What have you done today for your success?

It's not the big things that make you successful, it's the little everyday things you do which determines if you are on the road to success.

No matter how many trainings you follow, at the end of the day it's your everyday attitude which will make a difference.

In this training I will be covering a broad area of your life in the hope that you will take something away from this that will ensure your success.

This is not a free ride.

Covered in this tutorial:

  1. Everyday Activities
  2. Food Presentation
  3. Your House
  4. Exercise
  5. Respect
  6. Tips and Conclusion

Let's get this show on the road...



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Swangirl Premium
Very wise and inspiring Michael. I know I keep too many things. I grew up in the bush and my Dad could make something whenever he needed out of the parts and scraps he had kept. (He made a refrigerator/freezer out of a huge cooler turned upright with a ton of insulation added and then covered with nice spruce paneling that he cut with our own sawmill. It ran off power from the solar system/battery bank). The nearest store was over 100 miles away! By airplane! So we kept everything that could have a use. Tubs were used to store food, nuts and bolts, catch drips, feed pets, scoop animal feed, spread compost etc. etc. Burlap sacks were kept to collect moss in the woods which we dried and used to store the vegetables out of our garden, layered in old wooden barrels (the old, old kind with the metal hoops around wood slats!). I could go on and on all day. Anyway, the only things we threw out were broken, or too filthy to clean, or didn't have any use like aluminum cans which we crushed and hauled back out 100 miles to recycle. Dad did not believe in burning plastic garbage so that got hauled back out too. Wood and paper would be burned, scraps went to the dogs, chickens or into the compost for the worms and the garden.

Every piece of waste was handled carefully to avoid extra trips to the dump...100 miles away.

Now, I live with a garbage can and recycling can that we wheel out to the curb every week! I seems too easy! I can go to the store to get whatever I need. I still can't break the mindset that I could save money by reusing something though, or that I don't want to be wasteful by buying a new one every time. I do reuse a lot but I need to pare things down to eliminate clutter. We are in the process of moving so I am getting better about throwing things out. I am torn between our need for a clean space and the awful waste of our consumer culture however.
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Ultimateless Premium
That is music to my ears. I believe in repurposing which is why I create Steampunk artefacts but my training here is more about respect for oneself.

Also to get incredibly wealthy (which again is not everyone's cup of tea) there needs to be a paradigm shift.

Even so, we can give away to people/organisations in need to clear the mental clutter which will allow better things into our lives.

Wealth is never about possessions anyway it's about serving others and easing other people's burdens, the more people we help the wealthier we get. It does show up as money/possessions because that is how one is rewarded in this world.

I love your father's ingenuity, Jessica.
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Swangirl Premium
Yes. The refrigerator and solar system still run though he passed away several years ago. So does the electric fence system (on autopilot from the battery bank with a trickle charge from solar panels) to keep bears out. We are not there to maintain any of it. Mom is trying to sell the homestead since it will all fall down without care. I wish you lived a continent closer. I am sure you would have fun looking at our "oasis in the wilderness" as Dad called it. Lots of cool old antiques and inginuity. We had a 500 gallon hot tub as well which kept the attached greenhouse warm all winter.

The property was originally a roadhouse and blacksmith shop on the old mining road through the area over 100 years ago. Want to buy a piece of Alaskan history complete with placer mining rights to the oldest operating gold mine in Alaska a few miles away?
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Ultimateless Premium
I know I would love your "oasis in the wilderness" it sounds idyllic. Alas, my country of choice at this moment in time is Australia. I hope your mum sells it to some worthy person.
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Chezbrown Premium
Mmmm Have you been using you magic to have a look at my life before you wrote this lol.

Firstly though, I only ever wear my Sunday Best Pj's when I work from home as I am very classy lol.

My eating is so bad in that I really don't care about food and I tend to graze rather than sitting down to a meal. Not a good thing I know but have this aversion to food.

Thirdly, the only clutter in my house I need to get rid ofare a husband, daughter and twin boys and then I would have the cleanest, tidiest house around because.I wouldn't have to keep shouting at them to lift things up and put them away.

The best exercise I get is walking which I like. Love to go long walks with Jake but not when its cold. As I don't drive I tend to walk everywhere if I can.

Anyway Micheal, thanks for this great training and certainly lots for people to ponder over and think a lot about as will I. Thank you. Xx
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Ultimateless Premium
Sounds like you have it all handled Cheryl. :)

You can't get rid of family, they are your challenges, we all have them, lol !
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Chezbrown Premium
Definitely a challenge with my lot lol.

Thanks Michael, Most days I have it handled but some others I don't. Xx
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gs1954 Premium
Thanks for the inspirational words.
Cheers
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Ultimateless Premium
Thank you, Gregory.
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ChrisScott Premium
Wow, Spot on & I love the illustrations as it brought this awesome training to life. Too cool.

I have done everything you have recommended but find the dressing and exercise the hardest. My last bout with death has destroyed 1/2 my appetite and what has been dished out under the guise of my daily bread has disrupted the other 1/2.

I have lost a bit of weight, (30 lbs.) over the past three weeks, but it was needed. I am now back under 200. My skin is not as tight as it once was.

Very good trainer and thank you for the style, art, empathy and dedication to crank it out.

Your service to WA is in keeping with the very best of entrepreneurialism and reflects great credit upon you, this platform and the entire online community.
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Ultimateless Premium
Thank you so much, Teddy, coming from you is quite an honour.
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amgolf Premium
็Time to adjust "Helm" of my ship.

Thank you so much for your guide
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Ultimateless Premium
Go for it, Nattawut.
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ValerieJoy Premium Plus
Thanks for the great training Michael. I enjoyed reading it all and I agree with all of the points you speak about.
Dressing well, even just for ourselves is definitely something I believe in and do. In the past I have read articles or promotions where the value of being able to work in your PJ's 'till whatever time of day has been highlighted as an attraction to sign up for a work from home business. Hmm.... makes one wonder!

So thanks again Michael. There are some things I need to go and do, having read your training! But, maybe I will leave them 'till tomorrow!!
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Ultimateless Premium
Thanks, Valerie, yes that bit about being able to run a business in PJ's is another one of, do nothing and get everything, type of mindsets. I would love to pop a success pill but I have to work for it. :)
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