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Revisiting Your Childhood for Business Ideas
"Success is waking up in the morning, who ever you are, wherever you are,
however old or young, and bounding out of bed because there is something out
there that you love to do, that you believe in, that you are good at -
something that is bigger than you are, and you can hardly wait to get at
it again today" -- Whit Hobbs
Truly, when was the last time you felt like
that?
When you were a kid, maybe?
I'll admit that I do,
frequently, have these moments, but it has only been since I took the leap
into doing what I want and stopped doing what society attempted to dictate to
me.
For a time I took everything, including myself, far too seriously
-- because that's what I'd been brainwashed into believing was right.
However, the result was that I was miserable and what I was therefore
motivated to contribute to this world, did not amount to very much, of any
use.
We are conditioned, generally, to separate work and play. Like
medicine that tastes awful must be doing us good, we accept work we hate
because that's what work is supposed to be. Hard: something you grit your
teeth over getting done.
This stifles creativity and causes us to look in
all the wrong parts of our minds to find ideas for our own success.
(I had a friend back in England who used to reenact ancient battles ... when
he wasn't breaking up modern ones as a night-club "bouncer"! :-)
From
the SCA, I couldn't help following links to the site for "The Mary Rose",
Henry VIII's famous 16th-century warship.
Because I have seen it at Portsmouth (it's only 25 miles or so from my mum)
and, it left a permanent impression on me. It IS unlike any other historical
find and has led us to discover many things about Tudor life that are
startlingly different to much that had been previously assumed.
(The
discovery of the ship is a story of "working with passion" in itself, because
nobody believed that the wreck was even there, except one man who searched
and found her.)
I've always maintained a very keen, even
passionate, interest in history and, especially Tudor and
Renaissance history. It was my favourite subject at school. I even made
(and wore) a full-sized Tudor costume for a history project -- since, for
most of my childhood and formative years, we lived just two miles from Henry
VIII's Hampton Court Palace
In those "good old" days, it was free to get into most of the grounds and
even large parts of the Tudor buildings.
And I would frequently take the
bus or even WALK those two miles, just to make another visit, warp back in
time and discover something more about the past. Yeah, talk about passion,
for a teenager to WALK two miles for anything (other than running where
hormones mandate, that is! :-)
I have always supposed that a study of
history is really a voyage of self-discovery. When we learn why people in
past times did certain things, or rulers made certain decisions -- and,
Henry VIII's decisions, perhaps more than any other, have shaped countless
laws and customs that still prevail today -- we begin to understand where we
came from and, why, in turn, we hold certain beliefs or behave in certain
ways.
It also lead onto other things: it was probably what
also prompted me to study psychology and to write. It sparked other
interests such as in the Renaissance-revisited aspects of the Pre-Raphaelite
period of art and, in design.
But, isn't it amazing how a casual thing
such as this passing comment will invoke memories and take your mind
off to a different place? Now, the "trick" is to hold onto it and, at the
same time, let it spark "impromptu" ideas.
Yep, I am certain that all of
us have, somewhere within us, some thoughts and passions, hobbies or
interests such as these. Things we would enjoy researching, pursuing
and turning into a theme and means to make our living.
More
importantly, we are freed to offer something of true VALUE if we enjoy what
we are doing and therefore do it well. My advice: stop listening to what
other people say. Start listening to your heart. Please yourself and,
you will please others and deserve to be compensated for it.
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