Imagine Better

What you deserve is a challenge to your imagination.

If you don’t know already, to use your imagination involves working nearly every part of your brain: the cortex, hippocampus, neocortex, thalamus, […] and worst of all, the amygdala.

It’s hard to work every part of your brain to produce something remarkable. But it must be done if you want your work to be just that – something remarkable.

The challenge lies in your experiences. Everything you have experienced to be the “best feeling/event/thing” in the world, you have to imagine something better, bigger, and more ridiculously great. Once imagine things being just a bit better, go make it happen.

To live a fuller life, you have to stretch your

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Stay Positive & If You Can Imagine It, You Can Have It

Garth E. Beyer

Secret recipe: work

One Of Life’s Favorite Students

Ben & Jerry’s ice cream had some wise words to share. The bottom of the ice cream lid said “A dream alone is just a dream. A dream together is reality.” I am one motivated and high-hoped soul with dreams above the clouds. One year ago, I read the quote by Ben & Jerry and realized that I was going to need a partner in some of my business-creating endeavors. I could only think of one person that I would want to build a business with: Katie Christianson.

All throughout middle school, I grew up knowing Katie, but never talked to her until high school. Our ambitions aligned when we were both offered a chance to be in a program that allowed us to attend college full-time and skip our junior and senior years of high school. It was in college when we realized we had a similarly ambitious mindset and became close friends. Who better choose to interview than someone with a “make the most out of life” attitude?

Having just turned 20, Katie was born in Chicago and raised in Belvidere, Illinois. Katie is now back in Chicago getting her Bachelor’s degree in Business Administration at Loyola University. While a formal education has taught her a lot, some of her biggest lessons came from the greatest teacher known to women, Life. With a mere 20 years of being Life’s student, Katie has learned more than those who are twice her age.

Katie Christianson

At the age of five, she realized that you don’t need anyone to tell you what you can and can’t do. Her mom took her, her sister, and her aunt to Florida when her dad was being a grouch about spending money. “Fine,” her mom said, “we will go without you.” Katie now affirms that you don’t let people hold you back, especially not when they hold you back from maximizing the quality of your life.

Kids will believe anything. And once they believe it, there is little anyone can say or do to change that belief. Katie was no exception to this rule. She shared her story about how she thought she was being evicted when she was six years old.

I thought my parents were lying to me when I came home from kindergarten one day and saw a “for sale” sign in the front yard of our house because my dad was always commenting about how broke we were. My mom was the opposite and would spend her last dime on making us happy so that we always felt secure, but I knew she was just being protective. So when I came home and saw a “for sale” sign in the front yard of our home, I thought we were being kicked out. My mom told me it was because the landlord passed away, but I didn’t believe her. This experience made me realize how important money was. It made me be creative and very budget-conscious even as a six year old. I felt guilty if I spent my parent’s money at all knowing that those funds were being pulled away from something else, so I would try selling lemonade or my belongings to make money. I later realized that the story my mom told me was actually true once I understood how estates are handled after the owner dies, but by the time I fully understood the concept, being savvy was already a part of who I was.

This story screams “maturity,” but, let’s face it, Katie was six years old – still a kid. That leaves an open question, just when did she grow up? Contrary to any assumption, Katie grew up two years after the house-for-sale controversy. After a work-related accident, Katie’s mom became permanently disabled. At first, this had no real effect on Katie other than her mom was always home and her dad worked more. It wasn’t until the day Katie fell off her bike in the street outside her house that she fully understood the effect of her mother’s permanent disability. “I started crying for her.” It was in that moment, when her mom looked at her from the window, that Katie knew there wasn’t going to be anyone coming outside to help her. “I had to help myself. I had to get up, brush myself off, and get out of the street. That’s the day I grew up.”

Among these lessons, Katie learned countless others. She developed a fear of having regret at her deathbed after living with a family member who found out he had terminal cancer the same day he had to have both legs amputated due to diabetes. Recently, Katie learned life is about finding hope in hopeless situations after losing her best friend on June 4th, 2012. As Katie puts it, “there are so many people who need you to pull through so that they can find the strength to pull through themselves.” Since as far back as Katie can remember, she knew that there was something deep within her, something special. “I know if I don’t make the most of each day, I am hindering this inner power.” She understands that she is in this world for a greater cause, admirably selfless in her way of living.

In addition to the hardships and lessons life has taught her, she has also had to combat the deep stereotypes about women that have been ingrained into society. I have witnessed with my own eyes that Katie has had to work harder to stand out. People automatically look to men to lead situations and they are surprised to see Katie being the one to take charge. Katie also admits that it’s a challenge, being a woman, to control her emotions. However, she says, “Women’s brains are wired to be 7 times more emotional than men, so it makes us better able to empathize. My ability to understand different perspectives has made me a better listener and a better friend.”

Personally, I have to say that all that makes Katie who she is doesn’t turn her into just a better friend, it makes her the best. Her determination is ruthless and her compassion and selflessness is considered, by some, to be reckless. Heck, I’m even a bit frightened of where she’s going in life. The goals Katie has set out to accomplish may come as a shock because she doesn’t just dream big, she dreams of turning the impossible into done it and onto the next one. I have learned so much from Katie and she has brought me to tears with her stories of how she got to where she is today. If there is one thing that I would take away from all Katie has taught me, it is that “it’s about persevering when everyone around you would understand if you didn’t.”

 

Stay Positive & Keep At It Katie

Garth E. Beyer

Katie has just started up her blog. You can visit it here

Hiring A Freelance Writer?

I’m your guy, resulting in direct success for your blog/businesses. After reading posts that I have made, you know that the ideas, the motivation, and the creativity are there.

What you may not know is that I also Ghostwrite for other private employers with topics including, jobs, education, all corners of business, marketing, the way ideas spread, improvements, budgets, career changes, life & work decisions, public relations, personal stories, and anything else in relation to these topics. Additionally, I do interviews and reports for business’s and other individuals which I would be happy to do for you.

But, it doesn’t end there. I can write about anything. I will do the extensive necessary research to become a professional on the specific topic choice. My ability to adapt and overcome with success can not be competed with. You will realize that my writing breaks boundaries and mechanical preferences in order to exceed formal expectations which results in value so rich its richness becomes tangible. (Yes, by that I mean profitable.)

You can always reach me at thegarthbox@gmail.com

Statistics, Trends, and Meaning

StatsTrendsMeaning

Our world is plastered with statistics. Some good. Some bad. But all, relative, subjective, and never quite capturing the whole picture.

That’s a statistic though.

What we want is that bittersweet spot between the alphabet and the number system, between a statistic and the reality of it all. (The reality being that one can never simplify their lives down to fulfill one statistic.) What we want is trends.

Discovering trends creates a yin-yang vibe to creativity. Fifty percent of your mind thinks, “hey, similar ideas to this have worked in the past,” or “these numbers look offly familiar to the numbers in 1980, 1964, and 1952.” The other 50 percent of your mind is asking “what does this mean?”

You have a field covered with geese. The geese then take flight and you have a flock. The flock flies in a V formation, and now you have meaning.

Statistics alone make you think of all the goose poop on the ground. Put the statistics together and give them a kick, and you have a trend – something that works consistently and collectively. Then it is to each his own to derive meaning from it.

The meaning you come up with is what becomes invaluable to your readers and listeners.

Note though, that detailing the meaning alone in a book though, is pointless.

There’s a famous philosopher called Kierkegaard. He wrote an insanely long volume about the existence of God. In the end, he notes that all of what you have read is pointless, that nothing of it matters, but the journey was an important one for you to take to make that realization. This is the result of only writing about meaning. It’s a journey, yes, and maybe entertaining, but in the end, pointless.

It is the statistics and the trends that you put before the meaning which induce action. Without them there are no stepping-stones, only preaching to an audience who has no reason to believe you are credible enough to be preaching. Meaning alone is simply interesting.

 

Stay Positive & Use Statistics and Trends. Don’t Pull A Kierkegaard.

Garth E. Beyer

You’re Going To Hate It

I think most PR professionals can vouch with me that a time will come when you’re going to need to learn something in PR that you hate.

You’ll announce to yourself, “I’m going to hate it, but I need to know it.”

If you can accept that, PR will be your favorite thing to hate.

Idea Day!

I have a lot of ideas for businesses or publicity acts and what not. Here’s one I wrote about already. Here’s a handful more.

  • Music media channels. One person puts a music channel on (similar to Pandora stations) and other people can tune in to the same station and chat about it. Where music professionals go.
  • A social media site that requires you to have more than 400 characters to post something. A place where you must find meaning in everything.
  • Create a magazine that you can only find the magazine content in the magazine, and the online content, online. Freshtent: Will never find the same story in a different tent.
  • New designed paper shredder. Cross cut’s as you put it in +++++
  • Cop-locater Facebook page. Use of Google maps to see where people have marked a cop car in the last hour.
  • Abercrombie & Fitch
  • Dog leash shoelaces: like the retractable 32 foot dog leash, but picture it in a shoe. So in winter when you toss your shoes the laces don’t get soaked in the melting snow because they retracted back into the shoe.
  • Picture texting: You take a picture and you can put your text inside it. For example: Take a picture of a billboard and you can write what you want in the billboard.
  • eReaders sectioned like real books in a library. Grab and check out an eReader. Now you hold access to 50 books on the subject you want, not just one.
  • President can provide a photo filter for people to upload their social media profile images to represent the President that they want to win. For example
  • Nook Nook Instead of looking for a book and sitting down at Barnes & Noble, why not have a lounge area stocked with eReaders where you can just sit down, pick up an eReader and browse their online collection of books.
  • A restaurant creates an area online where they post the days and times waitresses will be working so that frequent eaters can either 1. Reserve to be waited on by a certain waitress or 2. Can go there and request to have the same waitress as last time. – I’m not being discriminatory: waiter/waitress, whichever. –

Stay Positive & Keep The Ideas Coming

Garth E. Beyer

The Second Best Kind Of Laugh

Learn to enjoy laughing at yourself.

There are going to be times that you say something funny and no one laughs. Enjoy the joke yourself instead of beating yourself up and deciding not to share any future jokes or one liners.

Laughing at yourself, I think, is the single best way to truly live in the moment.

 

The other day I told my co-workers that I wish I had an air guitar.

No one laughed.

I was cracking up.

 

Stay Positive & We’re All Weird. Laugh About It.

Garth E. Beyer