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πŸ“Œ Miracle on 34th Street It Ain't...
"Yes, Virginia, there is a Free Lunch!" Tuesdays ar 12 noon Eastern (New York) Time.
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πŸ“Œ Miracle on 34th Street It Ain't...
πŸ“Œ This Week In Business
What is one thing you want to achieve in your community or business this week? Drop it below.
πŸ“Œ This Week In Business
πŸ“Œ Conspicuous Sameness
Thorstein Veblen, renoun Norwegian-American economist and sociologist who is best known for his 1899 book, The Theory of the Leisure Class, wrote about something he called "conspicuous consumption". At the time, it referred to the visible display of wealth; buying and showing things not just for their usefulness, but for what they signaled to others: status, belonging, success. It was never just about the thing itself. It was about what the thing said. I have been thinking about that idea recently, and how it might apply in a very different space. Not to what people are buying. But to what they are saying. There is a pattern I have been noticing. Coaches, creators, professionals; all well-intentioned, all trying to find their footing; beginning to sound… remarkably similar. You know the template: "I help [this group] move from [this problem] to [this result] without [this frustration]." You have seen it. You may have even tried it. It is clean. It is teachable. It is repeatable. And that is precisely the point. It signals something. Competence. Alignment. "I know the framework." A kind of professional belonging. Not so different, perhaps, from Veblen’s observation. But something else happens along the way. The message becomes less about meaning… and more about matching. Malvina Reynolds captured a version of this long ago in her song "Little Boxes. "Little boxes on the hillside… and they all look just the same." Different context. Same idea. Uniformity dressed up as individuality. Now, to be fair, there is value in structure. Frameworks help people begin. They offer clarity when there is none. They reduce friction for those just getting started. But there is a point where structure quietly becomes constraint. Where expression gives way to imitation. Where the desire to "get it right" overrides the desire to be real. And that is where something is lost. Not skill. Not intention. But voice. The interesting thing is, most people can feel it. They cannot always name it. But they sense when something sounds practiced rather than lived. When it follows a pattern instead of a perspective.
πŸ“Œ Conspicuous Sameness
πŸ“Œ Conversations In Time
A new post in Just Thinking (in the classroom) called Conversations In Time was added today. Access requires Standard tier membership, but it is free. If you are not a member, click here to sign up.
πŸ“Œ Conversations In Time
πŸ“Œ A Simple Invitation (Before Things Expand)
I have been giving some thought to the Premium tier inside Skool Cafeteria. More content is on the way. Quite a bit, actually. Before that happens, I wanted to make a quiet offer available to a small group. Normally, Premium access is $39 per month. For the next 10 members, I am offering a full year for $78. That is not a tactic. It is simply a way to allow a few people to come in early, at a level that works, before the library grows and the value shifts. No pressure. If it feels right, take a look: πŸ‘‰ https://www.skool.com/skool-cafeteria-3864 And if not, that is perfectly fine as well. The space will continue to grow, and you are always welcome when the timing makes sense.
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πŸ“Œ A Simple Invitation (Before Things Expand)
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Stephen B. Henry’s "Your Pathway To Growth" community is a calmer, safer place for learning A.I. through natural conversation and guidance.
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