Forcing Mechanisms
On a basic level, we can all recognize pretty easily how we should be spending our time, money, and energy. Fixing a salad trumps the drive thru at McDonald’s. A
On a basic level, we can all recognize pretty easily how we should be spending our time, money, and energy. Fixing a salad trumps the drive thru at McDonald’s. A
As you probably know (or certainly assume) I’m a connoisseur of the podcast, and have been since long before my PODnah Jared Pennington and I launched the Sportsman Drag Racing
Recently, a close racing friend of our family was killed in a tragic highway accident while driving his racing rig (a toter home and trailer) to an event. I discussed
In this Time Management series, we’ve covered a lot of ground. I began the discussion by writing about telling our time where to go (instead of wondering where it went).
I’ve experimented with a lot of different ways to create, establish, implement, and measure goals; on a variety of different time lines. I’ve developed daily goals, weekly goals, monthly goals.
Before we can tell our time where to go, we have to develop a firm sense of how we want to spend it. That’s where goals come in. I think
“The reason most people never reach their goals is that they don’t define them.” – Denis Watley In the first entry of this series, Managing Our Time, I talked a
“We all have the time; the question of the quality of life is answered by how we spend it.” – Tony Robbins Two of the most common, non-racing questions I
What did you just get yourself into as a reader? Great question, it’s one that I’m actively trying to unpack as a writer! Within this ongoing blog series, you’re subject