By the Ocean
Cloudy 72 Degrees
7:01 a.m.
There’s a difference between what you do and why you are here.
If you are clear about the difference, you get less confused. If you’re not clear about it, you can run around for a long time and feel like you have no idea what you’re doing.
Why I am here:
I’m here to give people direction by empowering them to make their unique and individual contribution that ultimately brings the world closer to the expression of the love of spirit.
And because I’m a really practical guy (part of me at least, the other part thinks the government should disappear) the only thing I’m interested in is how to help people do that in ways that are materially successful.
That’s why I’m here.
What I “do” is completely up in the air. I do what is required to work in alignment with why I’m here.
The Matrix-imprisoned business consultant would say, “where’s the market for doing that Jason? You can’t even say what it is that you do!”
If I was dumb, I’d accept the premise of the question and struggle to answer it. But I’m not dumb. I’m a genius (in a few very specific things), and I’m here to help do things in ways they’ve never been done before. So I know that question is a trap.
The only way you answer it is to accept the mind prison that the question requires to consider it valid.
You don’t “find” a market for any of this. Instead, you grow one. This is one of the processes I use to help business owners figure out how to build a system that does that.
This approach might not make sense to alpha entrepreneurs, but to artists who want to be successful, this is the way. If you haven’t noticed, humans are tiring from being on the receiving end of the typical business building strategies used by people who have nothing real to share. It’s getting annoying, which is why they are turning off.
You get to be the antidote to that. But you have to show up, again and again. And be clear. Otherwise, no one knows you exist or how you can help them!
The future is bright for artists who are here to solve problems for others and actually say something real in the process.