“Happiness is not a product of getting. It’s a byproduct of giving – giving your mind, your heart, and your sweat to something you value.” – Michael Masterson
wellspring (noun)
A wellspring (WEL-spring) is a source or supply of anything, especially when it is inexhaustible. As used by Nikos Kazantzakis: “My principal anguish, and the wellspring of all my joys and sorrows, has been the incessant merciless battle between the spirit and the flesh.”
During the Black Death pandemic – which peaked in Europe from 1347 to 1351 – half of the 100,000 population of Florence died in a four-month period. In Milan, the news from Florence terrified the population so that the families that the locals suspected of harboring a victim were walled up inside their houses.
The Latest Issue of AWAI’s Barefoot Writer
Including:
* The Million-Dollar Writing System that Awards Effort Above All Else
* Why Most Copywriters Never Make Big Money
* This Global Obsession Can Bring Writing Legends to Your Kitchen Table
* 4 Freelance Secrets From an Ex-Pat Writer in Mexico
One problem with dumb ideas…
I Finally Did it… I Picked Up the Phone!
I am phonophobic. No, that’s probably not right. I’m phone-o-phobic. Like many writers, I am scared shitless of speaking on the telephone. When email became ubiquitous 25 years ago, I felt like it had been invented just for me. I took to it like a fly to dog poo. Today, no one that knows me calls me. And anyone that calls goes through Giovanna, who tells them that I am not available to speak. By and large, communication with me takes one of two forms: Email for business. Texting for directions or scheduling social appointments.
But there are at least three kinds of communication that are better done in person or on the phone:
* Group conversations (like business meetings)
* Difficult two-way conversations (bad news or criticism)
* Analyzing anything complex
Thus, four or five times a year, I fly to some city – Baltimore, London, Sao Paulo, etc. – and spend a few days to a week in meetings with the many companies I consult with for my main client. And despite occasional bouts of jet lag, I find that those meetings are very valuable.
Yet, given the choice, I’d always rather have business discussions via email.
However, when it comes to discussing what’s happening with the business as a whole (an international, billion+ dollar group of direct response companies), we are usually looking at spreadsheets. Such conversations, hugely important, consist of three to five people analyzing complicated problems. So email just doesn’t work at all.
But after years of trying – half-assing it with email strings that run on forever and never seem to reach a conclusion – I bit the bullet this month and had a phone conversation about our first-quarter financials with the CEO.
And to my surprise and delight, it went very well. In less than a half-hour, we were able to identify two or three serious concerns, go into them well enough to understand and even resolve some of the issues, and then identify a follow-up conversation needed to advance the discussion to the next level.
I’m writing this in the afterglow of having done something I’m uncomfortable doing and realizing how foolish that discomfort is. I don’t think for a minute that I’ve overcome my phone-o-phobia. But I’m pretty sure the anxiety I’ll be feeling about our next conversation will be a bit less.
“Anxiety was born in the very same moment as mankind. And since we will never be able to master it, we will have to learn to live with it – just as we have learned to live with storms.” ― Paulo Coelho
“You Can’t Buy a Starbucks franchise. Here’s Why and What You Can Do About It”
I’ve had some experience with franchising. Just enough to know that it’s an industry best approached if you have money to lose and time to spare. Most of what’s written about franchising is not worth reading. But this short article on three of the biggest operations is good and well worth a few minutes of your time if you are thinking about a franchise business.
decoct (verb)
To decoct (dih-KAHKT) is to extract the essence of something by boiling it down, concentrating it. As used by William F. Buckley, Jr.: “Norman Mailer decocts matters of the first philosophical magnitude from an examination of his own ordure, and I am not talking about his books.”
The # sign – commonly known as the “pound sign” or the “number sign” – has a technical name: octothorpe. The “octo” part refers to the sign’s 8 points.