Samurai Self-Help: Games R Us

Tags

, , ,

Okay, confession time.  Lately  I have become a self-help junkie.   At the library, the WordPress and all other things computer are very close to the religion and self-help books.  These days I can’t seem to stay away from the self-help section.  Self-help books are like the chocolate covered almonds.  You can’t just have one.

Why I Take Self-Help Literature With A Grain of Soy Sauce

Though I am attracted to self-help literature I also resist it.   First of all, it’s emphasis on the self as the end and be all.  Self-help literature sometimes seems to forget that we are social, communal beings.  The hidden message seems to be that if things are wrong, maybe it’s because of how you imagined them to be.

On the other hand, the other message seems to be that the way to change reality is to change yourself.  It doesn’t take into consideration how we can act in concert with one another for social and spiritual change.  (Brother can you paradigm?)  Once I get done reading all of the self-help books in the world 🙂  I am going to read:   Sham:   How the Self-Help Movement Made America Helpless, Yes You Can:  Behind the Hype and Hustle of the Motivation Biz, and Bright-Sided: How Positive Thinking Is Undermining America.

Wherever You Samurai Go, There You Samurai Are

On the third hand (Holy Avatars, Batman!), the self is where one starts and connects with the world.   Currently, I am also reading Autobiography:  The Story of My Experiments With Truth by Mohandas Gandhi AKA Mahatma Gandhi.  ($.99 on Kindle)I’m reading it really slowly, reading one chapter after I finish reading to my daughters at night.   One of the things, I’ve noticed so far is that Gandhi does a thorough inventory of his failings and efforts of his life.

People like Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr.  didn’t change the world by themselves.  They had advisers and networks of people that helped shape and spread their message.  Yet, maybe they also had to start by confronting themselves and transforming what they thought was possible.   They also delved deeply into spiritual and political literature including Henry David Thoreau’s Civil Disobedience.

You are What You Read

Self-help literature is kind of like trying to subsist on a diet of pop tarts.  However, one of the big lessons I’ve learned by following All Japanese All the Time (AJATT) is the importance of fun.   I was trying to learn Japanese by doing electronic flashcards until my brain was numb.  I st communicated with Khatz, the mad scientist creator of AJATT, who asked me whether I was having fun.  I decuided I needed more pop tarts and delved into Japanese self-help literature.

Khatz also mentions a heaping helpful of self-help literature from Getting Things Done to The Talent Code to a host of self-help books in Japanese and English.  That’s how I got back on the self-help and pop psychology train.

One Japanese self-help book,   1日30分」を続けなさい!人生勝利の勉強法55 (Continue Each Day 30 Minutes:  55 Study Methods for Winning in Life), Furuichi-san explains that its really important to read while your interest is high.    (Kenichiro Mogi, in 脳を活かす勉強法 or Leverage Your Brain talks about the dopamine factor involved in overcoming learning hurdles.   Fun doesn’t always mean easy.)

Right now I’m playing self-help games.   However, by playing games I am also getting results.  I am writing more consistently (usually no more than 30 minutes a day) and having more fun doing it.  If you got to the bottom of this post, you have tasted of the fruit of my self-help tree :).

Have fun.  Follow your mind,and have fun,  whether it means reading Bhagavad Gita in Norwegian or Who Cut the Cheese?  Enjoy.

 

Samurai Money Energy: A Penny “Saved”

Tags

, , ,

Small counts.   Sometimes I pick up pennies to remind myself about the "energy" of money.  I don'tmeaninit a new age way but as a way to respect the labor, sweat, and creative flow behind money.

Small counts. Sometimes I pick up pennies to remind myself about the “energy” of money. I don’tmeaninit a new age way but as a way to respect the labor, sweat, and creative flow behind money.

A funny thing happens in New York.   People throw out pennies.  You find them on the street, lost and lonely little pennies.  I’ve witnessed people hurling them into the street.  My wife, Yoko, was shocked about this.    This just doesn’t happen in Japan.  People may leave their money at Shinto temples but money isn’t just thrown out like that.

I’ll share a little secret.   Every now and then, I bend down and pick up these tossed away pennies.   Because it’s more than you would earn a day in savings accounts these days? No.  It’s because money is energy.   When I pick up a penny it’s to reaffirm a message to myself that I am a director of energy through money.

You Con-du-it

Er, you are a conduit.   All kinds of energy comes into you and leaves in a different form.  A lot of that is involuntary but there is also a lot of room for choice.  You have input choices:   food, information, et cetera.  You also have output choices:  how you move your body, treat and speak about others, etc.  You can come from your day at the munitions factory, eat fast food, watch five hours of escapist television and be mean to people. No. Please. Don’t.

Bending down to pick up a penny is just a physical reminder to myself that I am a conduit, a conductor of wealth.  Even if you make $20,000 a year for the next 50 years, it’s a million dollars of energy that will flow in and out of your life.  You get to direct that energy to support more energy.  You get the chance to orchestrate the direction of that flow.

By keeping a money journal years ago, I started to become aware of financial patterns and changed them.  For example, the money that used to go my every other day ice cream addiction might go to investments, acupuncture treatments, jamplay.com guitar lessons, or a chance to help a friend or stranger in need.

Small Counts:  Think Big Act Small

Picking up a penny is also a way of honoroing the small.  Big results are often the result of the accumulation of small choices.  I don’t know if anyone knows much about Shakespeare’s writing habits.  (Bill, if you are reading this now, I am sooooo totally open to “channeling” opportunities.)  However,  I’m pretty sure he didn’t write all of his works overnight.  He had to get up, sharpen his quills, and make small decisions that added up to his compleate [sic, man, sic] works.

Toni Morrison, in an interview in Paris Review, explained how she became a dawn writer, waking up at the pre-dawn before her two small children woke up.   James Arthur Ray, author of Harmonic Wealth:  The Secret of Attracting the Life You Want, describes Morrison as “writing at the edges of time.”

In  100 Ways to Create Wealth, Steve Chandler and Sam Beckford explain that the extra five minutes on a project that you are thinking on giving up on can make all the difference.

Small counts.   The other day I visited Big Booty, Chelsea bakery with excellent “pan de yuca” and an outrageous name.  After making a small purchase, I reached into my coat pocket to get a tip and pulled out some quarters and some pennies.

“I am sorry about the pennies,” I felt obliged to say.

“No need to apologize, thank you very much,” Elvis, our favorite bakery guy, replied warmly.

You don’t have to pick up pennies.   Move into the small corners and moments were the creativity energy lies.  Pick up that pen or legal pad.   Dust off that guitar bag and open it.   Pick up a penny of your dreams.

How to Use Multiple Savings Accounts

Tags

, ,

Capture your financial flow.  Use specific targeted savings accounts to be a financial samurai. This is a graphic from one of my Tao of Money seminars.

Capture your financial flow. Use specific targeted savings accounts to be a financial samurai. This is a graphic from one of my Tao of Money seminars.

Disclaimer:  Remember I am just a motivational speaker who lives in a van down by the river.  Multiple savings accounts are a great way to train your mind to think about money, and I think that will have an impact on your creativity and you peace of mind.   For actual investment advice,  try Personal Finance for Dummies.

Advantages of Multiple Savings Accounts (MSA’s):

  • MSA’s let you too keep the purpose for your savings clear.   It lets your mind know how your money is allotted rather than have to keep track of it mentally or otherwise.  It saves time and space on your mental hard-drive.
  • MSA’s tap into the creativity and energy of flow.   I like thinking of money like water.   If water doesn’t move it gets stagnant.   Multiple savings accounts help you creatively accelerate the flow of money in your life, specially if you use direct deposit and automated savings.
  • You earn interest.   When I started doing multiple savings accounts, I typically earned 5%.  Now I earn a whopping .80%. Woohoo! However, the first two benefits make this worthwhile.

Multiple Savings Account Suggestions from Money is My Friend

Like I mentioned before, this is one of the key ideas I got from reading Phil Laut’s book, Money is My Friend.   In the book, he suggests creating the following banking accounts.   There are finer points for each account and I highly suggest buying it out checking it out from the library.    Phil Laut suggests the following accounts:

  • Cash Flow Savings Account:  keep a month’s worth of income in and pay yourself from there
  • Large  Purchases Account:  deposit into it regularly and use it for whatever you want
  • Financial Independence Account:  train yourself to get used to just spending the interest earned
  • Millionaire’s Savings Account:  money for investments
  • Annual Income Savings Account:  for a year off or shorter amounts
  • Taxes Savings Account:  save for your taxes
  • Generosity Savings Account: giving away money is a great way to free up your mind

Make Savings A Game

When I started doing this, I actually used real bank passbooks.  The passbooks at the bank used passbooks that looked like grey passports.  I went a little overboard and put stickers all over it to make it fun.  Those were the days.

Now internet banking has made it easy to create these multiple accounts.  I started with ING Direct and have stuck with them, and haven’t really researched other options.   What I like about ING is that they make it easy to nickname your various accounts to make this system work, and you save on postage or trips to the bank.  Please let me know if you find better or different banking options.

I don’t necessarily follow Laut’s system to the letter.  My Cash Flow account is typically the amount of cash that I tend to spend per week.  It’s automatically withdrawn twice a month and when I want more money I transfer it online to my credit union.  I also have a Bills Account.   When I charge something on my credit card, I place the exact amount into my ING Bills Account.  When the bill comes, I have the exact amount waiting for me in the account.

I also have an impulse spending account, which is just play money.   Do I want to spend $50 on stickers or chocolate?  It’s right there.   The purpose of this account is to allow for play and impulse instead of associating saving with deprivation.

Of course, with the right attitude and creativity Multiple Savings Accounts help turn setting financial priorities into a game.   Enjoy the game and save!

 

Money is My Friend: Reflections on Ideas from Phil Laut’s Book

Phil Laut’s book, Money is My Friend, came into my life in the offices of a publisher at Ballantine Wellspring.  I was there with my agent to promote the book I had written at the time,  Mind, Body, Wallet.    The book didn’t get picked up– I didn’t have a platform, etc.   But the publisher gave me several books including a slim volume of Money is My Friend.   In retrospect, all the efforts I put into my book were worth being exposed to Phil Laut and his work. Continue reading »

Do Money or Money Will Do You: Rich Samurai/Poor Samurai

Tags

, , ,

Screen shot 2013-07-18 at 1.42.14 PMSorry about the Rich Dad/Poor Dad reference.  I just had to.  Truth is, I found that book in our book sharing shelf in the building and I haven’t gotten around to reading it.

Now, remember, I am just a motivational speaker who lives in a van down by the river.  I am not a Rich Dad or a Poor Dad.   I am a dad.   However, I have stopped “being done by” money.

Take care of finances, so finances don’t take over your life

I made that decision in the middle of the wilderness in Western North Carolina.  I was at a base camp of the North Carolina Outward Bound School, where I went to learn how to be an outdoor educational instructor.   I woke up that morning to the hooting of barred owls outside of the rustic cabin I was staying in between wilderness trainings.   Someone came to my cabin and said,   “Juan, you have a phone call.”  I put on my fleece jacket and shuffled down the trail to the base camp office and picked up the phone.  It was a collection agency.  My credit card and college loans debt had caught up to me. Continue reading »

Furuichi’s Learning Success Formula: Samurai Mind Power Activate!

Tags

, , , , , , , ,

 

I don't know if there is or should be a formula, but Furichi's formula helped kicked me into a learning renaissance.

I don’t know if there is or should be a formula, but Furichi’s formula helped kicked me into a learning renaissance.

I normally don’t like formulas but Furuichi-san drew me in with this one.  Drum roll please:

Y= A x B x X² + C

Did you feel the earth shaking?

Y is the results of your studies.  A is the quality of materials and service if you are attending a school or program.  B is your power of concentration and focus.   X is the amount of time spent studying.  C is the previous learning you have done.  In other words, the results of your studying is the result of the quality of your materials, times the quality of your concentration, times the time spent studying squared, plus previous education.

I especially like how previous education is factored in.   Previous education doesn’t seem to have the multiplier effect that quality, concentration, and time have.  Furuichi, in part, is seeking to debunk the belief in Japan that if you go to a top university, you have it made for life. Continue reading »

Listening to Samurai Echo: How to Turn “Failures” into Successes

Tags

, , , , , , ,

Every effort creates an echo or even a dissonance to be listened to, to build on.  Even a “failed” effort creates a lingering question.  The question is, can you persist and grow from it? Continue reading »

How To Leverage What You Read: Furuichi Tip #3 「読書のコツとは?」

Tags

, , , , , , ,

Break out the soy sauce, because Samurai Mind Online is lost in translating another Japanese source today!  In this chapter of 1日30分」を続けなさい!人性勝利の勉強法55 Learn to Win by Yukio Furuichi (古市幸雄)  asks the simple question,  what is the best way to read?   Continue reading »

Keep Your Mind on Samurai Shuffle

Tags

, , , , , , , , ,

 

I was one of those guys that resisted getting an iPod for what seems like an eternity.  Then, I started trying to learn Japanese and realized what a relic I was walking around town with a cassette deck or even a CD player.

Ipods, etc are a great boon to the samurai mind. You’ll want to have moments of silence but you can immerse yourself in your field or in your field of dreams. I have used my sound environment to help me with Japanese, WordPress, my health, and to start blasting through old creativity and money patterns. Photo by Jim at http://bit.ly/S1Kvpd

Then I started doing AJATT (All Japanese All the Time) at ajatt.com.   Khatzumoto recommends that you always have fun Japanese music and podcasts playing during times you can’t be hooked up to other forms of Japanese media.  It made sense and I bit the bullet.  I haven’t looked back since. Continue reading »

Samurai Mind Goes Bowling

Tags

, , , , , , , ,

Happiness, breathing, bowling. It worked for me one amazing night. Photo from Jim at http://www.unprofound.com/viewpic.php?pic=bowler.jpg&photographer=jim#

I haven’t gone bowling in years, but three weeks ago I was back at it, funny shoes and all.  I think I’ve played mini-golf more times than I’ve gone bowling, and that isn’t saying much.

I only played two games.  The first game, I was getting used to bowling again.   I kept experimenting with different balls.   I went for the pink gum light gum balls and tried bowling with that.   I kept noticing my buddies next to me getting strikes and having a great old time.   I hung my head in shame and then just kept trying.  I kept trying different balls and adjusting my technique.  I got a heavier ball and got a strike towards the end of the game.  I think I got an 85–not an impressive score.

However, towards the end of the game, I made a few interesting choices in addition to getting the heavier ball.   I modeled the form that the more successful players were using–something like my foot ending up on the other side of my body.  I also made the decision to breathe and, as hokey as this is going to sound, I made the decision to love the moment.   I made the decision to be happy holding the ball, seeing where the pins were, releasing the ball, and staying connected even after I released the ball.

The results were shockingly fun.  Almost every frame I played a spare or a strike.   At one point, I got three strikes in a row.   I surprised myself by being able to pick off single pins.  Each time it was my turn, I made the decision again:  have fun with this moment, connect, love.  I ended up the game with 200.

Maybe creativity flow can happen like this, a balance between concentration, focus on technique, while breathing and letting go. Photograph from Jim at http://bit.ly/UChtLh

I didn’t know that this was a big deal, except for the big video display.   Then guys came up and said, “Wow, how did you do that?”  A couple guys explained that they have been bowling regularly and have never gotten to 200.

I could end this little post with some big lesson.  In fact, as I wrote this, Steve Chandler’s 100 Ways to Create Wealth came up on my samurai shuffle.   His wealth tip #29 is:  “Learn to Keep Breathing.”

However, for now, I’m not going to further dissect that moment.  My only hope is that I can have more of those moments, and that others can have more of those moments in bowling, serving others, the earth and all other sorts of silly games.

© 2012-2025 Samurai Mind Online All Rights Reserved -- Copyright notice by Blog Copyright