My #1 Must Read Book from 2019

From everything I read last year (all 111 books) if I could have the knowledge of one book instantly downloaded into the minds of other people, I would choose the book I’m about to mention.

But first, a bit of background…

For whatever reason, the recent revelations regarding Jeffrey Epstein have grasped my attention and wouldn’t let go. Because of some news sources I follow, I was aware of these crimes before his recent arrest in July 2019.

So when that happened, I got excited because I thought some shady stuff might just come to light!

Digging into Epstein you find he had powerful connections to politicians, including past and current presidents. To Hollywood celebrities. To scientists. To business and financial moguls. And to intelligence agencies.

Silly me for thinking it would go somewhere! Then Epstein committed “suicide” and for most people it faded into the background of constant other news noise. (#epsteindidnotkillhimself)

All this made Ricky Gervais’ monologue at the Golden Globes all the funnier, not to mention ballsy because of the truth behind it.

And humor is good before we dive further into darkness…

Most people want to bury their head in the sand about this stuff. To deny it even exists…despite the overwhelming proof if you only scratch below the surface. All it takes is the smallest amount of digging.

The book I’m about to mention begins with a quote attributed to Edmund Burke:

“All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.”

And that is why I am sharing on this topic. Why I won’t remain silent on the topic.

I find that if you want to understand something, understanding the past can be quite useful because nothing is really new under the sun. Epstein is a modern scandal (even though it goes back decades), but similar scandals have occurred before.

I heard about the following case, which occurred before I was even born, and choose to go deep down the rabbit hole. Enter…

The Franklin Scandal: A Story of Powerbrokers, Child Abuse & Betrayal by Nick Bryant

While I’d heard a tiny bit about this event before, I knew it was time to dive deeper. Sure, you can go to the Wikipedia page and believe that it was a “carefully crafted hoax” if you want, with its extremely sparse information and sources.

Or you can check out this book, which includes 100 pages alone of proof from documents as well as links to the web for much more. You can check out the website right here: http://franklinscandal.com/

The story begins with Lawrence (Larry) King, Jr., a rising star in the Republican party. His embezzlement led to the collapse of the Franklin Credit Union. But that is only the start because it gets far worse from there.

This story involves a pedophilia ring, run by people in powerful positions, and the covering up of such crimes.

The author, Nick Bryant, was a popular journalist, who got into this subject to disprove it. He was a skeptic. But he followed the truth where it led him. This book is the result of a seven year investigation.

The book is close to 500 pages yet reads like a thriller…because in many senses it is.

It does get bogged down in some areas including the court cases (you won’t believe how one sided the judges and prosecution can be!).

The cover up by multiple government agencies, with media in their pocket, seems unbelievable. It’s big in scale. There are a lot of people in on it. But…look…at…the…evidence.

And of course, it is likely to anger and disgust you. It might just send you into depression. Diving into this swamp was responsible for some down periods personally this past year. My world view was rocked by the implication of what this means. And I say to you, those are natural responses.

It might also inspire you. When you see the Job-like-transformation (as in Book of Job) of Alisha Owen, a victim of abuse many, many times over, you just might shed a tear. I did.

I understand that to talk about this, to even mention such a book or subject, is not good for business. I’m doing it anyway because I won’t remain silent.

The desire to turn away is normal too but I urge you to suppress that desire. Turning a blind eye will not make it go away. Instead, I challenge you to read this book.

Top Books Read from 2019

Out of the 111 books I read last year, here are some of the highlights. I’ll be saving my #1 book of the year for the following post. And if you missed it, the full list can be found in the previous post here.

With reading this many books it is possible to read quite a few around different topics. I like to consider these “Deep Dives“. These included:

  • All of Nassim Nicholas Taleb’s books (and I’ll likely re-read some next year)
  • Masculinity
  • Magick, specifically chaos magick
  • Systems thinking (including reading Thinking in Systems twice)
  • Conspiracy (aka history and biography)
  • Habits (in preparation of my release of HabitsOnDemand.com)
  • Medical intuition

A number of these will be addressed a bit more below.

Favorite Fiction Book of the Year

I only read ten fiction books this year. Most of which were Sci-Fi but not all.

It’s hard to call out a favorite of these as there were some great ones! Notable runner ups were Gates of Fire, Blood Meridian and Pandora’s Star. (The Brothers Karamazov was really good too…but it did take several hundred pages before I was really hooked. Actually the same for Pandora’s Star but the payoff at the end was worth it.)

But the award goes to Daemon by Daniel Suarez. (With the sequel Freedom™️ being right up there.)

This book has a bunch of themes that are currently present in our world and seeing them play out in a really fascinating way was great. It was also relatively short compared to some of the other monstrous novels I read.

Tip: A while back I searched for a list of top 100 science fiction books and used that to identify many titles, I’ve been reading the past couple of years. Working my way through the books that stood out to me on such a list is one reason I’ve been reading so much science fiction.

Favorite Book on Masculinity

King Warrior Magician Lover by Robert Moore and Douglas Gillette

In the early part of the year I felt drawn to dive deeper into the topic of masculinity. One of my favorite articles I wrote all year was Masculinity Forged in the Gym. It’s worth reading, and covers the four archetypes mentioned here too.

I re-read a bunch of books I already had on the topic and got some new ones. Of them all, this one is my favorite. I find it a useful framework of archetypes to work with. (And truthfully, it can work for women just as well too, simply sub out King for Queen.) This led me a bit deeper into Robert Moore’s work including the topic of initiation which is interesting too.

Favorite Books on Systems Thinking

Thinking in Systems by Donella H. Meadows

2019 was the year I got into systems thinking. And I’m kicking myself for not diving in sooner! For a long time I have thought about systems, but I finally found some great books on the topic.

Thinking in Systems is a short read. But it is so good that I read it twice in 2019. I don’t think I’ve ever read a book twice in one year, so that is saying something. I’ll be working further to understand and utilizing the Systems Traps/Opportunities and Leverage Points covered here.

The Fifth Discipline by Peter M. Senge

And I can’t not mention The Fifth Discipline as well. This is a business book and covers other topics too, but the section on systems thinking here is worth it alone. It gives a bit of a different take on the systems, diagramming them differently as well.

Systems thinking is so important it should be taught in school. Since for 99% of people it was not, I would encourage you to educate yourself on the topic now.

Best Book on Parenting

Becoming the Parent You Want To Be by Laura Davis & Janis Keyser

I haven’t read a whole lot on parenting, but of what I’ve read so far this is my favorite. It covers a lot. One tip I heard from another parent was to read a book about development. This helps you to know what is coming. Well, this book covers that topic quite well. And on that note, I’m sure I’ll be referring to it again and again as new ages occur and new strategies are needed.

Best Book from Taleb

Antifragile by Nassim Nicholas Taleb

I would say that all of Taleb’s books are worth reading. I read them all this past year and there is a good chance I’ll be revisiting at least some of them in 2020 as well. Highly entertaining while being highly educational.

I’ve heard several people say that different books of his are there favorites, but for me the concept of antifragility was a big aha. I’ve been talking about it ever since, like in the health sovereign podcast. It applies to strength. It applies to health. It applies to so much. And it’s not like this book just covers the one concept but so much else.

Taleb gets a high recommendation from me!

Most Useful Business Books in 2019

I’ll cover three different books here. By most useful I mean that I took the ideas and put them into action.

One to Many by Jason Fladlien

This book is about webinars. I did two webinars in 2019. One was before I got this book and it was all over the place. The second one was much more tightly focused using the model Fladlien lays out in the book. That was The Art and Science of Habits On Demand that I did in December.

I’d like to say I crushed it and sold a boatload…but unfortunately the audio cut out during the close which, needless to say, was not the best way to sell. Still I think the webinar went really well.

Deep Work by Cal Newport

There is a lot going on in life these days. This book, is about stepping away from activity, in order to really focus on what is important. Reading this, along with some other situations, has led to me doing computer-free work days which have thus far been quite amazing. Without using a computer I’m able to focus on deep thought. I’ll likely be reading this one again at some point.

The Bezos Letters by Steve Anderson with Karen Anderson

This book shares principles gleaned from Jeff Bezos’ letters to shareowners of Amazon. There’s some great stuff in here. The distinction between type 1 and type 2 decisions (primarily, those that are reversible and those that are not) was very helpful.

In addition, it got me focused on figuring out the Flywheel for Lost Empire Herbs, which I’ll be sharing in an upcoming post. (Which happens to be a systems diagram!)

Best Science Book

Dance to the Tune of Life: Biological Relativity by Denis Noble

“There’s no privileged level of causation in biology.” -Denis Noble

I got turned onto the work of Noble from Perry Marshall (whom I interviewed recently surrounding such topics here and here.) He shared that quote at one of his seminars and I new it was important for me to learn more about.

Of Noble’s two books, this one is more recent and better. It covers a lot of similar information as Perry’s Evolution 2.0, which I highly recommend (and re-read this year). But this is a bit more technical though not overly so. And you see that a systems approach is necessary here, rather than reductionist science.

Best Mind Stretching Books

A Brief History of Everything by Ken Wilber

I found myself coming back to this distinction multiple times since reading this book. That is the four quadrants of the individual vs collective and the internal vs external. (The common thread of systems thinking runs through this, but is only a part, i.e. the external and collective.)

These in turn leads to the Good, the Beautiful and the True. This shows why Sam Harris trying to derive values from facts will not work. Incompatible quadrants.

That’s far from everything covered in this book, but a critical distinction, like I said, that I’ve been reflecting on a lot.

The Watchman’s Rattle by Rebecca D. Costa

Collapse. It’s something we are quite likely facing. So much of what we humans are doing right now is unsustainable. By definition, that means it will not sustain. We must either change such things…or we will go into some form of collapse.

This book takes a look at past civilizations, which pretty much all have collapsed to see why that happens. And basically the answer here is that the people stop being able to make sense of what is going on. Do you perceive that as going on right now? I sure see it.

I’ll be returning to this topic, but I did find this book a great way to dive in.

Best Biography Book

The Devil’s Chessboard by David Talbot

This book is about Allen Dulles, one of the early heads of the CIA.

It details how much he worked with Nazi’s after the war in his fight against the threat of communism, along with his brother John Foster Dulles, the Secretary of State during the Eisenhower administration.

It covers the CIA coups against democratically elected leaders in Iran, Guatemala and elsewhere. (Are you aware of these? They’re common knowledge outside of the US, but for some reason aren’t taught in our schools.)

This stuff is disclosed nowadays and out in the open. But it also goes into detail of some of the stuff still hidden. Seeing Truman’s response to the CIA, when he was the president that created it, was eye-opening.

“I never would have agreed to the formulation of the Central Intelligence Agency back in forty-seven, if I had known it would become the American Gestapo.”

“Now, as nearly as I can make out, those fellows in the CIA don’t just report on wars and the like, they go out and make their own, and there’s nobody to keep track of what they’re up to. They spend billions of dollars on stirring up trouble so they’ll have something to report on. They’ve become…it’s become a government all of its own and all secret. They don’t have to account to anybody.”

Former President Harry S. Truman, regarding the CIA he started

So that’s just some of my top picks from the year. Like I mentioned at the beginning, I’ll be sharing my top pick for the year in the following post.

I Read 111 Books in 2019

As I’ve done in previous years, I’m sharing my reading list from 2019.

So without further ado, the list from this year…

  1. The Millionaire Master Plan by Roger James Hamilton
  2. Meaningful Work by Shawn Askinosie
  3. The Bed of Procrustes by Nassim Nicholas Taleb
  4. Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy
  5. The First Year IBS by Heather Van Vorous
  6. King Warrior Magician Lover by Robert Moore and Douglas Gillette
  7. Becoming the Parent You Want To Be by Laura Davis & Janis Keyser
  8. Antifragile by Nassim Nicholas Taleb
  9. The Magician and the Analyst by Robert Moore
  10. He by Robert A. Johnson
  11. The Symbols by The Heavenly Hosts, the Servents of Creator
  12. Fooled by Randomness by Nassim Nicholas Taleb
  13. Viriconium by M. John Harrison
  14. Deep Work by Cal Newport
  15. Magic Power Language Symbol by Patrick Dunn
  16. The Mask of Masculinity by Lewis Howes
  17. The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky
  18. The Chaos Protocols by Gordon White
  19. The Black Swan by Nassim Nicholas Taleb
  20. Sovereignty by Ryan Michler
  21. The Future of Man by Teilhard de Chardin
  22. Digital Minimalism by Cal Newport
  23. The Awesome Science of Luck by Peter Ragnar
  24. Life After Google by George Gilder
  25. Living the 80/20 Way by Richard Koch
  26. Condensed Chaos by Phil Hine
  27. One to Many by Jason Fladlien
  28. Skin in the Game by Nassim Nicholas Taleb
  29. Gates of Fire by Steven Pressfield
  30. The Music of Life by Denis Noble
  31. Profit First for Ecommerce Sellers by Cyndi Thomason
  32. The Master Works of Chaos Magick by Adam Blackthorne
  33. Holistic Dental Care by Nadine Artemis
  34. Deafness of the Mind by Kevin Fitzgerald
  35. Dance to the Tune of Life: Biological Relativity by Denis Noble
  36. Pandora’s Star by Peter F. Hamilton
  37. Thinking in Systems by Donella H. Meadows
  38. The King Within by Robert Moore and Douglas Gillette
  39. Liber Null & Psychonaut by Peter J. Carroll
  40. The Direct Mail Revolution by Robert W. Bly
  41. Thinking in Bets by Annie Duke
  42. How I Raised Myself from Failure to Success in Selling by Frank Bettger
  43. Shaman, Healer, Sage by Alberto Villoldo
  44. The Way of the Superior Man by David Deida
  45. The Alter Ego Effect by Todd Herman
  46. Exploring the World of Lucid Dreaming by Stephen LaBerge and Howard Rheingold
  47. Sacred Economics by Charles Eisenstein
  48. The Archetype of Initiation by Robert L. Moore
  49. Brutal Wisdom by Master “Dutch” Hinkle
  50. Overdeliver by Brian Kurtz
  51. Building a Story Brand by Donald Miller
  52. Spiritual Enlightenment: The Damndest Thing by Jed McKenna
  53. The Fifth Discipline by Peter M. Senge
  54. 45 Master Characters by Victoria Lynn Schmidt
  55. The Sayings of Vikings by Havamal
  56. A Brief History of Everything by Ken Wilbur
  57. Judas Unchained by Peter F. Hamilton
  58. How to End the Autism Epidemic by J.B. Handley
  59. Norse Mythology by Neil Gaiman
  60. Conspiracy Theory in America by Lance deHaven-Smith
  61. American Cosmic by D.W. Pasulka
  62. The Integral Vision by Ken Wilbur
  63. Ordinary Men by Christopher R. Browning
  64. The Dark Path by Isaac Weishaupt
  65. Conspiracies Declassified by Brian Dunning
  66. The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg
  67. Never Split the Difference by Chris Voss
  68. Evolutionary Herbalism by Sajah Popham
  69. Atomic Habits by James Clear
  70. Triz for Dummies by Lily Haines-Gadd
  71. Supernormal Stimuli by Deirdre Barrett
  72. The Watchman’s Rattle by Rebecca D. Costa
  73. Population Control by Jim Marrs
  74. Limitless by Laura Gassner Otting
  75. Conscious Men by John Gray and Arjuna Ardagh
  76. Getting Everything You Can Out of All You’ve Got by Jay Abraham
  77. Murder by Injection by Eustace Mullins
  78. High Performance Habits by Brendon Burchard
  79. Medical Medium by Anthony William
  80. The Franklin Scandal by Nick Bryant
  81. Native Son by Richard Wright
  82. The Master Keys to Strength and Fitness 2nd Edition by Logan Christopher
  83. The Creature from Jekyll Island by G. Edward Griffin
  84. Everybody is Sick, and I Know Why by Peter J Glidden, MD
  85. Radical Brilliance by Arjuna Ardagh
  86. The Cancer Industry by Mark Sloan
  87. None Dare Call It Conspiracy by Gary Allen with Larry Abraham
  88. Medical Intuition by C. Norman Shealy, MD, PhD
  89. Perfectibilists by Terry Melanson
  90. Programmed to Kill by David McGowan
  91. The War of Art by Steven Pressfield
  92. Discovering Joy in Parenting: The First Seven Years by Cindy Brooks and Joya Birns
  93. The Candida Cure by Ann Boroch, CNC
  94. The Habit Forming Guide to Becoming a Systems Thinker by Tracy Benson & Sheri Marlin
  95. The Republic by Plato
  96. The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen R. Covey
  97. The Bezos Letters by Steve Anderson with Karen Anderson
  98. Becoming Us by Beth McCord and Jeff McCord
  99. Virtual Summit Launch Formula by Eric Z. Yang
  100. Rewire by Richard O’Conner, PhD
  101. Evolution 2.0 by Perry Marshall
  102. The Spiritual Journey of Joseph L. Greenstein by Ed Spielman
  103. The Coaching Habit by Michael Bungay Stanier
  104. Daemon by Daniel Suarez
  105. The Devil’s Chessboard by David Talbot
  106. Freedom TM by Daniel Suarez
  107. Cancer: The Metabolic Disease Unraveled by Mark Sloan
  108. Discovering Your Soul Signature by Panache Desai
  109. Thinking in Systems by Donella H. Meadows
  110. Develop Your Medical Intuition by Sherrie Dillard
  111. The Healing Organization by Raj Sisodia and Michael J. Gelb
Just a handful of the books read this year…

What allowed me to read over 50% more than last year?

My intention this year was to engage in more speed reading depending on the book. Many of these I read every single word. Other ones I read through faster, with more skimming. It depends on a variety of factors. But my goal was to rule the book, more so than letting it rule me which has occurred in previous years. I would say mission accomplished!

In addition, I worked to moderate my habit of watching less TV and movies too. I enjoy these immensely, so don’t want to get rid of the TV entirely, not like I have in the past, just make sure it wasn’t on every day. I measured 173 days when it was not on, almost half the year. (Keeping in mind I’m not the only one wanting to turn it on in my household, I thought that was pretty good.)

These were the two biggest changes. Otherwise I am still following all the steps I outlined last year in this article, as for how I read.

I also want to mention that not only did I increase the number of books read, but also that the length of many of these books was overall larger than last year. Some large 500+ page tomes were counted here! Right now I’m reading two books that are over a thousand pages each.

Reading Plans for 2020

I am going to continue to expand on many of the threads started here. More diversity of reading I feel is paying off in greater fulfillment and depth of vision.

I will continue to speed read, possibly turning it up another notch of two.

My fiction percentage was a little under 10%. I think I want to get that up to at least 15% this coming year. (Those are the books in italics listed above.)

In my next post I’ll dive a bit deeper into the subjects I covered and my favorite and most impactful books from the year.

Tech Constraints and Opportunities

I’ve been very blessed to have come of age as the internet got started and off and running. By seeing it do so, I jumped on board the wave and have been successful in doing so. (Over a decade of experience in online business makes me have more experience than most!)

Yet, throughout that time I’ve also been very, very frustrated by technology…

Long ago when I first got started in online marketing (back in 2008) I hired a web designer. Starting on a shoe-strong budget that didn’t seem a long-term viable option.

So I learned how to use HTML templates and do basic HTML coding. Not long after that I switched to easier to use WordPress for the vast majority of my websites. My coding skills never moved beyond the most basic of HTML stuff.

Technology on the internet has moved fast and vastly improved in ease of use. So many things can be done with drag and drop editors without any coding needed. Yet things have also become more confusing because there is so much that must be done.

All-in-one solutions soon enough became things that needed still more bolted on top of it. (I’m talking about you Infusionsoft.)

A friend of mine called his websites and business a Frankenstein monster seemingly held together by duct tape.

I feel his pain, all too much!

For instance, with Lost Empire Herbs, our inability to make sales funnels quickly has hampered us big time in the marketing department. Making them wasn’t the problem so much, as was connecting to our limited merchant providers, CRM, fulfillment, etc.

Clickfunnels made building pages easy but did not play well with much else we were using.

And with Legendary Strength, I’ve been on some old systems basically since beginning. (Does anyone else still use 1ShoppingCart?) While still functional, these have held me back from growing.

I’ve tried several options to fix these problems with varying degrees of success (aka mostly not).

Feeling like I’m banging my head against the wall I’ve thought that it could be simpler to start over from scratch!

But I found something that does seem like it’ll help me out significantly. It’s still early in the game but from what I’ve seen so far, I’ve got some big plans.

So much so that all of Legendary Strength is moving over to it.

My new solution is Kartra.

More than anything else I’ve seen on the market today, this does seem to be the most complete all-in-one solution for internet marketing available.

  • Page builder
  • Optins
  • CRM
  • Email broadcasts and sequences
  • Products (both physical and digital)
  • Checkouts and order pages
  • Memberships
  • Affiliate program
  • Even a helpdesk

And with everything integrated together, guess what? It makes analytics much easier! (Along with the Frankenstein monster, getting good measurements on things becomes very rough too. And without knowing the right numbers it is tough to grow on a budget.)

No program is perfect, but this does look like it’ll solve some of my biggest problems.

As I mentioned, I’ll using Kartra for some new projects. (Like with habit change. Updates on those coming soon…)

And I’ll be moving a bunch of old stuff over to this new platform. This will take some time but on another good note, I’ll actually SAVE money in doing this because I’ll be using less overall SaaS platforms. Hundreds of dollars per month for something that works better. I’m sold!

I’ve already shifted the LoganChristopher.com optin and email list to it. So writing this post and sending it out was my first live test of the system.

I figured it was worth a mention to anyone else that’s suffering from the same problems I am.

This is an affiliate link, so I do get a commission if you sign up, but as you know I’d never promote anything I didn’t believe in.

If you’re interested in hearing more, including the details of the transition, let me know in the comments below.

Featured on Starter Story

How did Lost Empire Herbs get started? Well, it wasn’t even called Lost Empire back then!

Recently, I worked with Starter Story to share the story of the beginnings and how that has led up to today.

This covers some things that have not been shared anywhere else including numbers and stats, what’s worked, what hasn’t and many of the resources that helped get us to where we are today.

You can check it out here.

https://starterstory.com/stories/how-i-started-a-seven-figure-supplements-business

Feel free to ask any questions there or here.

And while I’m at it, I’ll also point you to a recent podcast episode I did with Grow Ensemble that also talks a bit about the behind-the-scenes of the herb business.

https://growensemble.com/logan-christopher-lost-empire-herbs/

Synchronicity

The past year or so, I’ve been focusing on synchronicity more. This is when two or more seemingly unrelated things happen together in a way that defies coincidence.

Although some people were looking into this phenomenon earlier, the concept and name comes from Jung. He defined synchronicity as an “acausal connecting (togetherness) principle” or “meaningful coincidence.”

If you focus on synchronicity more it tends to pop up more often. And apparently stronger forms of it too, as you’ll come to see…

Last year I read two books on the subject (of 73 books total). These two books are:

Both of these books are worth reading if you’re into this subject, which since you’ve read even this far into the post, I’m guessing you are. While I do not agree with many of the opinions in them, there is definitely some great food for thought.

For instance, Dr. Kirby discusses the “New Age” idea that synchronicities are signs from the Universe pointing you in the right direction. Without being explicitly taught that, I just kind of picked it up. Contrast this to his opinion is that synchronicities simply match whatever we think about. They’re a reflection on what you desire…including if you want to believe the Universe is guiding you. He shares some somewhat humorous, somewhat sad stories of people with psychological problems that he’s worked with having synchronicities support their crazy worldview.

But I’m not here to discuss theories on why or how these work. Instead, I wanted to share some of the more powerful ones I’ve had.

My Most Potent Synchronistic Series of Events Ever

I realize that’s a bit of an oxymoron. Synchronicity is about things happening at the same time, aka synchronized, while here it is a bit of a chain of events. Still, up until recently I thought this was my best example. The timing was off a bit, but the meaning was potent. In fact, this series did help steer my course in life to some degree! Another term for this would be following a “golden thread”, as Stephen Harrod Buhner talks about.

One day when I was writing, and I don’t even remember exactly what it was, the idea of alchemy popped into my head. This was a subject I hadn’t really explored before. I go online, fire up Google, and for some amount of time, went down the rabbit hole. Soon enough I realize what I’m doing, close the browser and get back to work.

Later that day I was at the Lost Empire Herbs office (technically Super Man Herbs at that time). My oldest brother Cloud hands me a book saying you’ll probably be interested in this. It was called Spagyrics: The Alchemical Preparation of Medicinal Essences, Tinctures, and Elixirs by Manfred M. Junius.

For those not familiar, as I certainly wasn’t at the time, spagyrics essentially means alchemy with plants, as opposed to the more commonly known metals. There is something to this art and science, even if the turning lead to gold (which everyone automatically goes to first in their mind with the word alchemy) didn’t prove out.

Yes, definitely interested! And I did take that as a sign that this was something I had to start reading immediately (as opposed to some other books I’ve been gifted from the same brother, or other people).

So I read the book…and was confused. Spagyrics, alchemy is a pretty complicated subject. Reading the book I was thinking two things.

Number one: there is no way I could possibly do this stuff without finding a mentor or something like that.

Number two: I wonder if anyone is doing this and selling the spagyrics? For this second reason, I started hunting around online. Spent a half hour to an hour looking at sites, many of which are extremely ugly.
After that I forget about the subject for a little while.

But then a short time later I find myself at a health conference in Southern California. One of the exhibitors looks a bit familiar to me, though I know I’ve never met them. Soon enough I realize that I came across this website in my earlier search.

This company, Organic Unity, not only prepares and sells spagyrics but they also have training on herbalism which includes alchemical preparations. The training starts in a month and is in Jackson county of Oregon, close to two other places I’d done lots of training in Medford and Ashland. And a place that is only a seven hour drive away. No problem!

I take this as a sign of something I need to do (and want to do) so I sign up on the spot.

The rest, as they say is history. I got into spagyrics, started making my own, and Lost Empire Herbs now sells a number of them, which are very popular, with far more growth in this area almost certainly to occur in the future.

(For those interested its our Ashwagandha, Nettle Root, Blue Vervain tinctures, as well as Mushroom Alchemy.)

Recent Powerful Synchronicities

I get a piece of direct mail, a postcard from the company Robinhood, which promises to let you buy and sell stocks for free. They also offer a free share of stock when you sign up. I’m intrigued so I check it out.

As I’m setting up my account, I’m also multi-tasking…

I have a video on with Peter Diamandis interviewing Martine Rothblatt. I follow Peter’s work even if I’m not quite as optimistic about how future technology will save us all. Anyway, I had never heard of Martine, but she was the creator and CEO of Sirius XM, the satellite radio station.

The interview is going on, just starting up where I’m hearing about this as I’m working on the Robinhood account. The free stock comes up and it’s…Sirius XM

Whoa! That synchronicity definitely blew me away. 

Then just the other day I was walking through the forest, aiming to find some new fungi and partaking in my “Church of Nature” routine.

I’m on my way back on a loop I’ve often taken. I start noticing the Redwood Sorrel around me. This plant looks a lot like Clover, and is commonly mistaken for it.

As I’m looking at the Sorrel, I start wondering if the same mutation that makes a four leaf clover happens in this plant.

Literally two seconds later I notice this.

I have never, ever seen a four leaf version before this moment…and I’ve spent plenty of time around Redwood Sorrel.

Crazy synchronicity in which the world reflects my thoughts. It’s interesting to think about how this occurred:

  • Did I start thinking about four leaves because the plant was talking to me?
  • Or was it the future event rippling back in time as quantum physics says is possible?
  • Did my thoughts “create” reality because I was in an open state walking through the woods?

I can’t say for sure what it was except that it was one of these, or at least something like it.

Or was it just coincidence? This option I don’t believe at all. The materialistic mindset really doesn’t explain anything, so much as try to explain it away…unsuccessfully I might add.

Besides a more magical worldview is just plain more fun in my opinion.

These are just two examples of the more powerful synchronicities that have happened lately.

(I’ll share one smaller one. I think the number ones are pretty common and not a big deal to me. To me they seem too easy but lots of other people seem to focus on them. As I was journaling in the morning, sitting in my infrared sauna as I always do, thinking about writing this article, I looked up and saw 32 degrees Celsius with 32 minutes left on the timer. Okay, I guess I’ll write the article…) 

I would love to hear a story of a powerful synchronicity you’ve had in the comments below.

How to Read a Lot to Learn a Lot

“Readers are leaders.” – Jim Kwik

My Library

I read a lot because I love to learn. As a writer, reading is essential. It’s one of the places I get tons of ideas from, as well as one way to hone the craft. And I only started writing because I already read a lot.

For me, since adulthood at least, reading has been one of the best ways to learn.

The year after graduating from high school I took a semester at Community College but left after that. Why? Because I knew I could learn better myself, with a learning program tailored specifically to what I was going to do in the world. This has always been supplemented by live events such as seminars and conferences, audio and video programs too, but reading has been the mainstay.

It takes time to write a book. A lot of time. It’s a crystallization of thoughts that have been thought over many times, and hopefully put into practice (as oppose to just being theory). Thus, to learn from a book is to take a shortcut in that learning process.

But learning is only a part of it. I enjoy reading too. It’s not just about learning but is a pleasurable activity itself.

I wrote a bit about how too read a lot of books in a year in this earlier post, but figured it was worth diving into more detail into.

I thought about writing a book on the subject! But I’ll settle for this long article for now. Part of my reason for doing this, besides sharing, is that it had me reflecting more on what works well and what could be done even better.

Invest Time in Learning to Speed Read

If you want to read a lot you can’t be a slow reader. It is worth spending some time to learn how to read faster. There are countless books on the subject of speed reading, so make that one of the first you read. If I remember correctly, Breakthrough Rapid Reading was what I went through in high school.

And realize that it’s not just about reading a book on speed reading. Speed reading is a skill. As such it needs to be practiced.

This is done by using a book and forcing yourself to read faster than you are comfortable doing. Practice this and your time goes up. Simple as that.

Also, the main thing that stops people from reading faster is sub-vocalization. This is where you think the words to yourself as if speaking them. But you can see and understand the words on a page faster than you’ll ever be able to speak. Thus, this habit most people have needs to be broken. And pretty much any speed reading book or course will cover doing that.

Skimming

Speed reading can still involve you looking over every word. Even if you’re fast, this will still take some time with most books. The fact is that not all words, sections, chapters of books are worth devoting time too. (The fact is that many books aren’t worth it either so proper selection in the first place is essential.)

Rule the Book, Don’t Let the Book Rule You

I include skimming here as this is also something I need to get better at. Especially in doing these lists for the past two years I was trapping myself into finishing books, and reading all of them, that I might not otherwise have done.

It is important to realize that the book is there to serve you. While the author may have high hopes that you’ll read every line, including the acknowledgements and appendixes, and re-read the book ten times, very few books deserve this level of attention. Especially when it comes to learning, you are here to get something out of the book. For great books this may involve slowing down and taking your time, even re-reading them several times. For many other books, skimming though it quickly to get one nugget in a half hour time span may be all it’s worth. 

Another way you can think of this is that if you get stuck an stop reading because you’re reading a “bad” book, that stops you from reading period, you’re stuck in not reading other things that would serve you much better. Having fallen into this completionist trap, as in “I started the book, I have to finish it,” before I feel it is important to recognize these other ways of looking at things.

One of my reading aims in 2019 is to do far more skimming. So far, so good.

Set a Goal

If you want to read more, than set a goal to do exactly that. Maybe it’s a certain number of books over the year. Maybe it’s a book a week. Maybe it is something else.

Goal setting works if you do it right, so make the intention, make the plan and then get after it.

Understand Why?

Beyond just the goal, why do you want to read more. Is it simply to be more-well read? Or do you have specific outcomes you’d like?

I primarily read to learn. It’s how I get better at life. If there’s an area I want insight or help in from sex to thinking, nutrition to team building, money to foraging there are books on it. There are people that have spent decades or lifetimes in a field and distilled that down into a few hundred pages and made it available for $20.

In this way I see it as insane NOT to read a lot of books. It has worked out quite well for me so I plan to continue to do it.

Prioritize Reading

If you want to read more than you have been, then reading needs to move up in your list of values or priorities. I’m not saying that reading should become more important than working out or spending time with your family. But chances are it can be made more important than watching TV, spending time on social media or the internet.

A lot of people do read each day. But it’s a choice if that reading is just tweets and Facebook posts for the latest brain fart of the day, or something that has been put into book form.

Again just because it’s a book doesn’t make it worth reading, but chances are better that it’s higher quality than most things on social media or the internet.

The hurdles of writing and book and getting it published are smaller these days than in years past but there are still some hurdles. To put it another way what are you spending your time on?

  • Tweets vs. Books
  • Brain Farts vs. Knowledge and Wisdom

Make Reading a Habit

A goal is good. Prioritizing is good to. And ultimately, these need to be transformed into a habit. If you want to read a lot then it needs to become a daily habit.

Here is how I read. I find reading to be a relaxing and unwinding activity for me. It’s more passive than the work I’ve done that day. As an introvert, reading is recharging me-time. For these reasons, I read when I can in the afternoons and evenings after my work is done.

This is interspersed with other activities like spending time with my wife, daughter, doing social things, eating food, even some watching TV.

Very often if I have nothing else to do, I will go straight to a book. And specifically, some other points to come up next fit into more on how I structure my reading.

7 Books at a Time +/- 2

I don’t read one book at a time. Sometimes, if I get completely engrossed in a book (especially great fiction), I will read that all the way, then return to my normal routine, but that doesn’t happen to often.

Instead, I have somewhere between seven to nine books open at a time. Mostly six to eight. Why? First of all I am interested in a bunch of topics. If I only read one thing at a time I wouldn’t be learning new things in all these different areas.

Also if some of these books are more boring than others I get stick to the more exciting ones that I want to dive into each day. Often then I’ll get to the less boring ones once I have the momentum going as related to the next point.

I have to give credit to Dr. John La Tourrette, one of my mentors that I picked up this tip from. Once I started reading this many books actively at one time, it really did transform my reading.

One Book Per Subject Matter

In my mix of five to nine books I tend to have one business book in the rotation at each time. Right now, as I’m diving deep on masculinity I’m re-reading previous books on the subject as well as some new. One masculinity book is in the mix at any time. One pre-Gutenberg (see below) is in the mix at any time. One (or more) fiction books too.

The subject matters do change over time, but I find this tends to be helpful in keeping a mix of different materials.

One Chapter Per Book Per Day

This goes back to my habit. My ideal habit anyway, because I feel like I seldom hit this, but I tend to hit some part of it each day. For each of my open books I try to read one chapter per day. (If the chapters are too long, I may break it up into sections. If chapters are too short I may read multiple. But for the most part one chapter seems to work.) Read that chapter, whether skimming or full-on detailed reading, then close up the book and move onto the next one.

Why do this? We tend to remember the first and last things better than the middle. I’m creating lots of these first and lasts, by switching books and topics, rather than just reading through one book alone. It helps with recall.

It also can help with boredom. Again, if a book isn’t worth reading please don’t read it. But some books are boring and still worth reading. I can get through a chapter or a section at a time easily. Trying to plow through chapter after chapter, not as much.

Fiction vs. Non-Fiction

Right now about 85-90% of the books I read are non-fiction. I did title this book about reading a lot to learn a lot, after all. But I am reading more fiction and over time, more and more of it. I do learn from fiction too. I learn how to tell a story better. I learn how to put words together in more magical ways.

That’s why I always have at least one fiction book in rotation, and lately its been two. (I am about halfway through the huge Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov right now, finally got to the murder promised in the first pages…400 pages in!)

Also there are times when I need to shut my learning mind off. It’s not often but it happens. So fiction is great when I need more of that relaxation and recharge that reading brings.

Parenting Books, Why Wouldn’t I?

As I was getting ready for my daughter being born I posted on Facebook, asking people what their favorite parenting books were. There was a great response and I’ve only begun to scratch the surface of the list that was created. (Thanks to those that responded, those books have been great so far!)

And, not to knock them, but a few people said I don’t need to read books about being a parent, it’ll come naturally.

I get the sentiment, but why wouldn’t I study this subject? I read books on strength training to become strong. I read books on health and nutrition to become healthy. I read books on business to build my businesses. I read books on NLP to master the subject matter. And on and on I could go. So why the hell wouldn’t I read books about something that is arguably more important than all those things, i.e. raising a human being?

I don’t always have one of these books in my mix but do most of the time. Just finished the 400 page Becoming the Parent You Want to Be which was quite illuminating as it describes things from the baby/child’s point of view as they’re developing.

Pre-Gutenberg Books

This is a tip I picked up from Perry Marshall. As I mentioned earlier there aren’t many hurdles to creating a book these days. So the quality of books overall has gone down because of that. But there use to be far more hurdles.

Specifically, before the printing press was invented by Gutenberg, which allowed for the mass printing of books, they had to be copied by hand. Think about that for a second and how much time it would take.

Therefore, because of the efforts involved, the books that come to us from before the printing press was invented tend to be of higher quality. There tends to be more wisdom present, instead of mere knowledge. That’s why I’m always reading something ancient.

And I am reading older stuff that isn’t quite that old. Books from a hundred years ago tend to be quite good as well.

Aim for One Book Per Week

If you read a book per week you would read 52 books in a year, which is not bad at all. That would put you in the top 1% compared to others, and very likely a much smaller fraction of a percent. (Sadly, most people don’t even read a single book per year.)

So it’s a good process goal to aim for. I often try to finish at least one book per week, though on average the past couple years I’ve done more than that. This brings me to the next point.

Extra Reading Time on Weekends

Because I see reading as a leisure activity, I will often do more of it on my weekends. Very often I’ll try to finish a book on a Sunday, among other things I might do that day.

I do like to finish things so this will often be several chapters in a book, whatever I am close to finishing, that I’ll do a final push on over the weekend.

Underline and Take Notes

I used to feel that I couldn’t damage the perfection of the book. That I needed to keep it in pristine order. But I realized my desire to learn was greater than this feeling.

I would say I at least double what I get out of a book by underlining the important points as I go along. I’ll also take notes in the margins, ideas triggered by the reading.

Plus this makes it easier to skim and refer to later, which I’ve found especially useful for writing when I want to use lots of other great books as references, such as in my new book Powered By Nature.

Recognize Your Primary Representation Channel – VADK

Are you a visual person? An auditory person? Or a kinesthetic person? While we are all all of these, one channel tends to be better as relates to learning. A visual person will learn best with a video or a demonstration. An auditory person may prefer audiobooks. A kinesthetic person will learn best hands-on.

There is also the digital representation system, which is basically words and symbols. If you’re strongly digital, like I am, then reading will suit you just fine.

The reason I read a lot is because I love to learn AND it suits my learning style. Plus I find it to be a relaxing and recharging activity. While I think pretty much everyone would benefit from reading more, I recognize that I am particularly suited to it and others will not necessarily be.

The question to ask is how much of this is innate vs. trained? My guess is that it’s some of both, which means that if you want to read a lot, you can train yourself to do it better and get more out of it.

Irlen Syndrome

Do you often get to the bottom of a page and feel like you don’t know what you just read? Or get to the end of a chapter and not be able to recite anything? Does reading make you tired, hurt your eyes, or give you brain fog?

Here is a possible stumbling block for some. I bring it up because it impacts my wife greatly. I first heard about Irlen Syndrome on Dave Asprey’s podcast. I though, “Hey that sounds like my wife.” So we consulted with a coach and sure enough, she has it. What this means is that normal words on a page negatively impact her. But by using a special colored filter she can read just fine. Find out more at Irlen.com.

I’m fortunate to not have this problem, but I mention it because it is not well known but should be more so.

Travel

The routine and habit I listed above is great for when I’m at home. But what about when I travel which I do from time to time? I tend to travel with one to two books on me (depending on length of travel and how much I will have time to read). If my flight is in the morning I tend to write on the plane. If my flight is in the afternoon, evening or overnight (besides sleeping) I will read. (I only tend to write well in the mornings.)

Because I’m not going to bring 7 +/- 2 books with me, I don’t stick to my normal routine. Instead I pick a book I feel like I’m fine with going straight through on. I tend to travel with fiction too, because many of my travels like for business tend to drain me, and I want some very passive reading.

E-Readers

I resisted using these for a long time as I like real books. Then after years I finally gave a Kindle a try. I used it a bit…but now it’s been in my draw for years without use.

If you like them all the power to you. But I choose real books.

Conclusion

I threw a whole lot at you here, with a minimum of organization. Take what works for you and put it into practice.

Have any questions? Use the comments below and I’ll be happy to answer them.

Any tips or methods that work well for you in reading? Please share them below.

2019 Prediction: Silver

I’m going out on a limb here and making a prediction for 2019, that silver will rise up in value significantly.

Let me start right now with this…

Disclaimer: This post references an opinion and is for information purposes only. It is not intended to be investment advice. Seek a duly licensed professional for investment advice.

I’ve been following silver for years since first getting interested back in it back in 2011.

It’s been part of my wealth building strategy. In a way, it’s a forced savings. Yes, you can sell your precious metals but there’s an added hurdle that can stop you from doing so.

In addition to buying onto and holding the physical silver, of which I have some, I use a trading service for easier use. With this I can automatically transfer money into silver every week or month.

I use a company known as OwnX.

(In the sake of transparency, I do get rewarded for people signing up through that link. It’s great in that it’s a way to have my precious metals generate interest sort of.)

They actually hold onto the physical silver (and gold) for you and you can take delivery at any time. There are some fees to this, but as mentioned their rewards program offsets it and then some, at least for me.

Back when I started buying silver it was actually at a higher price than now!

This may not sound too great to you when I’m saying it’s going to go higher.

Interestingly the highest price silver has ever been at was way back in January 1980 at $49.45. That’s not including inflation. Nothing, I repeat nothing else, has its highest price ever back in the 80’s.

There are a number of reasons that it won’t likely stay this way for long.

It seems that silver has had its price suppressed for a number of years and that has to end at some time. (For example, employees at JP Morgan Chase have just been found guilty of crimes in trading precious metals.)

Silver is not just used as a store of value, like gold is, but is used in a wide range of industries. Those uses are growing.

And less silver is coming out of the ground.

These reasons and more and some say a 10x in price is not unreasonable.

At the current price of close to $16 per ounce, silver is quite cheap. (Actually, it’s already gone up recently. It was just under $15 at the start of the year so the upwards movement may have already begun.)

Remember the bitcoin explosion that happened a little over a year ago? Did you profit from that? I did, as I started investing in Bitcoin a couple years before that ever happened.

Something similar could be happening in silver soon. Probably not quite as big, but certainly significant.

Exactly when, no one can say, but that’s how these things go.

Again, not investment advice, but just sharing something that I’m doing. And with this out there publicly, we’ll see how my prediction goes.

I Read 73 Books in 2018

Last year I read 73 books in full.

The previous year I read 72 and did numerous posts detailing that, spread over five parts. You can find them here:

This year, I don’t plan to go into as much detail, but I figured it was worth visiting the same concept in one large post.

To start with, here is the complete list of books I read in 2018.

The List of 73 Books

  1. The Star Principle by Richard Koch
  2. Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carrol
  3. The Vaccine Guide by Randall Neustaedter
  4. The Ra Principle (The Law of One Book One) by Ra
  5. Birth Chemistry Workbook
  6. 12 Rules for Life by Jordan Peterson
  7. The Essential Gnostic Gospels
  8. Anything is Possible! by Joe Vitale
  9. Wild at Heart by John Eldredge
  10. Creative Imagination by Christopher Hills
  11. Excelsior! The Amazing Life of Stan Lee by Stan Lee and George Mair
  12. The Healing Wisdom of Africa by Malidoma Patrice Some
  13. Secrets of the Lost Mode of Prayer by Gregg Braden
  14. Bottleneck Breakthrough by Joshua Long
  15. Cuffed, Tied and Satisfied by Jaiya
  16. How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big by Scott Adams
  17. The 80/20 Manager by Richard Koch
  18. Alice Through the Looking Glass by Lewis Carrol
  19. Warburton’s Winning System by Greg Warburton
  20. 16X by Richard Koch
  21. Real Magic by Dean Radin
  22. Raising An Emotionally Intelligent Child by John Gottmann
  23. Persuader by Lee Child
  24. Breakthrough Advertising by Eugene Schwartz
  25. The Natural Laws of Business by Richard Koch
  26. Renegade Beauty by Nadine Artemis
  27. The Terror by Dan Simmons
  28. Killing Floor by Lee Child
  29. 60 Minute CFO by David A. Duryee
  30. The Gulag Archipelago [Abridged] by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
  31. Remote Viewing Secrets by Joseph McMoneagle
  32. Carrion Comfort by Dan Simmons
  33. Never Lose a Customer Again by Joey Coleman
  34. Flow by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
  35. Taoist Sexual Meditation by Bruce Francis
  36. Selected Works of Cicero
  37. Measure What Works by John Doerr
  38. The Norse Myths by Kevin Crossley-Holland
  39. Strong Fathers, Strong Daughters by Meg Meeker
  40. The Everything Store by Brad Stone
  41. Creative Conflict by Christopher Hills
  42. A Brief Tour of Higher Consciousness by Itzhak Bentov
  43. Servant of the Bones by Anne Rice
  44. The Omnivore’s Dilemma by Michael Pollan
  45. Superconnect by Richard Koch and Greg Lockwood
  46. The Botany of Desire by Michael Pollan
  47. Leonardo’s Notebooks edited by H. Anna Suh
  48. The Outsider by Stephen King
  49. Synchronicity by Allan Combs and Mark Holland
  50. Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth by R. Buckminster Fuller
  51. Your First CFO by Pam Prior
  52. Finite and Infinite Games by James P. Carse
  53. On Writing by Stephen King
  54. Dream Yoga and the Practice of Natural Light by Chogyal Namkhai Norbu
  55. Beyond Good and Evil by Friedrich Nietzsche
  56. The Hero with a Thousand Faces by Joseph Campbell
  57. Clock Work by Mike Michalowicz
  58. How to Change Your Mind by Michael Pollan
  59. Reinventing Medicine by Larry Dossey
  60. The Dispossessed by Ursula K. Le Guin
  61. Golden Dawn Ritual Tarot by Chic Cicero & Sandra Tabatha Cicero
  62. Superhuman You by Iron Tamer Dave Whitley
  63. The San Lorenzo Valley by Lisa Robinson
  64. Positioning: The Battle for Your Mind by Al Ries and Jack Trout
  65. Iron John by Robert Bly
  66. Modern Magick by Donald Michael Kraig
  67. Neuromancer by William Gibson
  68. Five Wishes by Gay Hendricks
  69. Giftology by John Ruhlin
  70. Synchronicity: The Art of Coincidence, Choice and Unlocking You Mind by Dr. Kirby Surprise
  71. Foundation by Isaac Asimov
  72. When: The Scientific Secrets of Perfect Timing by Daniel Pink
  73. The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron

Plans from Start of 2018

It’s interesting to reflect on my predictions and plans around reading I made at the start of 2018.

  1. More fiction. Check! While I only did 5 out of 72 in 2017, this year I read 11 out of 73. (And that’s not counting the Norse myths either.) More than doubled my fiction ratio. And I’m definitely enjoying it. Of all I read I always have at least one fiction book in progress, and lately more than one.
  2. More diverse reading covering a wider-range of topics. Check! I wouldn’t even hope to categorize these books like I did last year. There’s still many of the familiar categories but some completely new areas of exploration. And that includes some very eclectic titles in there.
  3. More biographies. Not really. There’s a few in there but about as much as previously. It did not turn out to be a major theme this year.
  4. More re-reading. Not really, there was only a few in there.
  5. More on strength and fitness. Check! Not included in the list because I didn’t finish it was The Super Athletes by David Willoughby. I read 400 pages or so of this monstrous tome but didn’t finish it. Still, this book gave me some big ideas and affected my training for the better. More on that in a bit.
  6. Books on parenting. Check! I love to learn so why wouldn’t I spend some time doing so in this extremely important area?

On the note of having a baby, my time was impacted but I was able to read more than last year. In fact, I kind of made that my goal to beat out what I did previously. You can see I’m very goal oriented by hitting 73 with last year was 72. Helps to have a plan and a goal!

Not bad, hit four of the six things very well, without really thinking about them since writing them down last year.

Next, I’ll highlight a few books that top the bunch in a variety of ways.

Most Impactful Books in 2018

I Ching by Hilary Barrett

This isn’t mentioned on the list as it’s not a book you “read.” Instead I’ve been using it almost daily by consulting the oracle. (I started with the older version, the translation by Wilheim and Baynes, with Jung’s interesting foreword, but found this version more user friendly.) I’m finding this is a very useful practice that helps me answer big questions. And in that way it’s related to the next book.

The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron

Another habit that has been added to my morning routine is the ‘Morning Pages’ as described in this book. Can’t say I’ve done most of the work from this book, but this one thing has been huge for me. I start off my morning pages with some of the results from the I Ching reading and then go from there.

Super Athletes by David Willoughby

Again, not a book I finished but one that has impacted my training. While it was a dream that got me started doing bent presses and getups again, I think it was reading this that caused the dream! I’ve also been practicing the chin hang which I had never even seen previously as a result of this book. Several other ideas for future training too.

Never Lose a Customer Again by Joey Coleman

Joey is a fellow Maverick1000 member, but that’s not why it’s on this list. This was my favorite, most impactful business book of the year. After reading this I was revamping our entire prospect and customer campaigns this year as well as several other recent changes in Lost Empire Herbs. More changes to come that have still been in the planning and development stages.

Raising An Emotionally Intelligent Child by John Gottmann

Although most of this book would come into play beyond the age of one, so wasn’t immediately applicable in that regard, I realized I needed to start practicing. This way I would be able to act in an emotionally intelligent way when the time comes. I have largely been practicing with my wife, but also kids besides my daughter when I’m around them.

Most Eye Opening Books

The Gulag Archipelago [Abridged] by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

Turned onto this by listening to Jordan Peterson, having never heard of it before. I picked up the Abridged version as I felt that was plenty long enough. Wow! The descriptions of what went on in the Soviet gulags were incredible. It further left me reflecting on why we don’t think of Stalin as badly as we do of Hitler…when after all he was responsible for far more death. And also left me a bit worried that I don’t think society has learned it’s history lessons.

The Omnivore’s Dilemma by Michael Pollan

I don’t think he would think of it as a health book, but I do. This is the best thing I’ve seen that clearly shows where food comes from. That will give you a feel for industrial food, organic food, beyond organic food, foraged and hunted food. I feel like the reason we have 10,000 different diets is our fractured relationship to food. We moderns don’t know where it comes from. This book shows you clearly the different types of food out there.

Real Magic by Dean Radin

Parapsychology researcher Dean Radin comes to the conclusion the psi research, paranormal research, and all the other names it’s been called in the past hundred years or so, is simply different terminology for what people before called magic. I like this frame of reference and you can see that this sparked some new interest in the direction of some of the books I read.

Iron John: A Book About Men by Robert Bly

The subject of masculinity is a subject I plan to explore much more in depth in 2019 (already have started). This includes writing about it. While I’ve read some other great books on the topic, this one is really, really good. It takes the myth of Iron John (one I had not even come across before) and shows how it maps to the masculine psyche.

Best Fiction

The Terror by Dan Simmons

Hard to pick but I have to go with The Terror. Dan Simmons is an amazing writer. I started with his sci-fi, the Hyperion series which is also amazing. What I am amazed with is Dan is able to write across many different fields. Here, historical fiction with a twist. While I thought the AMC series on TV was decent, it just couldn’t do justice to the coldness that the book made me feel, the wussiness I felt compared to these sailors and so much more.

Most Over My Head

Beyond Good and Evil by Friedrich Nietzsche

Not something that can be read quickly, which is how I read most of it. Nietzsche tends to use long sentences, like 30 to 50 words long, so grasping what he is actually saying is tough to do. I’m guessing I may revisit this in a couple decades and get more out of it.

Reading Plans for 2019

I realized with doing this list, keeping track of books in this way, it was “forcing” me to finish books I wouldn’t otherwise have finished. Not so great. To read a book cover to cover is great…if the book is worth reading cover to cover. Not all of them are.

I will be “speed reading” a number of books were I skim and dip in as things look interesting. This may end up being most of a book, or even just sections. And I will be keeping this as a list of books speed read as such separate from the list of books fully read to see what happens.

This plan is already underway as we’re a month into 2019. Doing so I figure my list will be even bigger next year.

Questions about any of these books? How I read so much? Use the comments section below.

How to Be More Personally Productive with a Trello Board

Basic Trello Scrum Board

Personally, my experience in entrepreneurship has gone hand-in-hand with learning to maximize my personal productivity. For many years, being a one man show, the more I got done, the more I made.

Eventually my journey of entrepreneurship has come to involve an ever-growing team. While I’m still certainly involved, I get far more done by having my team be productive.

When I found out about Trello, I fell in love with it. Plus it’s free! Previously I ran my day off of a Planner Pad, but decided I could do better with Trello. That’s what I’m using to this day. Of course, how I’ve used it has changed up a bit.

Of course, Trello can be used in a wide variety of ways. Previously I did cover how I use it to collect writing topics. It’s also great for managing team projects. But it also can be used just by yourself to manage your time. It’s this latter category that I’m covering today.

Basic Scrum Board

The basic way to use Trello is to setup what is known as a scrum or kanban board. Why I like Trello more than other project management software is that it is visually driven and things are easily dragged-and-dropped.

With this basic board you make three columns:

To Doing – Doing – Done

Basic Trello Scrum Board

Here is an example, which hasn’t been worked on in some time, though I am thinking about getting it finished now.

You’ll notice that there are six different things in the To Do column. There is nothing in Doing. And there are two finished things (from long ago!) in Done.

In essence, this is a glorified to-do list. But you can recognize better when you’re doing something and when it’s done with this format. Still, not too useful until we add in even more. That brings us to the…

Advanced Scrum Board

Advanced Scrum Board

As you can see there are quite a few more columns going on here. This is a live and working board from which I run Legendary Strength LLC. off of.

Notice that you still have the same Doing and Done columns. Those function the same. But much else is changed.

To Do (Week)

At the end of each week, I plan out the next. That involves moving or adding cards to this column. And at the end of the week, ideally, this column should be empty.

In this format, I consider the Doing column as my To-Do list for the day. If you can squint your eyes you’ll see LC.com Resume Articles in there. Hey, I’m doing that right now!

Waiting

Remember that this is a personal productivity method covered here. Well, often these projects involve other people.

And if something is done on my end, but I’m awaiting response or something else from other people, before I can take more action, into the Waiting column it goes. It doesn’t go into Done because it is not yet done.

Backlog

Backlog is another concept that comes from the Scrum method. Everyone has an ever-growing to-do list right? Wrong! Instead new ideas should simply get put onto the backlog as you have not yet decided if they should even be done, nor figured out the timing for them.

You’ll notice that the Backlog is the longest column, except for Done in this board. Some of these ideas have been here for quite some time (which means its good to prune this list every once in a while).

During my week planning I’ll pull items from here onto the To Do (Week) column if it is the right time to start that project.

Quarter Backlog (Q4 Backlog)

This and the next piece are the newest additions to my personal scrum boards. (Yes, plural. I have one for Legendary Strength, one for Lost Empire Herbs and one for personal stuff.)

I’m always seeking to better align time. What I mean by that is that I like think of time as fractal. If what I’m doing today is aligned with what I want to get done this week, which is aligned with what I want to get aligned this month, which is the same for the quarter, the year, the decade and my lifetime, then I’m doing the right things. For the board here I feel the quarter is as far as I need to zoom out, but in other places I do have those larger time frames covered.

Thus, I started keeping a backlog for specifically what I wanted to get done this quarter in this business. This has already proven to keep better alignment for my months, weeks and days as I have better eyes on it.

Month Backlog (November Backlog)

Thus, the month backlog is the same thing just with the month time frame. It’s in between the quarter and the week. Once again, the ideal is to have everything moved off of this list by the end of the month.

Intermediate Scrum Board

Most people may be best served by an intermediate version between these two. Before I added the quarter and month backlogs I just had the following model.

Backlog – To Do – Doing – Waiting – Done

I think the extra backlogs are more powerful, but if you’re starting from scratch something simpler, until you’re use to it, is likely to serve you better.

In case you’re wondering, these Trello board methods combine very well with the ideas I shared with Eat That Frog and The Ivy Lee Method.