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  • Raw Advice For Young Entrepreneurs

    “Choose what you want and don’t compromise.”

    Hey, how’s your week going over there?

    I’m finally back home after running one of the most intense weekend retreats I’ve ever been been a part of, and settling into a two month personal retreat I’ll be running for myself until late April.

    So I’m going to give myself the day off writing, and share this with you instead:

    ​Raw Advice For Young Entrepreneurs​

    This four minute clip is my tough-love response to a young entrepreneur who is already doing 30k per month, at 18 years old…

    …And wants to stop letting other people influence his path (“Go to school! Get a job!”)

    The result is a banger.

    ​Watch here.

    • T

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  • When the work dries up, the weird turn pro

    Look, let’s be honest here (because why the hell not, right?)

    When your client work dries up like a slug on hot concrete. Poof, gone, kaput… Adios income stream.

    You have choices. Terrible, wonderful, absolutely batshit choices.

    And don’t get me wrong. This was my choice. Clients were amazing, but hey. I gotta stand on my own two feet.

    There’s a few things you could do:

    You could panic (which is boring)

    Update your portfolio (responsible but It’s also hard when a lot of the work is wrapped in stupid NDA’s – The life of an ex-ghostwriter)

    Finally clean that thing growing in your fridge (it has gained sentience and is now demanding voting rights)

    OR… do something spectacularly ill-advised yet creatively nourishing. Which is something I’m very good at…

    Guess which one I chose?

    Obviously…

    So what’s a creative to do when they haven’t got any client work to do for the rest of the year? Well. I’ll tell you what. They take on a project that a buddy has mentioned would be a good idea, especially cause “You’re pretty damn good at the words” thing.

    So I’ve bought some video editing software, started researching ideas and concepts and are going to start a faceless YouTube channel because that’s obviously what sane people do when they need to keep busy.

    No baking Sourdough bread or writing the next great novel. They make videos, duh.

    Let me be crystal-fucking-clear though.

    I know NOTHING about video editing. Okay maybe a little but my expertise with video begins and ends with “I occasionally watch it” and “I once filmed my cat doing something weird but the lighting was so bad you couldn’t tell if it was a cat or a sentient dust bunny having an existential crisis.”

    Does this stop me? Nope.

    Cause creative work is not about what you know, it’s about what you’re willing to learn while publicly embarrassing yourself.

    It’s about diving face-first into the festering compost heap of possibility and coming up with either (a) worms in your teeth or (b) the seeds of something magnificent. Sometimes both.

    Why was it suggested? Well because it’s great practice for all the psychology and direct response principles AND it’s great to see people going back to the older days of Youtube videos, with simple production and just great content.

    Like the early years of blogging, except now it’s just visual…

    Remember those days? When content wasn’t algorithmically optimised within an inch of its life? When people just… made things?

    Things that were weird and genuine and maybe technically flawed but alive with unprocessed humanity?

    That’s the sweet spot I’m aiming for. That raw, unfiltered creative juice that tastes like someone’s actual thoughts instead of corporate approved flavour crystals.

    The plan. If you can call this janky collection of half-baked impulses a “plan” is threefold:

    Learn enough video editing to be dangerous (but not enough to be good. Good comes later, after the mandatory period of creating absolute horseshit)

    Create content that scratches my particular brain-itch while maybe, maybe, helping other creatives who are similarly adrift in the chum filled waters of unemployment.

    Stay anonymous because I don’t need the pressure and I also don’t want the fame.

    I mean who really wants this? Not this meat sack of anxiety and caffeine, that’s for damn sure.

    I bought the software yesterday. It stared back at me from my screen like a predator sizing up prey. I stared back. We’re at an impasse.

    Tomorrow, one of us will break. (Spoiler: it will be me, sobbing into my keyboard at 3 AM, watching tutorial videos made by 12-year-olds who somehow already know more than I ever will.)

    Is this a terrible idea? Yes.

    Is it better than the slow death of creative stagnation? Absolutely.

    Will I regret telling you about it when I inevitably produce nothing but the digital equivalent of a dumpster fire? Check back in two weeks or whatever.

    If you’ve made it this far into my descent into madness. Thank you.

    Either way, You’re in this now and you’re coming along for the ride.

    Your friend who clearly needs supervision and possibly therapy…

    Stephen Walker

    https://stphnwlkr.com/theleague

    P.S. Send coffee. Or whiskey. Or both, mixed together in proportions that would alarm medical professionals.

    P.P.S. If you have any video editing tips that don’t involve “natural talent” or “years of practice,” I’m all ears. Preferably tips that can be implemented while panicking and questioning all life choices simultaneously.

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    Stephen Walker
    Unit 146317
    PO Box 7169
    Poole
    BH15 9EL
    United Kingdom

  • Perfection is a pyramid scheme…

    Let’s cut the bone straight up.

    Perfection isn’t a destination.

    It’s a cult. It whispers sweet nothings like “Just one more edit” and “You’re not ready yet” while it pickpockets your momentum.

    Perfection is a taxidermied owl. Looks wise. Is dead inside.

    Progress is a raccoon on Red Bull. Ugly. Alive. Ripping up your trash.

    The lie? That greatness happens in a single lightning-strike moment.

    The magic isn’t in getting it right.

    It’s in getting it wrong, 87 times, until “wrong” starts curtsying and calling itself style.

    Perfection is a coma. Progress is a fistfight.

    Stop polishing. Just get it done and let it fly out into the world.

    Perfection is what holds us all back and just like in this super simple emails. I write them in one go and that’s it.

    You just need to be willing to show up daily and if it fails, well. There’s always tomorrow.

    Stephen Walker

    https://stphnwlkr.com/theleague

    P.S. The Mona Lisa was once a sketch. Jesus had 12 bad drafts before Judas.

    P.P.S. Your brain will scream “But what if they laugh?!” Correct response: “Good. Cats in hats are funny.”

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    Stephen Walker
    Unit 146317
    PO Box 7169
    Poole
    BH15 9EL
    United Kingdom

  • A.I. is already trying to kill you

    Let’s talk about the future…

    You know? that thing we were promised would have flying cars and robot butlers?

    Turns out it’s just a tide of ChatGPT diarrhea flooding Amazon with “how-to” guides written by algorithms that think poison ivy is a salad green…

    Here’s a fun case for a Sunday

    Some chucklehead decided “expertise” is overrated. Why pay a mycologist when you can ask a language model trained on Reddit threads and Minecraft fanfic to write “Foraging Fun: A Happy Little Guide to Not Dying in the Woods!” (I made that up but you get the point)

    So they jumped on to our pal ChatGPT and did some “writing”

    And their whole process probably looked like this:

    Step 1: Generate 10,000 words on mushroom identification using data scraped from Etsy reviews and a Hannibal episode.

    Step 2: Slap a stock photo of a smiling grandma holding a basket on the cover. (Trust vibes!)

    Step 3: Watch as some poor soul mistakes death caps for chanterelles because the AI described them as “tasty little umbrellas :)”

    Which is basically a headline for the future tabloids titled: “Here’s how A.I. accidentally kills you this week!”

    Granted this was last year: https://stphnwlkr.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/lolmushroom.jpg

    We have pretend experts using A.I. to create potentially life threatening guides on topics they have zero expertise on.

    Now I’ve done my fair share of mushrooms over the years and I can tell you from first hand experience that if you eat the wrong mushrooms, you will either trip your balls off or potentially kill yourself. There’s no in between.

    It’s why micro dosing has taken off for medical reasons…

    (But this isn’t a day for fungi education)

    It’s to point out that we now have idiots using these tools.

    If you have a genuine interest or education / high level experience in a subject or topic then yeah, use A.I. for research.

    I know those people will at least go out of there way to study and collect proven work on the work they want to share.

    It’s just dangerous knowing that there are people out there who want to fast track to the other side and allow our robot overlords to take the wheel.

    We’re not being replaced by A.I. We’re being out-stupided.

    So if you do need to use these tools. At least know about the topic or become an expert on it, which is not really that hard to do.

    I’ll stay in my lane though. I’m a pen monkey who just types words for your entertainment and educational purpose.

    Hell there wasn’t even a real reason to share this. I just found it interesting because more and more of these cases are popping up and it’ll just get harder and harder to detect it all (Until a lot of people die…)

    I’m off on a hike now before robots do all the walking for me.

    Stephen Walker

    P.S. The robots aren’t evil. They’re just committing evil via weaponised incompetence.

    P.P.S. Real experts have trust issues. AI has a Trustpilot account. Choose wisely.

    P.P.P.S. This post was written by a human. Probably. (Run it through the detector and pray.)

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    Stephen Walker
    Unit 146317
    PO Box 7169
    Poole
    BH15 9EL
    United Kingdom

  • How writing is the last legal black magic

    Let’s talk about the sorcery of words…

    Alchemy isn’t dead. It’s just traded its alembics and philosopher’s stones for pens and Google Docs.

    Think about it this way…

    Base metal? Your half-baked ideas, rotting trauma, and that weird dream about lasagna that somehow came alive.

    Gold? Sentences that make strangers weep, snort, or fist-pump like they’re mainlining adrenaline.

    Writing is the last legal black magic. You take nothing. Air, angst, the static between neurons and transmute it into something that outlives you.

    That’s not craft. That’s necromancy with a royalties clause.

    It’s why I always go on about become a better writer.

    Writing doesn’t just change the page. It changes you.

    Every story is a ritual. You carve yourself open, let the ink-blood spill, and stitch the wound with metaphors. Do it enough and you’ll wake up one day unrecognisable, sharper, wilder, a little feral.

    “But wait,” says the skeptic, “how do words pay bills? How do metaphors fix my Wi-Fi?”

    The writing is really the side quest in this whole operation…

    The real treasure is the alchemist you become along the way. The one who can turn rejection into rocket fuel or distill rage into dialogue sharper than one of this ginsu knives from the 90s. You also get to forge some wild levels of empathy from the scrap metal of your ego.

    Those bits alone are what can change the way you approach life and the way you seek experiences.

    The alchemists of old died chasing immortality. Joke’s on them though.

    You’ll achieve it by writing a paragraph that sticks to someone’s ribs like a haunted kebab.

    My year re-read of this gem always puts me back on the right path.

    Stephen Walker

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    Stephen Walker
    Unit 146317
    PO Box 7169
    Poole
    BH15 9EL
    United Kingdom

  • How To Unlock Your Creativity (The IDDEA Framework)

    “There’s no such thing as a bad creation. Sometimes the seemingly bad ones need to happen for a good one to come.” – Rick Rubin

    If you’re an entrepreneur, creator, knowledge worker, or artist…

    Or, you’re trying to answer a big question, make a big decision, or clarify a big idea…

    Here’s a framework for the creative process that has been invaluable to me.

    I call it:

    ​”I-D-D-E-A”

    Input
    ​Digestion
    ​Disconnection
    ​Emergence
    ​Action ​
    ​​
    (and yes, it’s an original — so don’t even think about ripping it off. Looking at you, Liam Barney…)

    Here’s how it works:

    1. Input: Gather raw material (brain dump ideas, research, collect).


    Don’t try to organize it yet, just dump it straight into your preferred note-taking system (ideally, your Second Brain).​

    1. Digestion: Organize raw material (piece it together, try to turn it into a cohesive first draft).


    Don’t expect it to come together perfectly, here.

    It rarely will.

    Instead, continue “digesting” until the infamous hopelessness stage is reached:

    When the mind is scrambled, overwhelmed, and too lost in the trees to see the forest.

    1. Disconnection: Unplug your mind from the project and do something else.


    What to do: Sleep, go for walks in nature, exercise, journal, eat healthy food, consume art that inspires you (movies, books, documentaries, etc that are unrelated to your project).

    What not to do: Doom scroll, content binge, eat garbage that dulls your senses, keep impulsively working on your project.

    The goal: Turn the project over to your unconscious mind, and wait for…

    1. Emergence: Of inspiration, clarity, and direction.


    Often, it will come from out of nowhere or from somewhere unexpected:

    In the shower, while on a walk, watching a movie, during an unrelated conversation, etc.

    The goal here is not to make it happen.

    The goal here is to get out of the way and allow it to happen.

    (without filling yourself with junk — social media, fast food, etc — that blocks it from happening)

    1. Action: Return to the project and bring it to completion.


    Of course, not all projects will follow this formula exactly.


    Some pop up from out of nowhere, fully formed.


    Others run through all five stages in a few hours, or a few days…


    While some take weeks, months, or even years, and you’ll go through several IDDEA cycles before the final product emerges.

    So as always, take what’s useful, when it’s useful to you.


    I look forward to seeing what you create.

    • T


    ​P.S. Funny enough:


    I found this idea buried in my Evernote, from back in the DeepGame days.


    I had (literally) hundreds of ideas for content unrelated to basketball, but it wasn’t practical to produce at the time.


    Which means I have hundreds of ideas for original talks, videos, podcasts, etc that have never been shared or published…


    …Sitting in my Second Brain, waiting to resurface.


    And I have a feeling they’re going to begin resurfacing, very soon.


    Stay tuned 🙂

    Also:​

    No email on Monday, possibly Tuesday.


    I’m running a four-day retreat this weekend, and will be back early next week.

    “Do not fight this process. Do not struggle against it. Do not resent it. Do not view it as an interruption or an impediment. Your brain is your friend. It is trying to help you. Every time it rejects an idea in midstream for not being good enough, it is making your story stronger and your voice more clear.” – Devon Eriksen

    5-420 Erb St. W, Suite 433, Waterloo, ON N2L6K6
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  • You’ve Been Programmed By Dopamine

    The Dopamine Series: Part 3
    ​(remixed from November, 2023)​

    “Dopamine is not about the pursuit of happiness, it is about the happiness of pursuit.” — Dr Robert Sapolsky

    Dopamine is dumb.


    That’s right; the almighty molecule responsible for motivating us to do just about everything we do…


    …Dumb as rocks, and happily willing to make us dumb too, if we let it.


    See, dopamine doesn’t care if it’s motivating you to do something healthy or unhealthy, productive or unproductive, enlivening or downright dangerous.


    Dopamine doesn’t even care if you actually like the thing it’s motivating you to do.


    Dopamine doesn’t enjoy, it craves…

    And all dopamine craves is more dopamine.


    (that’s why we keep doom-scrolling long after we’ve stopped enjoying what we’re looking at — because what if we find something cool in the next post?)


    This dumb little molecule is responsible for shaping our future, through shaping our present motivations…


    …So if we want a bigger, brighter future, we’d better learn to control it, instead of letting it control us.


    How?


    ​By changing where you get your dopamine.


    Instead of chasing cheap little “hits” from the buffet of modern stimulation (social media, junk food, video games, adult content, pick your poison)…


    …Activities that act like empty calories for your brain, leaving you less satisfied and more depleted afterwards…


    ​…Hook dopamine up with activities that are rewarding now and in the future.


    If you love training, dopamine will crave working out — and the feeling of making progress towards your physical goals.


    If you love your work, dopamine will send you flying to your desk the way it sends others flying through their newsfeed.


    If you love the feeling of challenging yourself, pushing through discomfort, and overcoming your own resistance…


    ​…Yep, dopamine will learn to crave that too.


    Because that’s what dopamine does; it craves.


    And, if you treat it like a programming device rather than an addiction…

    You can program yourself to crave things that make life better now, and later on.

    The choice is simple:

    Program, or be programmed.

    That’s the name of Dopamine’s game, and the stakes are high.

    Choose well.

    • T

    P.S. Catch up on on earlier parts of this series below:

    ​Turns out, the path really is the destination (Part 1)​

    ​Dopamine and the thrill of the chase (Part 2)​

    The Dopamine Series was first published November, 2023.

    It was a huge hit, but many of our subscribers never got a chance to read it. So this week, we’re remixing and revisiting it with fresh eyes. Enjoy 🙂

    5-420 Erb St. W, Suite 433, Waterloo, ON N2L6K6
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  • Your brain is a liar with a knife collection

    Evert now and then I’ll get a question about how to start.

    So let’s cut through the prepocalypse…

    You want to be a writer? Painter? Nude accordionist? Cool.

    Here’s the secret, strapped to a rocket and aimed at your excuses…

    Start before you’re ready.

    The smart ones? They’re still stuck in the “research phase.”

    Reading books about writing instead of writing.

    Watching tutorials on brush technique while their canvases sag with dust.

    Drafting 17 business plans for their Etsy store selling “artisanal chocolate marmalade.”

    The dumb ones? They’re already elbow-deep in the guts of it.

    Writing sentences so bad they’d make Hemingway haunt them out of spite.

    Painting landscapes that look like a toddler finger-banged a kaleidoscope.

    Playing the accordion so poorly, even subway rats toss coins to make it stop.

    Preparation is a wank. Mastery is a myth. The only truth is this…

    You will suck until you suck less.

    Let’s use a quick metaphor to make this infect the mind a little more.

    Imagine creativity is a back-alley tattoo parlor.

    Smart You: Stalls for months, designing the perfect sleeve. “Is this dragon meaningful enough?” “What if the ink clashes with my aura?”

    Dumb You: Walks in, slaps a $20 on the counter, and says “Gimme a sick scorpion holding a latte.” Two hours later, you’ve got a wonky arachnid with a foam-art heart. It’s terrible. It’s glorious.

    (Cut to five years later: Dumb You’s covered in ugly-scarred masterpieces. Smart You’s arm is still pristine, pale, and pulsing with regret.)

    Why does this work the way it does?

    Brains are bullshit artists. Yours will whisper “You need another workshop” while it slowly pickles itself in anxiety brine.

    Action is exorcism. Every shitty draft, botched chord, or deranged clay mug you make is a demon kicked out of your soul’s Airbnb.

    Momentum is meth. Once you taste the crackle of doing, you’ll chase it like a feral raccoon hunting dumpster croissants.

    Still stuck? Let’s weaponise a little incompetence…

    Write the worst sentence of your life. “The moon howled like a diabetic wolf.” Congrats. You’re Tolstoy now.

    Draw a stick figure. Give it a hat. A sword. A PhD in astrophysics. Boom. you’re a Pixar character designer now.

    Record yourself singing “Happy Birthday.” Autotune it into a dubstep remix. NFT that nightmare. Retire.

    The gap between “thinking” and “doing” is a graveyard where creativity goes to die in a Nike tracksuit. Stop polishing your tools. Stop curating your vibe. Start before your brain can hiss “But what if—”

    Burn the plan.

    Embrace the cringe.

    Let your early work be a dumpster fire so bright, it guides other overthinkers out of the dark.

    Stephen Walker

    https://stphnwlkr.com/theleague

    P.S. The world doesn’t need more “good” art. It needs your weird. Your raw. Your “what the fuck is that?”

    P.P.S. Dumb isn’t an insult. It’s a revolution. Be the raccoon.

    P.P.P.S. This post was written in 12 minutes. Edit? Never met her.

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    Stephen Walker
    Unit 146317
    PO Box 7169
    Poole
    BH15 9EL
    United Kingdom

  • The coffin slams shut.

    The nails hammered in with the finality of a judge’s gavel…

    bang, bang, bang.

    Inside? Ghostwriting. Your ghostwriting. That spectral little fucker you’ve been feeding for years, shovelling your voice into its gaping, incorporeal maw. (Poof. Gone. Like a fart in the church of getting paid)

    And honestly I still don’t know how I feel about it. Kinda relieved and kinda meh.

    I’ve signed off on my last Ghostwriting client and that’s it. Poof. Gone. Bang.

    And if this was a dance. I’d say it was waltz that lasted way too long.

    The NDAs were coiled around my throat like a lover’s hands.

    And don’t get me wrong. There was this weird thrill of crafting worlds that’ll never bear my name…

    (I’ve never had a thing for popularity and fame)

    The cash though. Was thick, syrupy, cloying and dripping into my bank account while my ego was starved on a diet of shut-the-hell-up.

    I mean I’ve written speeches for crypto bros who think “blockchain” is a sex position. Novels for influencers whose talent peaked at duck-face selfies. Corporate manifestos so sanitised they could’ve been scrubbed with bleach and a wire brush.

    The list goes on.

    No more though.

    The straitjacket’s off. The muzzle’s cracked. The cheque’s cashed.

    (I’ll miss the extra money. But freedom’s a currency that buys better drugs anyways)

    It’s time to dig up the bones I buried.

    2025? It’s a hungry year. A year of teeth and ink.

    And a friend so aptly say “You’ve been the shadow. Now be the fire.”

    If that isn’t motivation, then I dunno what is.

    Lemme know if there’s anything you’ve decided to kick to the curb and if you’ve replaced it with something you wanna pursue.

    Stephen Walker

    https://stphnwlkr.com/theleague

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    Stephen Walker
    Unit 146317
    PO Box 7169
    Poole
    BH15 9EL
    United Kingdom

  • Turns out, the path really is the destination

    The Dopamine Series: Part 1
    ​(remixed from November, 2023)

    “Once you realize that the road is the goal and you are always on the road, not to reach a goal, but to enjoy its beauty and its wisdom, life ceases to be a task and becomes natural and simple, in itself an ecstasy.” – Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj

    You’re staring at a mountain in the distance.


    The steep rock face ascends from the earth into the clouds, pulling your eyes upwards.


    How incredible it would be to climb, you think to yourself.


    Look at the view from down here — imagine what it’s like up there?


    ​You woke up on the wild side today, so you actually decide to do it:


    You rent some gear, hire a guide, and start scaling the mountain.


    A few hours later, you’re caught in some brambles, gasping for air, covered in scrapes and bruises.


    “What was I thinking,” you moan, “climbing sucks!”


    Then you remember exactly what you were thinking:


    ​The view.


    That’s what you did it for; that stunning, majestic view that had you so captivated back on earth you climbed a freaking mountain for it.


    So you look around…


    …And see nothing but rock, trees, bushes, and a narrow glimpse of the valley below.


    Your heart drops as you realize your mistake:


    ​The view of the mountain is not the view from the mountain.


    In fact, you can’t even see the mountain from the mountain — you’re so close to it that it blocks your view.


    The valley looks pretty cool from up here, so that makes you feel a bit better…


    Until you realize you were just in that valley, looking up at this mountain, thinking about how cool the mountain looked from down there.


    That old saying rings in your mind…


    ​”The path is the destination.”


    And you finally begin to realize what it means:


    ​To chase a reward for the sake of the reward is to chase an illusion.


    You climbed a mountain for the sake of the view, rather than for the thrill of the climb — until you realized the view you thought you’d enjoy isn’t real.


    And so it is, all too often:


    We pour our lives into an activity we think will bring us a reward, only to get the reward and realize it isn’t what we thought it would be.


    And even if it is what we thought it would be…


    If the view from the top really is spectacular — if winning the championship really is the greatest moment of your life — if reaching the goal really is satisfying…


    ​It’s only satisfying for a moment.


    Then, we climb back down — we start a new season — we set a new goal — and realize that, functionally, our lives aren’t much different than before we got what we wanted.


    So what gives?


    Why even bother in the first place?


    What’s the point of spending years pursuing a goal if you’re just going to enjoy it for a moment or two and then move on?


    The point, of course, is the pursuit itself.


    ​The path to the goal is the goal — the pursuit of the reward is the reward.


    So enjoy the path you’re on, or find a path that you enjoy.


    (don’t climb mountains just for a view, if you don’t like actually climbing mountains)


    To do anything else is to chase after something that doesn’t exist.
    That’s a complete lesson in and of itself, and an important one…


    But a deeper question still remains:


    If we all know that the path is the reward, why is most of humanity still racing down paths they don’t enjoy, chasing rewards that never come?


    In a word:


    ​Dopamine.


    This simple molecule is the key to unlocking human behaviour, and tomorrow it is going to teach us one the most important insights the inner path has to offer.


    I’ll see you then 🙂

    • T

      ​P.S. In case you missed it yesterday, here are:

      ​4 Speaking Habits That Make People Listen

    The Dopamine Series was first published November, 2023.

    It was a huge hit, but many of our subscribers never got a chance to read it. So this week, we’re remixing and revisiting it with fresh eyes. Enjoy 🙂

    5-420 Erb St. W, Suite 433, Waterloo, ON N2L6K6
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  • Here’s the deal with “manifestation”…

    “There are only three answers to a prayer: yes, not yet, and ‘I have something else in mind for you.’” – Elsa Dutton, 1923

    Reader asks:

    ​”What’s the deal with manifestation? Is it real?”​

    Taylor replies:

    “Nope.”

    At least not the version where the universe is a big happy dream factory* that runs on pretty thoughts and fairy dust and plops out the products of our desires on command.

    But when we hack away the fluff and see “manifestation” for what it really is, it’s quite real and quite simple.

    So, here’s the deal with it:


    ​”Manifesting” simply means turning your thoughts into reality.
    ​​
    That’s it, that’s all.

    The entrepreneur “manifests” his business, just like the artist “manifests” his work of art.


    Just like marketers “manifested” the word “manifesting” to sell more books and courses.


    So don’t let flowery terminology cloud the underlying principle:


    ​Everything you have ever created is a product of your “powers” of manifestation.​

    And it’s a good idea to learn how those powers actually work, if you want to create more of what you want and less of what you don’t want.


    Here’s the formula:


    ​Clarity x Desire x Action = Result


    ​Clarity means getting perfectly, vividly clear on exactly what you want (no hazy visions or vague generalities).


    ​Desire means you deeply, honestly, authentically want it (not “other people want it so I want it too”).


    ​Action means your behaviours move you towards what you want (not what you don’t want)…


    ​Result means allowing life to surprise you with when and how it happens, and what form it takes when it happens (the left side of the formula is our job, the right side is not).


    Notice I said nothing about affirmations or vibrations or pulling rabbits out of hats.


    Simply bring your vision, your emotions, and your actions into alignment, and you’ll have more magic than you can shake a wand at.


    Now, of course…

    We’re all doing this, all the time.


    The problem is:

    1. Our vision is hazy and vague.

    1. Our desire is clouded by fear and doubt and paranoia (or, is implanted by others rather than self-generated).

    1. Our actions are inconsistent and insufficient (and are often pointed in the opposite direction of what we want).


    So it’s no wonder we often manifest the mess of a children’s colouring book instead of the masterwork of an artist.


    To paraphrase Maestro Tyson:


    ​Power is like fire; it can cook your food, or burn your house down.


    Creative power, ie. manifestation, is no different.


    So if your powers of manifestation are creating a life you don’t want, tattoo this formula across your vision board:


    ​Clarity x Desire x Action = Result


    ​Abracadabra!

    • T

      ​P.S. In other news, this just dropped…​
    • the universe is a big happy dream factory, it just doesn’t run on pretty thoughts and fairy dust. But more on that another day…


    5-420 Erb St. W, Suite 433, Waterloo, ON N2L6K6
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  • Pregnancy roulette

    Unless the internet isn’t your thing…

    You might’ve heard of Lily Phillips, whose viral OnlyFans challenge a little concerned and rightly so a few weeks ago.

    Now I’m not gonna get on a soap box tell you that she shouldn’t have done something as wild as that.

    After all, she’s an adult and if she wants to smash 100 dudes in a 24hr window then more power to her.

    We’ve all done some outlandish shit in our lives.

    Personally I wouldn’t have decided to play Russian roulette with my fallopian tubes tbh and become become a walking petri dish, but that’s just me.

    But there is a lesson to this. She did what she wanted to and there’s always a reasoning behind it.

    YOU CAN READ MORE ABOUT IT OVER HURRR IF YOU REALLY WANNA

    The craziest thing is reading the comments on posts about this on Twitter, Reddit and Facebook.

    And I’m not the mega religious type but my boy John once said: “He that is without sin among you, let him first cast a stone at her…”

    People are incredibly quick to judge others on what they do if it doesn’t fit inside of some weird moral/social/ethical code. I mean yeah it kinda makes sense if you look at it from such shallow point of view.

    But look at it this way. In the very short time we have on this giant globe of dirt spinning around the sun at 107,000 km/h (or about 67,000 mph for my Freedom Metric Enjoyers)

    I’m here to be that little devil that sits on your shoulder and say DO THE THING.

    Cause no matter what. People are gonna judge. Whether you’re bedding 100+ people in a day or so or plotting to take over the world.

    Just. Do. The. Thing.

    (Unless it involves hurting animals or people)

    Do It.

    I bet her email list hasn’t had that much action before, which is sad. LILY IF YOU’RE READING THIS PLEASE START AN EMAIL LIST…

    But yeah. Start that email list. Write some crazy shit like I do. Have fun. Life is short. We’re all gonna expire one day, so we might as well have some fun while we’re at it eh?

    Stop caring about what others think about you.

    And do the thing…

    ⁽ˡᶦᵏᵉ ˢᵗᵃʳᵗ ᵗʰᵃᵗ ᵍᵒᵈᵈᵃᵐⁿ ᵉᵐᵃᶦˡ ˡᶦˢᵗ ᵒᵏᵃʸˀ⁾

    Stephen Walker

    https://stphnwlkr.com/theleague

    If you’re not diggin’ these tasty little emails anymore you can hit the unsubscribe button right here >>> unsubscribe

    Stephen Walker
    Unit 146317
    PO Box 7169
    Poole
    BH15 9EL
    United Kingdom