicist ceases and there is public opposition to Australia First, particularly in Sydney. In Western Australia the police send in an undercover agent and get evidence of a conspiracy to suport a Japanese invasion, sabotage and the assassination of public officials. The police swoop and arrest key Australia First members on 9 March 1942. Check out Barbara Winter's book 'The Australia First Movement, Dreaming of a National Socialist Australia'. Apologies for the sound quality at the end of the epsisode. This was due to a severe thunderstorm hitting Canberra. Email me at jamesdampier.awp@gmail.com
Kicking off Series 3, in this episode, Zofia interviews Dr Barbara Winter to discuss how indigenous artifacts have traditionally been collected and displayed in western Canada. This discussion touches on the arguments historically used to keep acquired material culture outside of minority communities (by colonial powers), and in large museum collections. To challenge these historic narratives made by caretakers of cultural heritage, we explore the ways in which repatriation reconnects individuals and communities to pre-colonial pasts and helps build confidence for future generations.Dr Barbara Winter worked at Simon Fraser University, British Columbia, for over thirty years as the curator for the Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at the university. She worked in the Canadian Museum of History in Quebec, and the Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Centre in Yellowknife, Northwest Territory. The University Museum link:http://www.sfu.ca/archaeology/museum.htmlTo get in touch and find out more:Find us on InstagramSupport us through Patreon Buy our merch on RedbubbleExplore more resources and topics about the ancient world on ArchaeoArtistMusic by the wonderfully talented Chris SharplesImage credits: cover illustration by Zofia GuertinIf you'd like to get in touch, email at twofriendstalkhistory@gmail.com.
Episode 304: Your Top 3 Favorite Conversations This Year and More In this last episode for 2021, Mike Kabeya interviews me asking questions about the biggest lessons, updates, and personal challenges I overcame. Also included are your top three favorite conversations and our favorites. I have found book writing to follow the emotional rollercoaster of innovation. Extreme highs and brilliant ‘ahas' along with visits into the pit of pain like feeling inadequate, confused, and overwhelmed, to sittings with the writing imposter. Mike invites a brief update on where I am after missing a self-imposed deadline and my goal in 2022. Out of the 100 or so book titles, my working title is this, Self-Leadership Mentoring: The Explorer's Dual Innovation Practice. A practice-based on how we can evolve as a leader while redesigning our businesses. I developed the practice from working with thousands of entrepreneurial leaders since 1992. You will also hear where I am getting writing support. Two books I Highly Recommend A novel that explores themes of teamwork, coaching, family, and economic class. “The Boys in the Boat,” writes author Daniel James, “is a book that tells the story of nine American rowers who won an Olympic gold medal in 1936.” The book became a best-seller and adapted into The Boys of '36 documentary. “The novel follows Joe Rantz's journey to the Olympics, during the Great Depression and Adolf Hitler's rise to power. It begins in 1933 when Joe attends the University of Washington and tries out for the rowing team.” This book was inspired by my daughter, Olivia, who joined the UW-Madison rowing team this fall. The other book, given to me by a neighbor, is Fault Lines: Fractured Families and How to Mend Them by Dr. Karl Pillemer (2020). A rare book that explains the landscape of estrangement affecting more than 65 million Americans and how those he researched found a path to reconnection. I discuss an idea I am implementing to reconcile with my dad. Even if reconciliation doesn't happen, this book broadens understanding and helps in conscious decision-making when relationships become strained. Milestone Birthday Blunder Insights Milestone birthdays have been challenging to plan with loved ones during this covid pandemic. What do you do? Who do you invite? How big or small? When under so much stress, do we allow for different ways we make decisions? How are we redefining expectations and handling disappointment? My idea for celebrating my 60th birthday this year flopped. The thought was to do something low-key, so I wrote down numbers from 1 to 60 on a piece of yellow tablet paper. I started the list by appreciating the vegan meal I made. I told Matthew and Olivia they could add to the list by writing down something they appreciated about me or did for me or a gift they bought. This spring (April) was still so stressful that I didn't get the buy-in, which led to a hurt that triggered unnerving feelings about my self-worth. I discuss my learnings that included loving acts of forgiveness, understanding, and healing. Mike also shares how his celebration plans went for his wife, Sylvie Kabeya, on her 50th birthday. Our conversation was surprisingly nurturing. You will hear what we both learned about ourselves and our spouses. Before moving into your favorite podcast conversations, we discuss is a 21-Day Abundance exercise I did with a friend. Deepak Chopra created the exercise. I share the shocking results. Mike was so impressed with the results that he wants to go through this free 21-Day Abundance program. If you would like to join us, email me at nancy@wementor.com. I will get you the details. Your Top 3 Favorite Conversations This Year #1 Barbara Winter, Pioneer, and Author of Making A Living Without A Job (2020 and 2021) It Is Time To Explore Multiple Profit Centers | WeMentor Mondays with Nancy PODCAST Employee Mindset vs. Entrepreneurial Mindset | WeMentor Mondays with Nancy PODCAST
Episode 291: 3 More Steps to Becoming An Idea Detective with Barbara Winter Last week, you heard the first three of six steps to becoming an idea detective. Find your curiosity, invite ideas, and the third step, my favorite. Auditioning ideas is a productive way of framing our ideas and getting feedback on new profit centers. Today we discuss the other three steps. Barbara Winter believes in putting fun titles to everything. It is part of her living joyfully jobless formula. Her Winning Ways newsletter is the longest self-employment publication of its kind. Long-time readers keep the issues as a catalog of ideas to retrieve for inspiration and new insights along the self-bossing journey. She has a technique for building a prosperity consciousness worth hearing. Her small is beautiful philosophy comes through in generating ‘doable' ideas like the $100 hour. You can change the number to any number. Why not start with an achievable number and build your way up? What dollar bill do you have in your purse or billfold? The next three steps we share deal with getting traction with your ideas and expanding revenue streams. Stay constantly curious, no matter what. Start with questions to ask yourself when you get up in the morning. Did you know 49M people do not want to go back to the office? They like working at a home office. Maybe it is your natural habitat and a way of fostering curiosity. Protect your ideas from the naysayers. Use discernment when it comes to who you share ideas with before auditioning them to a larger audience. Barbara has a strong view about this. The sixth step to becoming an idea detective is keeping your MPC's alive and knowing when to ditch them. Creating Multiple Profit Centers or multiple streams of revenue bridge cashflow gaps and build a foundation of viability. It can be your response to a changing world and staying vital and vibrant. Tune in to our conversation so you ‘don't waste time watering dead plants.' DOWNLOAD Please do the Conscious Attentive Leadership Mentoring (C.A.L.M.) Activities, below. Podcast Sponsor Strategies to Grow Your Business Monthly Bookkeeping Payroll Services Back Office Strategies and Support Contact Us Now Episode Resources Barbara's 3 Other Podcast Conversations Employee Mindset vs. Entrepreneurial Mindset | WeMentor Mondays with Nancy PODCASTIt Is Time To Explore Multiple Profit Centers | WeMentor Mondays with Nancy PODCASTPortfolios of Inspiration | WeMentor Mondays with Nancy PODCAST Conscious Attentive Leadership Mentoring After listening, do the following three C.A.L.M. Activities: Take this risk or do this adventurous task: Implement the next three steps in becoming an idea detective. Start with formulating strategies to stay constantly curious, protecting your ideas from naysayers, and strategies to keep your Multiple Profit Centers (MPC) alive (and a strategy for when to pull the plug on a revenue stream). Then, implement the strategies and refine them as you go. Apply Self-Compassion: Choose one of your strategies and love it. Gush about how much you love the strategy. You are more likely to implement strategies you love. Welcome Appreciation: “I appreciate the creativity and brainstorming of ideas Barbara sprinkled into our conversations. I appreciate her attitude that small is beautiful. I appreciate a reminder not to water a dead plant. Those ideas that are not likely to succeed need to be discarded for new ideas to pop up. I appreciate Barbara. She is rocking our world with her enthusiasm, grace, and brainstorming.” Your Turn. Start with, “I appreciate what I heard from today's Guest Mentor, Barbara Winter. I appreciate this week's adventurous task because….”“Most of the problems in our lives and world are caused by relational dysfunction, a dysfunction in how we relate: as social groups, as individuals, to animals and the environment, and even to ourselves. Therefore,
Episode 290: 3 Steps to Becoming An Idea Detective with Barbara Winter Barbara Winter is back as a pioneering self-employment advocate, writer, and teacher who has spent the last thirty years pondering the question, “Why aren't we all self-employed?” Helping others discover a Joyfully Jobless life is her favorite occupation. Barbara says, “nine out of ten of us in the 1900s grew up in entrepreneurial homes. Now, the numbers are reversed; nine out of ten people are employed.” One way to promote your entrepreneurial spirit is by becoming an idea detective. Barbara and I hear clients on two separate sides of the idea spectrum. The first side is, “I have too many ideas and don't know what to do with them all.” The second side is not having enough ideas or a strategy to gather ideas to explore opportunities. I asked Barbara to share three of her six steps to becoming an idea detective so whichever side of the idea spectrum you are on, you can advance your ideas with a strategic approach. We discuss three of six steps to becoming an idea detective. The other three will arrive next Monday. Find your curiosity. We discuss where our curiosity might have gotten snuffed out and how to bring ideas to life. We are born curious. Many quiet the curiosity voice growing up. Pondering life keeps our imagination fed. You can make friends with your curiosity again. Stay on alert and keep searching for new ideas. Be deliberate. Invite ideas. “Think of your business as a laboratory and not an assembly line,” says Barbara. Pay attention to ways you can capture new ideas. Barbara wakes up with this brain-engaging activity every morning. She asks herself, what's missing? And, what do I want to change today? You can keep your ideas moving with questions. We discuss how to solve inertia. You will hear what effect 19 months of isolation have had on Barbara and her creativity. She has solid strategies that help her move forward and discover new things. She even offers Brainstorming sessions, which I took her up on, to keep moving my book ideas forward. Audition Your Ideas. Auditioning my ideas has given me a structure to rolling out new ideas. A way to test them out on audiences to see if they are worthy for the next steps. Barbara is one of the wisest and most fun idea detectives I have ever met. I always pick up new ideas and strategies in being joyfully jobless. Let me know how implementing these three steps go. DOWNLOAD Please do the Conscious Attentive Leadership Mentoring (C.A.L.M.) Activities, below. Podcast Sponsor Strategies to Grow Your Business Monthly Bookkeeping Payroll Services Back Office Strategies and Support Contact Us Now Episode Resources Barbara's 3 Other Podcast Conversations Employee Mindset vs. Entrepreneurial Mindset | WeMentor Mondays with Nancy PODCASTIt Is Time To Explore Multiple Profit Centers | WeMentor Mondays with Nancy PODCASTPortfolios of Inspiration | WeMentor Mondays with Nancy PODCAST Barbara Sher Barbara Sher Hugh MacLeod Hugh MacLeod, Ignore Everybody Steven Pressfield Steven Pressfield, The War of Art Conscious Attentive Leadership Mentoring After listening, do the following three C.A.L.M. Activities: Take this risk or do this adventurous task: Implement the three steps in becoming an idea detective this week. Find your curiosity if you buried it. Invite ideas by asking yourself two questions Barbara asks herself each morning, what's missing? And, What do I want to change today? Audition your ideas by finding an audience to test out ideas. See what happens. I'll have three more steps for you next Monday. Apply Self-Compassion: Acknowledge the enthusiasm building within as you implement your first three steps as an idea detective. Welcome Appreciation: “I appreciate the joy and enthusiasm Barbara infuses into our conversations. Her delight in life and passion for helping others live a joyfully jobles...
What if you never have to look for a job again? What if you could be Joyfully Jobless? Good news! You can. Barbara Winter has been teaching How to Make a Living Without a Job for more than three decades and wrote the book about it. Her website JoyfullyJobless.com is a treasure trove of resources for entrepreneurs, or what she refers to as Self-Bossers. Sit back and enjoy the wisdom of a seasoned Weirdo. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/rasheed-hooda/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/rasheed-hooda/support
Crossing the world in 1932, two German airmen ran out of fuel in a remote region of northwestern Australia. With no food and little water, they struggled to find their way to safety while rescuers fought to locate them. In this week's episode of the Futility Closet podcast we'll describe the airmen's ordeal, a dramatic story of perseverance and chance. We'll also survey some escalators and puzzle over a consequential crash. Intro: Winston Churchill had a confusing namesake in the United States. Shelley's friend Horace Smith wrote a competing version of "Ozymandias." Sources for our feature on the 1932 Kimberley rescue: Barbara Winter, Atlantis Is Missing: A Gripping True Story of Survival in the Australian Wilderness, 1979. Brian H. Hernan, Forgotten Flyer, 2007. Anthony Redmond, "Tracks and Shadows: Some Social Effects of the 1938 Frobenius Expedition to the North-West Kimberley," in Nicolas Peterson and Anna Kenny, eds., German Ethnography in Australia, 2017, 413-434. Frank Koehler, "Descriptions of New Species of the Diverse and Endemic Land Snail Amplirhagada Iredale, 1933 From Rainforest Patches Across the Kimberley, Western Australia (Pulmonata, Camaenidae)," Records of the Australian Museum 63:2 (2011), 163-202. Bridget Judd, "The Unexpected Rescue Mission That Inspired ABC Mini-Series Flight Into Hell -- And Other Survivalists," Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Jan. 16, 2021. Peter de Kruijff, "Survivalist Retraces Lost Aviators' Trek," Kimberley Echo, Jan. 29, 2018. Michael Atkinson, "Surviving the Kimberley," Australian Geographic, June 28, 2018. Erin Parke, "No Food, No Water, No Wi-Fi: Adventurer Tests Skills in One of Australia's Most Remote Places," ABC Premium News, Jan. 29, 2018. "Forgotten Territory," [Darwin, N.T.] Northern Territory News, Feb. 28, 2016. Graeme Westlake, "They Accepted Their Saviour's Fish and Ate It Raw," Canberra Times, May 15, 1982. "German Fliers Got Lost in Our Nor-West," [Perth] Mirror, June 2, 1956. "37 Days in a Torture Chamber," [Adelaide] News, April 21, 1954. "Air Passenger," [Grafton, N.S.W.] Examiner, July 18, 1938. "Hans Bertram," Sydney Morning Herald, July 16, 1938. "Aviation: Pilot Bertram," [Charters Towers, Qld.] Northern Miner, April 20, 1933. "Bertram Lands at Crawley," [Perth] Daily News, Sept. 24, 1932. "Bertram's Marooned 'Plane," Singleton [N.S.W.] Argus, Sept. 21, 1932. "Captain Bertram," Sydney Morning Herald, Sept. 20, 1932. "Fully Recovered," Sydney Morning Herald, Aug. 6, 1932. "The Search for the German Airmen," [Perth] Western Mail, July 21, 1932. "The German Airmen," Albany [W.A.] Advertiser, July 7, 1932. "Death Cheated," Cincinnati Enquirer, July 5, 1932. "Lost German Fliers," [Adelaide] Chronicle, June 30, 1932. "Search for Hans Bertram," [Carnarvon, W.A.] Northern Times, June 16, 1932. "Strangers on the Shore: Shipwreck Survivors and Their Contact With Aboriginal Groups in Western Australia 1628-1956," Department of Maritime Archaeology, Western Australian Maritime Museum, 1998. Listener mail: "Escalator Etiquette," Wikipedia (accessed Feb. 8, 2021). Brian Ashcraft, "It's Hard For Japan to Change Its Escalator Manners," Kotaku, June 20, 2019. Jack Malvern, "Mystery Over Tube Escalator Etiquette Cleared Up by Restored Film," Times, Oct. 21, 2009. Laura Reynolds, "11 Secrets of Harrods," Londonist (accessed Feb. 14, 2021). Adam Taylor, "A Japanese Campaign Wants to Rewrite the Global Rules of Escalator Etiquette," Washington Post, Aug. 26, 2015. Linda Poon, "Tokyo Wants People to Stand on Both Sides of the Escalator," Bloomberg City Lab, Dec. 20, 2018. Johan Gaume and Alexander M. Puzrin, "Mechanisms of Slab Avalanche Release and Impact in the Dyatlov Pass Incident in 1959," Communications Earth & Environment 2:10 (Jan. 28, 2021), 1-11. Robin George Andrews, "Has Science Solved One of History's Greatest Adventure Mysteries?", National Geographic, Jan. 28, 2021. Nature Video, "Explaining the Icy Mystery of the Dyatlov Pass Deaths" (video), Jan. 28, 2021. New Scientist, "The Dyatlov Pass incident, which saw nine Russian mountaineers die in mysterious circumstances in 1959, has been the subject of many conspiracy theories. Now researchers say an unusual avalanche was to blame," Twitter, Jan. 28, 2021. This week's lateral thinking puzzle was contributed by listener Alex Baumans. Here are two corroborating links (warning -- these spoil the puzzle). You can listen using the player above, download this episode directly, or subscribe on Google Podcasts, on Apple Podcasts, or via the RSS feed at https://futilitycloset.libsyn.com/rss. Please consider becoming a patron of Futility Closet -- you can choose the amount you want to pledge, and we've set up some rewards to help thank you for your support. You can also make a one-time donation on the Support Us page of the Futility Closet website. Many thanks to Doug Ross for the music in this episode. If you have any questions or comments you can reach us at podcast@futilitycloset.com. Thanks for listening!
Episode 257: “Great Solstice Conjunction” and Your Favorite 2020 Podcast Conversations On this longest night of the year, a rare sight you won’t want to miss is right outside your doorstep. Immediately after sunset tonight, bundle up as you step outside. Turn your gaze up to the southwest area in the sky—a rare planetary event not seen since 1623. The two most prominent planets in the solar system, Jupiter and Saturn, align within .06 degrees to appear as one brilliant light, the Christmas Star. Forbes contributor and star gazing inspirationalist Jamie Carter says, The “Great Solstice Conjunction” hasn’t been this easy to see since the year 1226.” (Tom Wildoner took the photo of Jupiter and Saturn on December 8, 2020.) Another part of this ‘exciting day’ is this. Your 5 favorite podcast conversations for 2020 are ready below. You gravitated toward conversations about opportunities, inspiration, meditation, searching for peace, and clarifying your message, which reminds me of a Seth Godin quote. “Define who you are by what you do.” More exciting news! We have surpassed 150,000 downloads! We can’t celebrate in person☹, but you can help spread the joy by posting this link PODCAST EPISODES | WeMentor Mondays with Nancy PODCAST on Facebook, LinkedIn, Instagram, and Twitter. Also, on this rarest of days, I am asking for your generosity. A donation from you would encourage a teary eye of gratitude and tickle alive some joy in my heart as we invest in a new year of beginnings and new meaningful conversations to boost your ability to feel more deeply to think, act, lead, and mentor others more clearly and more effectively!!! Every dollar goes into improving and expanding our programming. Thank you in advance for your generosity. DONATE HERE
Episode 243: Portfolios of Inspiration Running multiple profit centers can be an organizational nightmare. Barbara Winter manages her five profit centers through a portfolio system. Her ideas take you into an inspirational process that will help you design and shape a portfolio for each profit center. There are a few tricks to successfully maintaining your... The post Portfolios of Inspiration first appeared on WeMentor Mondays with Nancy PODCAST.
Episode 242: It Is Time To Explore Multiple Profit Centers Labor Day, a day to ponder multiple profit centers with pioneer, Barbara Winter. Barbara coined the phrase, Multiple Profit Centers in her book, Making A Living Without A Job. A concept I have used since I learned it from her in 1996. It could be... The post It Is Time To Explore Multiple Profit Centers first appeared on WeMentor Mondays with Nancy PODCAST.
The Path to Self-Employment. Key Insights on How to Start Your Own Business Check out the blog post here.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/introvertsbubble)
We were so excited to sit down with Barbara Winter this week and talk with her about how she started down the entrepreneurial road. She gives us her ideas about profit centers and how to remain joyfully jobless. You can find out more about Barbara here: https://joyfullyjobless.com/ Twitter @joblessmuse Find more great content at www.Socialknx.com Find me on Twitter and Instagram at: @GinaSchreck or @SocialKNX Facebook: www.facebook.com/SocialKNX Be sure to connect with me on any social channel @GinaSchreck or jump into our DIYsocial Facebook Group
As we wrap up the year with this episode of Small Business with Steve Strauss powered by Microsoft, we take a look at the ultimate goal of all entrepreneurs; to Become Self Employed! Steve has some great tips on what you should be doing to prepare yourself for this challenging and rewarding, career change. Then Steve interviews someone who truly changed his life. Barbara Winter is the author of Making A Living Without A Job. It’s all about finding what makes you happy and then being successful at that. She also has a wonderful website called Joyfully Jobless, which sees self-employment as “an opportunity to share our unique gifts, passions and eccentricities with others so every citizen proudly creates a one of a kind enterprise that is a perfect fit for them.” Let Barbara change your life, too! Don’t forget, you can submit your question for an “Ask An Expert Live” segment by sending an email to theselfemployed@yahoo.com. Subscribe to the Small Business Success RSS Feed to get weekly podcasts automatically! Or, listen on iTunes!
Welcome to the 2016! In this episode of Small Business with Steve Strauss powered by Greatland podcast we're going to be talking about something important to all entrepreneurs. It's not hard work we're afraid of, in fact we generally seek it out. The key is finding something we love to do! Every year in Steve's Ask An Expert column at USA Today, he covers the top trends in business for the upcoming year. These are the things you can look forward to and plan for with your business. Whether it's in marketing, security, media, or otherwise, Steve will let you know what they are. Then Steve interviews someone who truly changed his life. Barbara Winter is the author of Making A Living Without A Job. It's all about finding what makes you happy and then being successful at that. She also has a wonderful website called Joyfully Jobless, which sees self-employment as "an opportunity to share our unique gifts, passions and eccentricities with others so every citizen proudly creates a one of a kind enterprise that is a perfect fit for them." Let Barbara change your life, too! Don't forget, you can submit your question for an "Ask An Expert Live" segment by sending an email to theselfemployed@yahoo.com. Subscribe to the Small Business Success RSS Feed to get weekly podcasts automatically! Or, listen on iTunes!
Rasheed Hooda is weird. In fact, he prides himself on his weirdness. He resides in his “mobile domicile” living a happily homeless, joyously jobless lifestyle, traveling the country twisting balloons and inspiring audiences with his story. Joyfully Jobless Weekend Rasheed was is collaborating with Barbara Winter, author of Making a Living without a Job: Winning […] The post Rasheed Hooda is Happily Homeless | Podcast 28 appeared first on Kandas Rodarte.
Steve discusses the joys and hurdles of being your own boss, and interviews Barbara Winter, author of Make a Living without a Job.
Outsmart Resistance & Make A Living Without A Job – with Barbara J. Winter Recently I had the opportunity to speak one-on-one with 15 extraordinary entrepreneurs who have one thing in common. They have stepped into their purpose and started businesses that not only allow them to express their passions, but monetize their gifts. For […] The post Monetize Your Gifts Masterclass Series – Interview with Barbara Winter appeared first on Rodney Washington.
Join me and Barbara Winter, author of Making a Living Without a Job, as we discuss what it takes to run an inspired business, one that expresses your most creative self and offers you the rewards of freedom and financial independence.