POPULARITY
This week Sarah and Jayme discuss what they've each been reading and whether you should read it as well. Sarah's Shelf: The Lost for Words Bookshop by Stephanie Butland, Allie and Bea by Catherine Ryan Hyde, This Time Next Year by Sophie Cousens, and The Lighthouse by Jessie Newton Jayme's Shelf: The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek by Kim Michele Richardson, Why We Sleep by Matthew Walker, Memorial by Bryan Washington, and Redhead by the Side of the Road by Anne Tyler
#22 In this episode we do a recap of the next episode of The Bachelor and do a deep dive into this season's "villain." After that we go over our favorite parts of December's book club pick, One Day in December (and our cast if we were to turn it into a movie). Lastly, we do a sneak peek into our January book, This Time Next Year! https://www.justgowithitpodcast.com/ https://www.instagram.com/justgowithit.podcast/ https://abc.com/shows/the-bachelor https://www.amazon.com/One-Day-December-Josie-Silver/dp/0525574689 https://www.amazon.com/This-Time-Next-Sophie-Cousens/dp/059319120X
Did 2020 hurt you? No, this book did DANIELLE! This month we skimmed This Time Next Year by Sophie Cousens, a romcom without the rom OR the com. Fall into a pothole with us as we ship Minnie Cooper to Old Jersey where she meets Quinn and they snog, but also kinda just like doooooon’t. I wish I could give you any context, but there is none. Don your fish tie, eat your pie soup in a bread bowl, and join us with your favorite hot beverage! HAPPY BIRTHDAY KATIEEEEEEE! And happy 2021. Follow our Insta @lit.tea.rary.podcast Send us your unappreciated jokes at lit.tea.rary.podcast@gmail.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Lacy and Kameron read, "This Time Next Year", by Sophie Cousens and Kameron does a birth chart reading for the two main characters. (No, seriously.)
This is a moving, joyful love story, This Time Next Year explores the way fate leads us to the people we least expect--no matter what the odds. If you only read one book over the holiday break, you MUST read Sophie Cousens’ debut novel THIS TIME NEXT YEAR. This book is the Good Morning America December book club pick AND has been compared to Love Actually, Sleepless in Seattle and Knotting Hill. Enjoy, y’all!
Episode 39 Sophie Cousens: THIS TIME NEXT YEAR. Rachel Barenbaum interviews Sophie Cousens about her debut novel THIS TIME NEXT YEAR.
2020 is coming to a close and we are not going to let this year end on a negative note. There were really some great things about this year (politics and pandemics aside, of course). In this episode we talk about our biggest professional and personal accomplishments this year and all of our favorite purchases. We reminisce about our favorite episodes of the pod this year, our favorite books, clothing and beauty purchases and all of our favorite ways that we self-cared our way through 2020. Grace’s Post: I don’t want kids … and that’s okay! Best Overall Purchase of 2020: Grace’s Dining Chairs - Vintage Marcel Breuer Cesca Chairs via 1st Dibs Brightland Olive Oil Fridge Lazy Susan The SoulCycle Bike Favorite Clothing Purchases of 2020: Pandemic Pants from Old Navy Aerie corded oversized sweatshirt (Quarter zip version; original is sold out) Eileen Fisher Tunic Sweaters Ralph Lauren Blazer Vuori Joggers Amazon Fleece Favorite Beauty Purchases of 2020: Dr. Bader Face Cream San Tropez Self Tanner Prose: prose.com/BOP Ilia Mascara Saie Mascara Favorite Home Goods of 2020: The air-fryer Favorite Books of 2020: Grace: One to Watch by Kate Stayman - London The Chiffon Trenches by Andre Leon Talley Kitchen Confidential by Anthony Bourdain The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennet The Last Flight by Julie Clark The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead Becca: A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J Maas Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi One to Watch by Kate Stayman - London The Boys’ Club by Erica Katz Kitchens of the Great Midwest by J. Ryan Stradal Open Book by Jessica Simpson (audiobook) Favorite TV Shows of 2020: The Undoing The Queen’s Gambit The Politician Season 2 Hollywood Never Have I Ever Dash and Lily Favorite Movies of 2020: The High Note 1917 Nancy Meyers Movies Favorite Recipes of 2020: Alison Roman's Sour Cream Flatbread Oh She Glows Cream of Tomato Soup Julia Turshen’s Turkey Meatballs with Ricotta Instagram: @the.sattva.life Obsessions: Robinhood Investment App Virgin River What We’re Reading: Stamped From the Beginning by Ibram X. Kendi Joyful by Ingrid Fetell Lee A Promised Land by Barack Obama This Time Next Year by Sophie Cousens The Star Crossed Sisters of Tuscany by Lori Nelson Spielman The Unraveling of Cassidy Holmes by Elissa R. Sloan Christmas At the Island Hotel by Jenny Colgan A Snowfall of Silver by Laura Wood A Sky Painted Gold by Laura Wood December Book Club: (Episode out Dec 16th!) The Cousins by Karen McManus Sponsor: Prose: Go to prose.com/BOP for your free in-depth hair quiz and 15% off your order. Betterhelp: Get 10% off your first month by visiting betterhelp.com/badonpaper. Join our FB group for amazing book recs & more! Like and subscribe to RomComPods. Available wherever you listen to podcasts. Visit Grace’s blog, The Stripe. New posts daily! Follow us on Instagram @badonpaperpodcast. Follow Grace on Instagram @graceatwood and Becca @beccamfreeman.
In this week's show, I had the pleasure of speaking with Sophie Cousens about her debut novel THIS TIME NEXT YEAR. I also highlighted some of the week's new book releases. Don't forget to download The 2020 BiblioLifestyle Holiday Gift Guide! This year’s guide has 14 categories, 170+ books, & some giveaways sprinkled in between. So whether you're looking for a gift for someone or you want to treat your shelf — you'll find some options here! Get your free copy at: bibliolifestyle.com/2020holidaygiftguide/ Also available is The 2020 Fall Reading List — a reader's free guide to the seasons best reads! Get your free copy at: bibliolifestyle.com/2020frl Books to keep on your radar:IRENA’S WAR by James D. Shipman is based on the gripping true story of an unlikely Polish resistance fighter - Irena Sendler who is also known as the female Schindler - who helped save thousands of Jewish children from the Warsaw ghetto during World War II. THE BLADE BETWEEN by Sam J. Miller is a frightening and uncanny ghost story about a rapidly changing city in upstate New York and the mysterious forces that threaten it. *** BiblioLifestyle newsletter subscribers are the first to know all the podcast happenings, get free goodies in the mail and they can enter for the chance to win free books. Every Friday you’ll get a special treat in your inbox filled with inspirational content, book recommendations, self-care tips, original interviews, and things we think you’ll enjoy. The best part? You will only receive ONE email per week and it will be an amazing 5-minute read or less! Get our free weekly delivery - bibliolifestyle.com. A list of all the books mentioned in the show can be found at bibliohappyhour.com. To find an independent bookstore near you or when you're traveling, visit bibliofinder.com. For as little as $1/month, you can tune in to our “off the cuff” discussion (aka the aftershow), get our tailored “top shelf” book recommendations, behind the scenes content, perks, and more when you become a supporter on Patreon. Join us at patreon.com/bibliofinder.
The Movielife formed in 1997 in Long Island, New York. They’ve released quite a few records such as It's Go Time (1999) This Time Next Year (2000) Forty Hour Train Back to Penn (2003) Cities in Search of a Heart (2017). I got Vinnie on the Skype and this is what we talked about: The latest I Am The Avalanche album Silent Majority Touring with No Use For A Name Playing in front of 5000 people while on tour with New Found Glory Going from Revelation to Drive-Thru The band breaking up How was I am the avalanche perceived in the beginning Making handwritten lyric sheets And a ton more Go get the new I am the Avalanche album out now on iSurrender Records which Vinnie says is their best album to date. If you market aggressively on Instagram Stories and want custom stickers then go here to get custom stickers or just email mike@drive80.com and I can send you samples. These are great for B2C companies and Realtors. Feel free to support the podcast for as little as $1 a month through Patreon Or go to thiswasthescene.com to possibly buy some merch.
This week I discuss how to cultivate a consistent gratitude practice. I also give three tips on how to cope with your family this time of year and how to avoid conflict. I also mention "The thing I'm loving" this week and it's my Book of the Month subscription and specifically the book "This Time Next Year" by Sophie Cousins.As always you can connect with the podcast on Instagram and through the new website. Finally don’t forget you can buy me a coffee and donate to keep the podcast going.
On Ep. 5 of NOTES BETWEEN SESSIONS WITH MARY EDWARDS, Singer/songwriter, Ondine PM and I take a trip back to 1980 --to our junior high school days--to talk about the influences that led to her recent single, "This Time Next Year." Stream on Anchor.fm, Spotify or Apple Music. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mary-edwards7/support
Sophie Cousens worked as a TV producer in London for more than twelve years and now lives on the island of Jersey in the UK, balancing her writing career with working for an arts charity and taking care of her two small children. Her debut novel This Time Next Year: THE feel-good rom-com of 2020. It is having amazing feedback and we fully expect Sophie Cousens to blow up and be the next big rom-com author. We really can see this being on the big screen too. Just look at that praise below! 2020's most perfect pick-me-up. Refreshingly romantic and certain to hold a special place in your heart, This Time Next Year is essential reading for fans of Jojo Moyes, Josie Silver and Lucy Diamond. 'Heart-warming and unashamedly romantic' RUTH JONES 'Sparkling and uplifting' MHAIRI MCFARLANE 'Every page of this book is perfect' CRESSIDA MCLAUGHLIN 'Swooningly romantic...I didn't want to put it down' KIRSTY GREENWOOD 'I absolutely loved This Time Next Year...so funny and sad and brilliant on love, friendship and family. Plus it contains the finest comedic airport security scene since spinal tap' TOM ELLEN 'A beautiful debut full of heart, soul and serendipity with characters you can't help but fall in love with.' ALEX BROWN 'This Time Next Year will make you laugh, cry and keep reading long into the night - it's the escapist read everyone needs right now.' HOLLY MARTIN 'A funny, pull-at-your-heartstrings read, this is the perfect companion for curling up with hot chocolate and a blanket. Unashamedly romantic and packed full of holiday sparkle, it's a hug in book form.' JOSIE SILVER This interview is certainly one to watch and if you are into warm romantic comedies with more substance than most, then you should most definitely pay attention to this interview and her novel. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/writingcommunitychatshow/support
What do you want to be doing this time next year? Channel your inner groundhog or woodchuck and chuck out those old bad habits. Jump on the early Spring for motivation all year! Discover your virtues that are unique to you! “Where do you want to be this time next year…” By Jaye McElroy and […] The post 069 This Time Next Year… appeared first on Inspired Action Podcast.
Leon Evans - 22nd December 2019 - This Time Next Year
Episode 144: This Time Next Year by What's A Good Guy?
Katy, Jo and Victoria are joined by James and Paul AKA Two Chubby Cubs.They talk us through their hugely successful blog, their time on ITV's This Time Next Year with Davina McCall and their upcoming book. Plus, going to the gym and not working out, why there should be separate male and female Slimmer of the Week awards and being a Slimming World rebel.
Today we have on the Canadian Pop Punk aficionado known as Matt Bacsalmasi. Matt is one of the most talented bassists in the valley and currently plays for the Nostalgic Alternative Pop Punk Phoenix based band "No Refills", he is also the owner of Unhooked Events. We discuss the DIY music scene in AZ, 3-D Printed Space Rockets, The Avengers, common artist struggles, addiction and comedy. His previous LA based band "Cover What You Can" was a regular with touring acts such as Story So Far, Mayday Parade, Hawthorn Heights, The Maine, This Time Next Year and many other Pop Punk Legends. He's promoting No Refills latest release "No Strings Attached" and his upcoming events with Unhooked. Check it out! ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://norefillsofficial.com https://www.facebook.com/NoRefillsOfficial/ https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/norefills2 https://www.soundcloud.com/norefillsband https://www.facebook.com/UnhookedPromotions/ Instagram: @NoRefillsBand Booking: NoRefillsBand@Gmail.com // unhookedpromotions@gmail.com https://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/music/10-phoenix-area-bands-to-watch-in-2019-part-2-11074897
This week we jumped in with the Pisten Bully's - James, Robin, and Chris were able to make it to the show. They have some live music somewhere in there where they play their original music: Bullet, This Time (Next Year), West Dakota, and I Ain't. Enjoy!
In week 5 of our “This Time Next Year” series, Pastor Andrew Gard warns us of the dangers of playing the comparison game.
This week in our series: This Time Next Year, Pastor Andrew Gard talks about letting go of our past guilt and shame and walking lighter into 2019 in his sermon, Done With That.
In week 2 of our series, This Time Next Year, Pastor Andrew Gard challenges us to take advantage of every opportunity, living with our hearts wide open to others.
Gretchen Rubin is one of the biggest names in self-help, but she's also special to me on a personal level. After my little sister gave me a second chance at life last year, I read everything I could get my hands on about how to be happier and healthier. One of the first books I read --- and the one that made the biggest impact on me --- was Gretchen Rubin’s The Happiness Project. Over the past few months, I’ve been getting to know Gretchen’s work in even more detail as I researched wrote my new book Winning Resolutions: Achieve Your Biggest Goals and Wildest Dreams Once and For All. Gretchen Rubin joins me on this episode of the podcast to talk about her four tendencies framework and how it can help you keep your resolutions. And fitness contributor Kathleen Trotter shares what she says are the three pillars of a balanced fitness routine. Feedback / Connect: Subscribe to My Instruction Manual on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify and anywhere else great podcast are found Visit MyInstructionManual.com for shownotes, more great content and to sign up the email newsletter Email: keith@myinstructionmanual.com Keith on Twitter: @KeithMcArthur Join our Facebook page and our Self-Help Book Club on Facebook Find us on Pinterest, Instagram and YouTube Download a free copy of 18 Steps to Own Your Life by clicking HERE Episode 50 Show Notes [00:00] Welcome and Intro Winning Resolutions will be released on December 11, but it's available for pre-order now. Order on Amazon Order on Kobo Other retailers coming soon To get a pile of pre-order bonuses, go to MyInstructionManual.com/resolutions [4:02] Featured interview with Gretchen Rubin Gretchen Rubin is New York Times bestselling author of multiple books including The Happiness Project, Better Than Before, and The Four Tendencies. In this conversation, Keith and Gretchen discuss: The TV program This Time Next Year (see YouTube clip below) [5:35] How Gretchen discovered the Four Tendencies [7:09] Gretchen provides an overview of The Four Tendencies [8:04] Upholders, obliger, rebels, questioners Outer + inner expectations quiz.gretchenrubin.com Gretchen and Keith are both upholders [11:06] Obligers [13:20] Questioners [18:50] How the tendencies overlap [23:07] Rebels [28:00] [34:33] Where to find Gretchen Website: GretchenRubin.com Four Tendencies quiz: Quiz.GretchenRubin.com Instagram: @gretchenrubin Twitter: @gretchenrubin Podcast: Happier with Gretchen Rubin [34:33] Fitness contributor Kathleen Trotter on her three pillars of a balanced fitness routine Kathleen Trotter is author of Finding Your Fit: A Compassionate Trainer's Guide to Making Fitness a Lifelong Habit In this conversation, Keith and Kathleen discuss: Why a balanced fitness routine is critical [35:00] Pillar 1: cardiovascular [36:00] Pillar 2: strength training [38:42] Pillar 3: flexibility + mobility [40:05] Where to find Kathleen [42:25] KatheenTrotter.com Instagram: KathleenTrotterFitness Twitter: KTrotterFitness Facebook: KathleenTrotter [42:45] Closing words
EPISODE 11 – Committing to a Twelve Week Year “Without goals, and plans to reach them, you are like a ship that has set sail with no destination.” — Fitzhugh Dodson On this week’s show, I will be discussing the concept of the twelve week year, how I used it to get out of a creative rut and how it can be used to focus your vision and complete goals quickly. It’s a bit longer than usual episodes but it’s filled with valuable and important stuff. Before I go on to that though, in last week’s episode I set out to discount the myth that multitasking is somehow a more productive way of working than just doing one thing at a time. The ONE THING AT A TIME PHILOSOPHY is not the easiest thing to do, and I perhaps find that especially true for creatives. As we constantly find ourselves thinking of more and more things we could develop or work on within ourselves or our creative projects, be they films or whatever, we often trip over the last idea we had with a fresh new one and short circuit it. Multitasking does exist of course, as any mother or father working from home with a toddler at their heels will confirm, but in productivity terms, it’s incredibly inefficient and as we get older we simply become less and less able to pull it off. If you missed the episode do scoot back and have a listen as it’s got some good food for thought in there but if you did and have been giving it a try, as always please get in touch via twitter or the website links and let me know how you are getting on. If you have a particular element of your life or work that you are struggling with then please get in touch and I’ll see if I can work up a new episode to help you to deal with it. ANECDOTE Sadly I lost my brilliant dad at the start of 2017 and just a few months later I lost my amazing mum too. It was not a good year and by September I found that I was struggling to get things done in both life and work. I always seemed to be a step behind and I was firefighting my way through everything last minute, that’s if I got things done at all. I’ve talked about firefighting a few times here and YOU CAN WORK THAT WAY BUT what it does is that it takes your attention away from larger problems and those problems play heavily on your mind. It also makes your goals secondary to whatever the current problem is that you are dealing with. It got to the point several times in the years leading up to my own first twelve week year where I had to just stop and those that follow my twitter feed will know this, I have to shut it down to allow me to focus on what is absolutely vital. The white noise that I talked about in episode 3, just saturated my thoughts with 10’s If not hundreds of small to large sized tasks and commitments and I got heavily bogged down and kinda lost. Of course, now I have ways to avoid this, but that’s really because I was able to get myself out from under a host of problems by committing to a 12 week year and in turn that started me on my way to high-level thinking. It’s worth saying that even productivity systems can become white noise if you try to follow too many at once, but I found the 12 week year and basically, with a fairly thin understanding of it I threw myself in. I’ll go into it in detail a little later but I usually describe it to others as taking your new year’s resolution, what you want to achieve by that same time the following year instead of putting it 12 weeks away. For example, let’s say you want to make a short film. You say. I want to write, shoot and edit a short film by this time next year that’s my vision, that tells a story that I want to tell, or you want to learn how to edit by this time next year, or you want to make a change in career by this time next year, or you want to lose a few pounds or here’s one, you want to launch a podcast by this time next year. Instead of saying by THIS TIME NEXT YEAR, the traditional way you instead put that goal just 12 weeks away. So a twelve week year simply takes the focussed energy at the start and end of a new year’s resolution - The first six weeks and the final six weeks of the year and misses out the middle bit. The 9 months of the year where you got distracted from your vision. It focuses your time and energy and makes achieving your goals a real possibility. “People with goals succeed because they know where they’re going.” — Earl Nightingale My goal when I set my own 12 week year up was to clear the decks of incomplete projects, unfinished personal matters and promises to help others out within that time and I largely succeeded. I successfully killed off projects that were going nowhere, completed tasks that had been lying unfinished for well, some of them, years and I either end lined or escaped from all but two other matters. One was a project I’d been dragged into and that the producer simply wouldn’t let go, and I found myself in the end, out of politeness, agreeing to extend my involvement – I shouldn’t have done it but I did, and the other was an insurance claim for water getting into my house which in the end I simply had to concede to as a kind of half agreement with them a few weeks later – by that stage it had been two whole years unresolved and the 12 week year put real pressure on them. I learned that corporate matters like an insurance claim are very difficult to get working to your speed. Everything else though and I’m talking some 11 or 12 quite complicated matters, as well as many many smaller ones, got resolved within the 12 weeks. Of note is that NONE of the people that I gave deadlines to for the release of my voluntary creative involvement, actually completed or indeed really even started their projects within the 12 weeks I gave them to do so. These were creative projects which I can only assume were started by people on a whim, and they had called me or invited me on board and this was before I taught myself to say no of course, but they never went anywhere. It’s not that they couldn’t keep up with the pace that I set, THEY COULDN’T EVEN TAKE THE FIRST STEP ONTO A PACE – THERE WAS NO PACE. I’d been sweating and giving up mental energy to these projects when the people who apparently were driving them were really just waiting for me to do it for them. That realisation and my higher level self’s acknowledgement of it made saying no to future involvements all the easier. I did try another 12 week year just after the first, trying to pull together within it both this podcast and a web series and that 12 week year failed, well kinda failed and the reason was that I was 1 – Uncertain of exactly what I wanted to do with this podcast and my goal was therefor unspecific, And 2 – That the project I’d let slide on the previous 12 week year slammed right into my one and took all of the spare time that I’d worked so hard for, off of me. I had to manhandle that project to completion and if I hadn’t it simply would never have shot. In effect, I dropped my own project in favour of someone else’s and killed my second 12-week plan myself. All really out of politeness. I’m quite aware as I work on these episodes that at times I may sound harsh, or unsupportive or negative even but I have deep regrets from wasting my time and energy with experiences like this, and I must tell you that giving up your own hopes and dreams to commit to furthering someone else’s vision, no matter how nice they are, is not a good thing for the soul. I’m currently nearing the end of my 3rd 12 week year, and my goal with this one – to launch a podcast on the subject of productivity by the end of September 2018. How am I getting on? THE LESSON So committing to and completing a 12 week year is really pretty difficult but if you can get through it, and NOT GET DISTRACTED you will achieve a hell of a lot. I present this episode as I know just how powerful it is and I absolutely believe in it. The TWELVE WEEK YEAR IS a PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEM created by BRIAN P MORAN and his business partner MICHAEL LENNINGTON, outlined in a NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLING BOOK (link in the show notes) and an accompanying website of the same name that debunks traditional goal setting, using annual goals, as an ineffective goal-achieving approach. The 12 Week Year Is Not About Mustering More Discipline, Willpower, Organizational Skills, or A better Mindset, it is simply a focussed approach to goal setting which takes your long-term vision and brings it closer. Please buy your copy through one of my Amazon Affiliate Links. I get a small cut and it helps keep teh podcast costs down a wee bit. AMAZON US: https://amzn.to/2RUaj98 AMAZON UK: https://amzn.to/2yfN3tW RESEARCH ON NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTIONS suggests that when you set one and commit to it on the 1st of January that it is very likely that you might put in a good effort towards that yearly goal for 5 or 6 weeks at the start of the year, hitting the gym or writing down ideas etc. but by the time you are 6 weeks in, that LIFE AND WORK AND OTHER MATTERS will have taken your focus and frayed it, diluted it and you’d probably have abandoned your goal to deal with what was immediately on your plate. It goes on to suggest that maybe towards the end of the year you pick it back up again, and say to yourself, well I must do that thing that I said I would, and you might return to the gym, or perhaps you may have decided just to let it go. AN IN DEPTH LOOK AT THE TWELVE WEEK YEAR The 12 Week Year is a highly practical guide for taking you from thinking about the things you should be doing to push your business or your project or your life forward to actually doing those things. I’m basing my next section on an article by Carrie Dils called How to Squeeze a Full Year out of 12 Weeks. I did a good bit of additional research but I really liked her conclusions. There are 4 stages to this: Firstly you must SET “PILLAR” GOALS “Goals are dreams with deadlines.” ― Diana Scharf Now I’ve kind of avoided getting specific on goal setting so far in this podcast but the time has come for you to start thinking long term. The whole point of higher level thinking is to intelligently move yourself towards your own goals be they short or long term. And you need to start thinking about it if you haven’t already – The question is this - What is your long-term vision for your life? Where would you like to be true about your life in 10 years. Would you like to be debt free? Would you like to have a family? Would you like to achieve a certain salary? Own a holiday home? Move your career to a significant place? This will be your pillar goal. Take your time with this. Get to grips with it. I’ll revisit goals again and again on this show. For now, the idea is to pick 2-3 core goals for each 12-week cycle that serve your larger vision. Did you know that - If you write a goal down the probability of you doing it goes up 80%? Write a compelling vision of the ideal future that you’re working towards. The second stage is to GET RID OF ANNUALIZED THINKING Imagine getting a week’s worth of progress made in one day. Think critically about the tasks that are truly most important to your goals and spend your time on those things. What can I focus on in the next 12 weeks that are in service of my Pillar goals? Plan the daily or weekly tasks that serve those 2-3 primary goals and if your daily activities aren’t supporting those goals, you’re doing the wrong thing. Create habits to make taking regular action as easy as possible. Here are some examples that serve my current goal of creating this podcast. Create the website that supports the podcast. Learn how to submit to iTunes. Create test episodes to learn from. And how have I tackled these? I stopped my involvement in other peoples creative projects in order to focus on my goal. I tried three different word press designers, wasted time with them, and I eventually took over and built it myself in Wix. I researched how to get onto iTunes by following you tubers and listening to podcasts that talk about the subject. I hired a friend with a podcast to advise me on creating this one, and I recorded tests and rerecorded episode 1 three times before settling. I narrowed my focus, out with the day to day work of fight direction which is incredibly busy this year I must add and I focussed only on my podcast goals in my spare time. I deliberately avoided being drawn into other ideas and projects that took my fancy. Thirdly - DON’T UNDERESTIMATE THE IMPORTANCE OF PLANNING. Planning is some of the most productive time you can have. You have to set focused tactical goals. Plan what strategies and actions will move you closer to your goal and your future success. To achieve a year’s worth of work in the next 12 weeks requires a style of planning and execution that forces you to shed the low-value activity that keeps you stuck. Engage with the word tactical and don’t be afraid to say no to things that will distract you or slow you down. You have to make a detailed plan, with dates to hit - and stick to it. My detailed plan for his podcast has three elements to it: 1 Be ready by the 12th of September – My ideal launch date. 2 Have 15 episodes researched written and recorded by that date. Today is the 7th and I am on episode 11. I will put off recording 12-15 as I’m not in Glasgow so cannot complete. I will however complete by the 20th. 3 To launch with a website which will support the show and is simple to look at but offers the opportunity for expansion. The website planning is very complex in itself. I have been getting up early - between5.30-6am in order to complete a little bit of work on the podcast every day. As I near the end, it is slotting into every spare moment that I can find, between risk assessments, travel and fights. Lastly – YOU SHOULD KEEP SCORE Make your goals SMART That is (Specific. Measurable. Actionable. Relevant. Time-sensitive.). If you can’t measure progress, how do you know how you’re doing? Keep score so you know what’s working and what’s not so that you can make adjustments along the way. It enables you to celebrate wins and consciously identify problem areas. Here are some common problems that you may face along the way. COMMON MISTAKE #1: Trying to change everything at once - This is the number one mistake people make. Start with one thing and do it well. Once you get a few wins under your belt, you’ll gain skill and confidence with the system and you’ll be able to achieve even more. COMMON MISTAKE #2: Not having a strong enough “why” You absolutely MUST have a compelling personal vision. This is the “why” behind what you want to accomplish and achieve. It provides the motivation to follow through and take action, even when you don’t feel like it. Don’t get caught up trying to please someone else or copy someone else. Find your own why. COMMON MISTAKE #3: Not tracking your actions. This is important because you are what you repeatedly do. You are always building habits, either by intention or by accident. Tracking is a daily reminder that you’re growing. COMMON MISTAKE #4: Going it alone - If you’re serious about achieving your goals, the best thing you can do is tell others about it. There’s an African proverb that says, “if you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together.” So share your vision & goals with a friend or a colleague. In the productivity world, there’s something called an accountability partner. I’m sure if you put some effort into it you can find someone who it would be mutually beneficial to share with. SUMMING UP Brian P. Moran says in the 12 week year that “the number-one thing that you will have to sacrifice to be great, to achieve what you are capable of, and to execute your plans, is your comfort.” I’ve gone into some detail here but the book covers this topic very well. Follow the link in the show notes to get yourself a copy. It’s got so much value in it that I’ve really just had time to touch upon here. In the interest of honesty, I have to admit that I have deliberately put back my launch of Film Pro Productivity from the 12 September to a bit later in the month. The reason for that? I’m directing fight sequences simultaneously on 3 different television shows now and one is on the Island of Shetland at the top of Scotland, one is on the Isle of Skye to the North West and the other is in Central Scotland, In Glasgow. I simply can’t make my own launch date as I have to follow the work. If I launched on the 12th, which tbh I can, then I would not be able to promote it. I have delayed a little to gain a lot. This twelve week year episode is my first foray into the subject of goal setting. I hope that you’ve found it useful and inspiring. “One part at a time, one day at a time, we can accomplish any goal we set for ourselves.” — Karen Casey CALL TO ACTION I’m not going to suggest that as a call to action for next week you begin a 12 week year – all I ask is that you think about how it could work for you and start deciding on your life and work goals. That’s enough for now. ENDING Next episode I’ll be talking about Timewasters and How to deal with them – I’ll try and make it a shorter episode! For now though, thanks so much for listening – and I urge you to take control of your own destiny, keep on shootin’ and join me NEXT TIME on Film Pro Productivity. The music that you are listening to right now is Adventures by A Himitsu. You can view the show notes for this episode at filmproproductivity.com/episode11 If you’re struggling with something you think I can help with or would like to tell me how you are getting on then please get in touch via the contact page on the website. Alternately you can get me on Twitter @fight_director or follow the show @filmproprodpod Please subscribe to the podcast and if you are in the caring/ sharing mood then I’d really appreciate it if you would spread the word and leave an AWESOME review. Sources: https://carriedils.com/book-review-the-12-week-year/ https://12weekyear.com/ http://www.asianefficiency.com/systems/12-week-year-mistakes-2/ Thanks: A Himitsu Music: Adventures by A Himitsu https://www.soundcloud.com/a-himitsu Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported— CC BY 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/b... Music released by Argofox https://www.youtu.be/8BXNwnxaVQE Music provided by Audio Library https://www.youtu.be/MkNeIUgNPQ8 ––– • Contact the artist: x.jonaz@gmail.com https://www.facebook.com/ahimitsu https://www.twitter.com/ahimitsu1 https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgFwu-j5-xNJml2FtTrrB3A
Our picks for some long range viewing including The Bridge and The Handmaid's Tale. Some confusion is confronted with telly choice, This Time Next Year, and odd Netflix film, I Am The Pretty Thing That Lives In The House.
They're back! After a week long hiatus Chris and Alex are back on the mics with a big cup of chat for your day! Hard bargaining in co-habitation, Jeff's place, This Time Next Year; IPF edition, and the age-old question of, is a moustache appropriate for a corporate job interview? Probably. email: itsprobablyfineshow@gmail.com twitter: it's probably Fine Pod Facebook It's Probably Fine Podcast Instagram It's probably Fine Podcast
They're back! After a week long hiatus Chris and Alex are back on the mics with a big cup of chat for your day! Hard bargaining in co-habitation, Jeff's place, This Time Next Year; IPF edition, and the age-old question of, is a moustache appropriate for a corporate job interview? Probably. email: itsprobablyfineshow@gmail.com twitter: it's probably Fine Pod Facebook It's Probably Fine Podcast Instagram It's probably Fine Podcast
We have a big week this week, from baking to time travelling and all the way back to Abby Lee Miller's bankruptcy fraud conviction! Join us as we discuss This Time Next Year, Abby Tells All and Cupcake Wars.We would love to hear your thoughts on this episode by visiting our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/Reality-Check-200658750349600/Have any suggestions for shows for us to review? Let us know by sending us an email at realitycheckpod@gmail.comYour hosts are Georgia Higgins and Katherine PowellGraphics by Harry CarterThank you for supporting our podcast :)
This TV podcast sees Andrew Mercado and James Manning discussing the ratings for the season final of Australian Ninja Warrior and talking about when we will likely see it next. Other shows under the microscope this week include The Block, Australian Survivor, MasterChef, The Bachelor, This Time Next Year, True Story, Kath & Kim, The Good Fight, Britain's Got Talent, Home and Away, The AFL Footy Show and Game Of Thrones.
Am vergangenen Dienstag hat die Geschäftsführung von RTL zum großen Sommer-Screening nach Hamburg eingeladen. Dort präsentierte man zahlreiche neue Shows und einige Serienpiloten. Mit Formaten wie «Schnapp dir das Geld», «This Time Next Year» oder «It Takes 2» versucht man den nächsten Show-Hit zu landen. Quotenmeter-Chefredakteur Manuel Weis urteilte, dass das das abwechslungsreichste Programm seit Jahren sei. Außerdem diskutieren Hauke Reitz und Quotenmeter-Redakteur Dennis Weber mit Gastgeber Fabian Riedner. Ebenfalls ein Gesprächsthema ist die Nackt-Datingshow «Adam sucht Eva», die eine Woche im Oktober täglich ausgestrahlt wird. Ebenso hat RTL mit den Qualifikationsspielen der deutschen Nationalmannschaft und der Nations League ein heißes Eisen im Feuer. Ein weiteres Thema ist der große Erfolg von VOX. Mit Eigenproduktionen wie «Kitchen Impossible», «Sing meinen Song» und «Der Höhle der Löwen» fährt der Sender gute Einschaltquoten ein. Die Formate sind so erfolgreich, dass selbst Wiederholungen am Montag zur Hauptsendezeit punkten. Gibt es eine VOX-DNA, die die Sendungen zum Erfolg führt?
Programa número 42 de la segona temporada del No Facis l'Indi. Cada dia a Cooltura FM a les hores següents: 11:00, 17:00, 20:30 i 00:00. Els dimarts tenim grans dosis d'energia amb Track Stop. En Toni aquesta setmana ens porta a California i ens parla This Time Next Year.
2 Kings 4:8-17 by Ps. Vincent Ong