BEGIN YOUR TRANSFORMATION WITH THE NEWSLETTER
Confusion to Clarity
How to Solve Problems When You See No Solutions | Confusion to Clarity #7
For a moment, imagine yourself as an accomplice to a crime. You and your partner are under arrest, and the police put you in two different rooms for questioning. The rules are simple: if both of you cooperate and tell the truth, you walk free. If you tell the truth...
Why Scary Goals Work Much Better than Easy Ones | Confusion to Clarity #6
There’s no thrill in doing the easy stuff. No one wakes up thinking, “Yes! I can finally wash the dishes today.” It’s boring, easy, and something we’re used to doing. But we do wake up thinking, “Yes! I’m finally going to hike in the Swiss Alps...
3 Mindset Shifts That Will Prepare You For Success | Confusion to Clarity #5
Your mindset matters way more than you think because your actions are a direct reflection of the thoughts inside your head. I understood this reality as a seven-year-old when I gave a speech in front of 500 people at my school’s annual function. I was just a...
The Truth About Building Success That Lasts | Confusion to Clarity #4
Small actions make a big difference—especially when it comes to success. Extraordinary results come from ordinary, boring things done consistently. Look at anyone who’s made it big, and you’ll see that when others glorified big leaps of faith, they worked in silence...
The Moment Writing Changed My Life Forever | Confusion to Clarity #3
On a crisp September morning in 2019, I walked into school feeling invincible. The night before, I had finished my fourth blog post, and I couldn’t wait to tell my friends. In my mind, I was the next J.K. Rowling, and my classmates? Die-hard Harry Potter fans waiting...
What it Actually Takes to Get to the Top | Confusion to Clarity #2
At the 2008 TED Conference, this is how Dr. Jill Bolte Taylor opened her world-famous talk, “My Stroke of Insight”: “I grew up to study the brain because I have a brother who has been diagnosed with a brain disorder, schizophrenia. And as a sister and later, as a...
