How long do you want to wait to make your dreams come true?
I had a weird dream last night.
It's not the first time.
As I come up on the one year
anniversary of my divorce from Corporate America, I dreamed I was back at the
company.
What I liked about being back at
work? Steady paycheck. Comfort in the routine. The people.
Most importantly the people.
What I hated about the dream?
Routine. Trapped.
Held hostage for nine hours a day by an idiot boss.
The steady paycheck wasn't enough to
offset the loathing I felt having to suffer through days filled with pointless
meetings where we met for meeting's sake.
We weren't allowed to have fun, because laughter was considered
"not working."
Ridiculous.
I wish I wouldn't have waited.
I wish I would have started this
journey in 2009, just like I planned.
But you know what they say about
plans. Man plans and God laughs.
There is always a price for
waiting.
You have to determine if you are
willing to pay it.
Millions of Americans are working at
corporate jobs they hate, where they can be fired or laid off with zero
notice. They have no safety net to catch
them if they fall.
They are miserable and mortgaging a
future where they plan to do the things they love once they retire.
It's not a real life, or perhaps its
more real life and I'm the delusional one.
So often people are in abusive
relationships with the company they work for.
Bosses demean, bosses criticize,
bosses "enforce policy" which outlines gray structures in black and
white lines.
Have you ever thought, "I don't
get paid enough for this."
Have you ever thought, "If I
win the lottery, I'll quit."
Then you need to make a plan to
divorce your job.
Start by saving some money from each
paycheck. Start your own business on the
side while you still have the security of a bi-weekly income.
Quit watching television for 5 hours
a week, and build your own business instead.
The price for waiting for me is
pretty steep.
I have file cabinets full of
unrealized manuscripts, short stories and screenplays just waiting for me to
type up and publish.
Plus every day I come up with a new
story idea for my SHADOWBOXER series, which I'm hard at work to develop and
promote on Amazon.
Last night, I saw a press release
for a story.
NAVY SEALS: NEW ORLEANS or something
along those lines.
The tag line was Navy Seals are sent
to New Orleans to fight a zombie outbreak.
I sighed and shook my head.
It's not QUITE my idea. Mine was "An Army Reserve Unit fights a
vampire outbreak after Katrina flooding unearths a nest of the undead."
But if I finished the story right
after Katrina hit, it would be published and up on Amazon now.
Instead, it's sitting in a drawer,
along with a couple of hundred others, just waiting for me to make time to
write it up, edit, grab a cover and promote.
Along with my Zombie story about a
Special Forces Team sent in to quell a Zombie outbreak on a river in Alabama.
(Deliverance meets World War Z) and another Z outbreak set in Montana where
folks gather to hide in a compound while Z's attack.
The price for waiting is someone
else will make an idea just like yours.
They're not stealing the idea,
because we're all exposed to the same media, the same music, the same news and
we're all trying to conquer the same market of proven media consumers.
At least in my business.
So the longer you wait, the more
disappointed you're going to be because other people will be working on
"your" ideas. Maybe you want
to invent something.
There is a guy in his garage
tinkering with the exact same thing right now.
Maybe you want to code an app. There's a little girl writing code right now
after school, and she wants to take you down.
Facebook is such a huge part of our
lives right now, no one remembers that it was a poor contender to My Space for
a couple of years, and fought off a slew of social sites trying to derail it's
growth.
If Zuckerberg had waited, even for a
moment, there might not be 752 million users today. Every 5 seconds someone creates a new FB
profile.
Which brings me back to your idea.
Make something and sell it. Write a book.
Write a song. Make a homemade
quilt, or knit some beanies.
Whatever you think your idea is, you
can not afford to wait to make it happen.
If your dream is to build a
conglomerate ant farm that revolutionizes backyard agriculture, start blogging
about it, find people interested and start talking to them about how they can
help.
I'm amazed at how many people have
told me they want to write a book, or start a business as a dream, and when I
offer to help, backpedal right back into their cubicle.
Stop waiting to make your dream
happen.
The longer you wait, the more life
will pass by, and you will become numb, and existing for a day when you can
retire and start living.
That makes zero sense. Don't wait.
Do one thing today to make your
dream start. Here, I'll make it easy for
you.
Email me and I’ll help you.
Stop waiting.
Start doing.
Join me on Patreon and let's do this together.
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