This, as usual, was really good information. I wasn't away from my blog for long but it was long enough for me. I started to become discouraged because there were so many pockets of information that I felt I was missing. It became extremely overwhelming and after a while, I stopped trying. | |
the community and resources a group full of people willing to help each other. | I'm so thankful for your current course because of the community and resources it provides. I really feel good entering a group full of people sort of on the same path and willing to help each other. |
I can't wait for your next course to start! |
I agree with your words, the most important thing is not the learning, it's the doing. Most people stay in the learning-phase forever, thinking that they are not ready yet. It's not possible to know everything from day one when you're a beginner, you can learn while doing it! Being afraid of mistakes is not going to help either, we all make mistakes but we learn from them. | |
Of course, there are a lot of things to learn and you can't wait to know everything, start with something easy and then add more. That's another reason why people end up overwhelmed by the pressure of learning so many things at once. | |
For me, the main reason people stop blogging is that they don't get anything in return. They spend days, weeks, months, a lot of valuable time for nothing. Anyone would feel that way after investing so much energy and not getting anywhere. The sad reality is that is not because they can't do it, it's because they're doing it wrong! | |
Doing the same thing and expecting a different result is like hoping for a little bit of luck. Instead of hoping for luck, create your own luck changing your strategy with a different approach, avoiding the already learned mistakes. |