Sometimes you remember something like it happened yesterday
But when you do the maths you realise how much time has really gone by
I find as you get older this phenomena happens more often - and the gaps get longer!
And what you really don’t want those gaps filled with is regret
What else could you have done with all that time if you hadn’t exchanged so much of it for money?
And probably not even enough money to pay for half the things you wanted to do when you were younger, unstoppable and full of dreams
Example:
The 11th of September 2001 is one of those moments for me - and for most of the people on the planet who were around then and old enough to absorb it
I remember my first experience it like it was five minutes ago never mind yesterday
The news of the first plane hitting came over the radio in my van as I drove back to our office after installing a P.A. system in a local hotel.
By the time I got back to the office, desperate to pass on what I’d heard (this was before we were all permanently wired to the web via smartphones) the whole team were glued to a big screen TV
The second plane had hit and the world was beginning to realise the horrible truth.
Point is, when I think of this I remember everything about where I was in life at that time - it’s like changing the channel on a TV - click - and Im there
But as you know it was actually 18 years ago - gone in the blink of an eye
We all have key moments like this in our lives. Think back to one of yours and then do the maths.
How much time has really passed? Where were you then and where are you now?
This is why I highlight time freedom as the biggest advantage of changing the way you can do things in the digital world
You really can put in some work now and in a relatively short space of time you can be in full control of your limited time
A great place to start would be with Stuart Ross’s Proven Steps webcast which you can register for (free) using THIS LINK
You might look back on it as one of “those moments” in years to come
Cheers!
Dave