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Interview with CEO, Bestselling Author Arthur Bozikas on His Latest Book ‘Iron Boy’.

Arthur Bozikas lives in Sydney, Australia and has been the CEO of a nonprofit disability organization for over twenty years. His life story was supposed to be short; at twelve, he was given an expiry date. But life doesn’t always turn out as we expect. Now sixty, he’s had forty unexpected years of life since that use by date expired.

 

After his day job as the CEO, Arthur was lecturing many business management courses part-time for seven years at the same university he graduated from. Additionally, he also was teaching many business management subjects as a casual teacher at several TAFE colleges for eight years, finally concluded all his teaching commitments to focus more on his passion for writing fiction novels.

 

I had an opportunity to catch up with Arthur on his latest book, ‘Iron Boy’. Personally, this book is inspiring, it is enduring, it is the story of struggle but also about the will and drive to move forward against all odds. It was an honor to have the opportunity to meet up with him and ask him some interview questions. This is what he shared up with me. 

 

‘Iron Boy’, is such an inspirational story looking back what got you through the entire experience? 

 

My family, and in particular my wife. Helen has continued to be the light in my darkness, I’m here because of her! More so, I’ve succeeded and excelled both personally and professionally because of her encouragement and support every way possible. My wife is amazing and I’ve been so lucky to have her in my life!

 

Have you ever gotten writer’s block and if so have you overcome it?

 

I’ve heard about writer’s block but only experienced an insignificant burden maybe because I started writing at a late age and I’ve got so much to say? When it occurs, I simply stop and start again the next day. It never lasts longer than a day. For me, stopping immediately is what overcomes it.

 

What is the first book that made you cry?

 

April Fool’s Day is a 1993 book by Australian author Bryce Courtenay. The book is a tribute to the author’s son, Damon Courtenay, a haemophiliac who contracted HIV/AIDS through an infected blood transfusion. The title refers to the date of Damon’s death, 1 April 1991. It was this book that I decided to be an author!

 

Do you think someone could be a writer if they don’t feel emotions strongly?

 

After reading many books over the years, I believe anyone can be a writer. However, only the great ones write with strong emotions.

 

What does literary success look like to you and what is something that you hope people can take away from, ‘Iron Boy’?

 

Reviews are a great indicator but success for me is getting published and holding the finished work in my hands in a form of a book. I would love if everyone can view each other as “people first” and not focus on their disability. No one is perfect, everyone gets old and eventually gets a disability in one form or another.

 

The most important question is how are you feeling today and if there is one lesson or something that you would like to share from the entire process that you experienced from the beginning to now what would that be and why is it important for you to share? 

 

I feel great to be alive. I think one lesson for me would be to go back and tell my younger self to stop worrying every day. I wasted so much time worrying instead of enjoying life! Try it, it’s awesome for you and for everyone in your life…

 

For More Information on Arthur Bozikas and to get a copy of ‘Iron Boy’ click here. https://arthurbozikas.com

For Media Inquiries Contact Michael Beas via C-Suite.

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Growth Personal Development

Michael Beas Interviews Hollywood Producer Burt Weissbourd on Movies, Books and Yellowstone

Burt Weissbourd is a novelist, screenwriter and producer of feature films. He was born in 1949 and graduated cum laude from Yale University, with honors in psychology. During his student years, he volunteered at the Museum of Modern Art in Paris and taught English to college students in Thailand. After he graduated, he wrote, directed, and produced educational films for Gilbert Altschul Productions. He began a finance program at the Northwestern University Graduate School of Business, but left in his final semester to start his own film production company in Los Angeles. He managed that company from 1977 until 1986, producing films including Ghost Story starring Fred Astaire, Melvyn Douglas, John Houseman, and Douglas Fairbanks Jr, and Raggedy Man starring Sissy Spacek and Sam Shepard, which The New York Times called “A movie of sweet, low-keyed charm.”

In 1987, he founded an investment business, which he still runs. Burt’s novels include the thrillers Danger in Plain Sight, The Corey Logan Trilogy (Inside Passage, Teaser and Minos), and In Velvet, which is set in Yellowstone National Park.

I had the privilege of working with Burt Weissbourd in 2021 and had the honor in being part of the success of   his books becoming International Bestsellers on a world wide arena. With hundred of reviews and talk of his works being showcased at Yellowstone it is truly a pleasure to interview him on C-Suite.

This is what he shared up with us.

From movies to pen and paper you have quite the portfolio of published and produced works. My first question is which is of your books is your favorite and why? 

This is a hard question to answer. It’s like being asked who’s your favorite child? The answer is always all of them. My first book, however, Inside Passage, will always be special for me. Not only because it was my first book, but because that’s the first time I wrote, and thought carefully, about Corey Logan and Abe Stein. Corey and Abe went on to be at the center of all three books in the Corey Logan trilogy.

 

I read that you use to teach during your college years English to students in Thailand, what was that experience like and more so what in your view did you learn from your students?

Teaching in Thailand was a great experience. I was young, twenty years old, and the college where I was teaching had just opened, so there was quite a lot of improvising. What I remember most was that my students couldn’t speak English, and I spoke very little Thai. Early on, I figured out that what they did know was the words to popular songs. They knew the words to Beattle songs, Rolling Stones songs and so on. What I did was teach them English by teaching them the meanings of the words in the songs. Before too long, often when I came into town, my students would break into these songs. It was funny and actually quite sweet.

 

From a movie perspective, you have worked with some of the biggest names Hollywood, one that comes to mind is Fred Astaire, who starred in your film “Ghost Story” among others. The question is when you write a script or a book for the matter do you visualize the characters acting in real life if that book or script becomes a featured film? My question is more directed on the mind set and process that you envision when writing a manuscript. 

One of the things I learned producing films was that casting a movie before it was getting made, was very difficult. I think that carried over to my writing. It wasn’t a conscious decision, but I never think about actors or actresses when I’m creating a character. Sometimes, after the book is finished, I fantasize about who might play the part, but that’s always after the book is done.

 

Talk to us about what you have in the works from a book / novel standpoint. Do you have anything in the works that fans of your writing can look forward to reading? 

I’m now finishing the sequel to Danger in Plain Sight, the last book that I wrote. It’s called Rough Justice, and it follows Callie and Cash a year later. This book begins with a twenty-six-year old woman, Sara, immigrating from Paris to the U.S. She has a visa, a job, and she flies to Seattle, where she’s picked up by an older woman, one of her new employers. This woman takes her on the company’s boat in the San Juan Islands to bring her to her new workplace and living set up. At night, on the water, the woman tries to kill her. Sara kills her assailant, gets away, to realize that she has no idea why they tried to kill her, and that she’s in a country where she knows no one. She has one lead, before she died, her mother gave her a letter written to her from her dad. The letter was from Seattle. She finds her dad at Callie’s restaurant in Seattle, Le Cochon Bronze. It’s Cash Logan, living now with Callie. He has no idea that he has a twenty-six year old daughter. Nor why people are trying to kill her. Sara is unmistakably Cash’s daughter, in brainpower, temperament and imagination. The story evolves from there.

I would like to know and maybe this can be the bonus question: But one of my questions would be  why is Yellowstone important to you? 

I’m very excited to be selling my Yellowstone book, In Velvet, in the park next year. I’m hoping to team up with Yellowstone Forever, the principal foundation for the park to sell books together. I’m also exploring creating a partnership with some of the hotels in Yellowstone. 2022 is the 150th anniversary of the park, and I’m finding that there are lots of opportunities to take advantage of that, particularly since I’m willing to publish an anniversary edition. This is all at the early stage, but if it works, it promise the possibility to create long term relationships with partners to sell books with me to the three million plus visitors to Yellowstone every year.

Categories
Growth Leadership Personal Development

Getting the Inside Scoop with Helena P. Schrader about her Groundbreaking Book ‘Where Eagles Never Flew: A Battle of Britain Novel’

In ‘Where Eagles Never Flew: A Battle of Britain Novel’ you feel like you are deep in the Battle of Britain with its adventure, heroes and real life action, so much so actual veterans of the battle praised its realism. In this epic read, Helena P. Schrader has crafted a book that weaves together authenticity, and a story that includes everything from action and romance to real world drama, making it one of the best historical fiction books of this year, and no doubt  for years to come.

‘Where Eagles Never Flew: A Battle of Britain Novel’ begins in the summer of 1940 and the Battle of Britain is gearing up, and the pressure is on. Why? If the swastika is not to fly over Buckingham Palace, the RAF must prevent the Luftwaffe from gaining air superiority over Great Britain. Standing on the front line is No. 606 (Hurricane) Squadron. As the casualties mount, new pilots find a cold reception from the clique of experienced pilots, who resent them taking the place of their dead friends.

Meanwhile, despite credible service in France, former RAF aerobatics pilot Robin Priestman finds himself stuck in Training Command — and falling for a girl from the Salvation Army. On the other side of the Channel, the Luftwaffe is recruiting women as communications specialists — and naïve Klaudia is about to grow up.

‘Where Eagles Never Flew: A Battle of Britain Novel’ has been hot with readers, and we were dying to ask Helena about this fascinating book. Recently we did just that, and it was an amazing and enlightening experience.

A lot of novels have been written about the Battle of Britain. What makes ‘Where Eagles Never Flew’ different and better?

The vast majority of novels about the Battle of Britain focus on a single pilot and his girl — or at most a single squadron. That has the advantage of intimacy and allows an author to build strong emotional ties to the protagonists. The price is that it severely restricts perspective. It is like trying to see a panorama through a keyhole. ‘Where Eagles Never Flew’ is exceptional in that it widens the perspective by consciously opting for a large cast of characters and interweaving a range of plotlines into the book. Thus, the book isn’t just about RAF pilots on the front line, but also ground crews, controllers, the training establishment, British civilians, and Germans.

The latter are not just “the enemy;” they are fully developed protagonists. ‘Where Eagles Never Flew’ follows the fate of a young German woman who joins the equivalent of the WAAF (Women’s Auxiliary Air Force) and finds herself stationed on a Luftwaffe base in France – and way out of her depth. It also introduces a novice German fighter pilot and his more experienced and less politically orthodox protégé.

The book depicts engagements in which the British and German characters interact (without, of course, knowing each other), showing their different perceptions of the same clash. One of my favorite chapters describes the German raid on Portsmouth on 12 August 1940, by opening with the German briefing to aircrews, switching to the RAF squadrons on readiness, and then describing what it looked like on the ground in Portsmouth through the eyes of a female character working in an office in downtown Portsmouth.

In addition, parallel storylines highlight the degree to which problems on both sides of the channel were similar — intelligence failures, the difficulties of flying in bad weather with very primitive radio equipment, the attrition, and exhaustion, etc. The parallel storylines also underline differences such as the popular and political support enjoyed by the RAF compared to the bitter recriminations suffered by Luftwaffe fighter squadrons.

The other storylines, whether it is the controller (who provides a strategic perspective) or the ground crews (that underline just how vital these men were to success) contribute to a more comprehensive and nuanced depiction of the Battle of Britain than the bulk of novels that can be reduced to young-pilot-falls-in-love-and dies/lives-during-the-Battle-of-Britain.

Your book was praised for its authenticity by veterans of the Battle of Britain when it first appeared in 2007. What do you think made men who had lived through the conflict feel that you had got it “smack on the way it was for us” as Wing Commander Doe notably said?

I’ve given that a lot of thought and even went back to re-read several of the memoirs written by these men.

One thing that jumped out at me was that many of the post-war novels, particularly those published in the U.S., turn the RAF pilots into superheroes. For example, in these books, pilots fresh on a squadron often shoot down five or six Germans in their first engagement. That’s simply not the way it was, and the veterans of the Battle know it. Most young pilots were more likely to be shot down themselves before they could record even their first victory. Even highly experienced and exceptionally good pilots rarely shot down more than a single aircraft in any one engagement. ‘Where Eagles Never Flew’ avoids those kind of cartoon stereotypes and shows the pilots learning their trade, making mistakes, and having accidents. It also shows that some RAF pilots were insecure and frightened, that some commanders were poor leaders, and that some men could not live up to the demands made on them.

Another thing that struck me is that many modern books on the topic want to dramatize and agonize over the horrors of war and the huge stress the pilots were under. Englishmen in the 1940s, on the other hand, were products of a decidedly understated and unemotional society. People didn’t appreciate or accept passionate displays of emotion. Indeed, any kind of public display of emotion much less trauma was considered “bad form.” It just wasn’t done. I suspect that while some of my younger readers view my characters as cardboard and cold-blooded because they don’t talk on and on about their feelings, the veterans identify with and recognize emotional restraint as authentic.

An example of this is when a pilot with insufficient training, who the squadron leader has been trying to protect, is killed. The squadron leader reports the incident with “Ainsworth bought it today. At least that’s one less thing to worry about.” That doesn’t mean that this or other characters in the book are callous or heartless. Their behavior simply reflects what eye-witnesses report. Namely, that the participants could not allow themselves to feel their own emotions without endangering their ability to operate effectively. Many veterans report that the grief and shock came much later.

While this is a war novel, it also describes the love interests of leading characters yet sexual norms and behavior were very different in the 1940s than today. Did you strive for and achieve authenticity in this context too?

Good question. I’m not sure I did.

When I was doing research for my dissertation on the German Resistance to Hitler, I interviewed more women than men because most of the men had been killed — either in the war or executed for treason. The women, perhaps because they were speaking to a young woman, stressed over and over again that they had been raised very differently than “modern women” (and this was the 1980s!). They reminded me more than once that they had not had “the pill.” The memoirs of WAAF likewise reflect these very real inhibitions. In the 1940s, women did not jump into bed at the drop of a hat, certainly not with casual acquaintances, and despite notable increases in the number of unwed mothers in both wartime Britain and wartime Germany, sex before and outside of marriage remained the exception, not the norm.

But modern readers seem to want and expect sex to feature in every romantic relationship, regardless of what the cultural norms were in the era depicted. I think I’ve probably bowed too much to market demands at the expense of historical accuracy. That said, compared to some novels I’ve read set in this period, I’m a paragon of historical virtue, so readers should not expect sex on every page or even in every chapter.

This is a book about real-life heroes. Did you find that made the book easier or harder to write?

The word “heroes” is greatly overused these days. I have the feeling that the term has been gutted of meaning as a result. It is critical to remember that the young men who flew in the Battle of Britain were literally “just doing their job” (and earning 14 shillings a day for it). They did not think of themselves as particularly heroic, and many remember and admit to having been terrified, to making stupid mistakes, to being irresponsible, and taking stupid chances, as well as having many lucky escapes.

That is exactly what makes them so appealing to me as an author. I don’t write cartoon books and I don’t want superheroes for characters. What I like is exploring and analyzing the thoughts, actions, and emotions of ordinary humans.

That’s exactly what these young men — on both sides of the channel — were. They were ordinary, immature, and often irresponsible young men, who happened to have a skill that was suddenly terribly important to the survival of Western civilization (as Winston Churchill put it). There is a scene in the novel where (based on a real incident) some celebrities drop in on a squadron party in a pub, reflecting the sudden “star status” of “the Few.” One of the female characters remarks to one of the celebrities that although young pilots were no different the month or year before, no one had paid them any attention back then. The celebrity answers, “ah, but my dear, they weren’t the same last month or last year. Then they were just a bunch of spoilt youngsters letting the tax-payer foot the bill for their fun in the sky.”

There are many autobiographies and biographies of Battle of Britain pilots. Did you base your characters on real people?

Not one-to-one, but naturally I learned from autobiographies about the kind of things that happened — the difficulties with the aircraft, the conditions at messes and dispersals, the interplay between comrades, the drinking bouts, the close-calls  — and how they felt about the whole thing. Here and there, I lifted entire incidents out of the anecdotal accounts. For example, Dr. McIndoe really did try to keep Al Deere in his hospital when he wasn’t seriously wounded just to give him a rest. One pilot really did just blurt out “oh, he’s dead” to the girlfriend of a fellow pilot when she called the mess and asked to speak to the dead man. Yet none of the characters in the novel is a replica or even modeled on a real person.

That said, very occasionally, I have characters who I believe are real (albeit ethereal) because I can neither control nor direct them. They tell me what they did, said, and felt. I’ve learned that if I try to make them do something they do not want, the entire book slams into a wall or breaks apart into a thousand worthless pieces. So, I work with them not against them, and when I do that, they are invariably a delight to work with producing particularly powerful prose.

One such character was Robin Priestman, the main protagonist in ‘Where Eagles Never Flew’.  Although he is not a known historical figure, whose memoirs one can read, I do not for a moment believe he is just a figment of my imagination either. He did and said far too many things that surprised me for me to have created him. I personally believe he was an RAF squadron leader, although he went by his real name, but one who did not write his story during his lifetime — which is why he decided to use me as his voice.

Curiously, I encountered another such spirit when I tried to move on to my next planned project, a novel about the Berlin Airlift. I’d already written nearly a hundred pages when someone made me stop everything, delay publication plans, switch gears, and focus on his story causing me to write two completely unforeseen books: “Lack of Moral Fibre,” which is one of three novellas in my recently released “Grounded Eagles” Trilogy, and “Lancaster Pilot,” a full-length novel that should be ready for publication next year.

For more about ‘Where Eagles Never Flew: A Battle of Britain Novel’ head over to Amazon.

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Growth Leadership Personal Development

Exclusive Interview with Bestselling Author Zana Petricevic on ‘Bold Reinvented’.

With over 15 years of experience as a corporate manager, entrepreneur, executive leadership coach, leadership development consultant, coaching trainer, and mentor with a great passion for writing, teaching, and public speaking. Zana Petricevic is the author of a book called Bold Reinvented: Next Level Leading with Courage, Consciousness, and Conviction.

I had a chance to chat with Zana Petricevic on Bold Reinvented. Here is what she shared with me:

 

What are the three key areas that you would recommend leaders to focus on?

 

My SOUL leadership framework is divided into four corners specifically to answer this question. First, we start with Self – where we uncover who we really are and our impact in the world. Then we move on to Others, exploring the quality of our relationships and learning to be bold enough to lean on others and ask for help. The next corner is Universe, one of my favorites. There we look at what it means to be a leader who can sense what’s needed in a room, in a company, in the world. We tune in to the bigger picture of leadership and collective responsibility. Finally, we get to legacy. Getting clear on why we do the work we do so we don’t end up working to make time and pay bills, but truly connect with our life purpose and make it real.

 

Define Bold Leadership Culture in your own words?

 

Bold Leadership is about creating a more daring world and having an active role in it. It’s about honoring integrity in leadership practice, change in collective consciousness, and accountability in individuals.

 

Every book has a story of how it came into existence. Talk to us about the story of your latest book ‘Bold Reinvented.’ How did the book come about, and what are some of the points that hope reads can apply after reading your book?

 

 

The book comes out of my own work of taking bigger risks and stepping into my own BOLD leadership. I’ve felt for a long time that I had a book in me. It was just a matter of time until I couldn’t hold it in and had to make it real. I’m so glad I did. If there’s only one thing readers can remember from this book, I hope it’s to take their own risks in living their life purpose. You are so needed. Behind every creative project, every company, every innovation, lies courageous individuals bold enough to step into the unknown with both feet. If we don’t do the work that calls us forth, so much of what we love would be missing, and so much of our impact that can make a meaningful change out there in the world would stay unrealized. I hope my book ignites your BOLDNESS and invites you to put some skin in the game and bring your leadership in service of your world.

 

What is one of the things that you enjoy doing when you are not teaching business owners how to lead and manage the world?

 

I enjoy spending time with my family, my six-year-old son, and my husband. Only when I feel their presence consciously and my deep sense of joy because of it do I realize that there is nothing more precious than the moments we share. I guess in simple language. You’d call it quality time. In these moments, there is not much that I am doing. I am just being present.

 

If you can talk to one famous business owner in the world, who would it be and why?

 

My curiosity goes in a different direction. I’d like to speak to many unknown people around the world that have brought significant, meaningful change to their environments by taking some sort of a risk. By that, I mean those people who took personal risks to make this world more human, and we perhaps do not know about them, and so we miss the opportunity to get inspired and empowered by their personal experience. I’d like to hear their stories, learn from their stories, and tell their stories as a part of our truly meaningful human legacy.

 

 

 

 

 

Categories
Growth Management Personal Development

Chatting with Bart Jackson about ‘CEO of Yourself’.

Every once in a while a book comes along and changes my worldview, and ‘CEO of Yourself: Getting Down to the Business of Your More Rewarding Life’, penned by Bart Jackson is one of those books. For those just starting out, the seasoned executive, and everyone in between this book provides innovative methods that can help them meet, and exceed their life goals, and increase their happiness level. That is the beauty of the ‘CEO of Yourself’, which may well be why it has caused a stir in the business world and the literary scene. Recently Bart sat down with me so I could find out more about this amazing read.

 

Bart, you’re last several books, and of course your radio show have been about business – Now you’ve penned ‘CEO of Yourself’, what inspired this one?  Isn’t it a departure from strictly business?

 

Your right, Mike this one is more personal.  But for years I had been doing a little segment on our The Art of the CEO radio show in which I said “That the good lord has given you the title and privileges of CEO of Yourself.. and that’s the most important position you will ever hold in your career.” Folks loved this discussion point. They all wanted more out of their lives, and didn’t seem to be getting it.

 

So what did they want? 

 

Well actually Mike we surveyed literally thousands of folks in all states of life, asking just that. They wanted real, back-slapping friends – respect and promotion at work – exotic adventure – but my favorite – the one that wrapped it all up – came from one gentleman who responded, “I want to wake up happy…spontaneously singing loud, bellowsome tones in the shower that will make my teenage daughter blush crimson with embarrassment.”

 

I wish him well.  But what exactly do you mean by ‘CEO of Yourself,’ and how does it bring about this more rewarding life?

 

Well the truth is Mike that most business folks, like all the C-suiters I know, handle their business leadership positions masterfully. They enter their workplace with a solid vision – they scrutinize each situation – they assess their assets – they see all the decisions, and hunt up the opportunities – then they select a path and enlist all the right people to bring that opportunity to fruition. In short, they act as the chief executing officer within their realm.

 

Yet, here’s the sad part – and what really inspired me to write this book. At the end of the workday, so many of them dump all that powerful self-mastery model in the desk drawer and head for home. They face their own lives not with a vision – but with a wishful fantasy.  They see days stacked with obligations and directives from others. And they’re not making those decisions that would guide them toward fulfillment, partially because they don’t see a life filled with choices, and partially because they don’t see those choices as theirs to make. So they fall into default mode.

 

 

All throughout ‘CEO of Yourself’, you talk about creating the Enterprise of You.  What do you mean by that, and how do you get this self startup started?

 

By viewing yourself as an enterprise, I’m simply asking you to launch into realizing the person you want to be, and set that person creating the life you want to live. The same way you would lay vision and plans for a company to create a product.  You and your life are an enterprise actively governed along the course you have designed and choose. And the launching part of this self startup is the most fun – and the most neglected: you walk around your warehouse and take count of all your individual assets: Your strengths, interests, friends, associates, and emotions – all of it.

 

Take you, for instance, Mike. If I were recording Mike Beas’ assets, I’d include your concept strength – your ability to distill a situation and present it in understandable segments. Of course, I add your skills at ferreting out opportunities…your broad network of friends.  But I’d definitely include one asset that you’d probably neglect: your emotional stance – you view life with humor and with quiet competence – you have that calm confidence of a Christian with four aces.  We all have a lot more assets than we tend to count, and you need to discover those assets if you are to employ them toward your vision.

 

‘CEO of Yourself’ sets forth an entire program for self fulfillment and an enriched life, from your first vision and attitudes to enlisting aid from others.  Can you distill it for us?  What’s your real message with this book? 

 

I’ll give you three of them, Mike.

 

#1 – You already have all you need. You – just as you are – are capable of seizing that enriched, joyful life you’re dreaming about. This isn’t a makeover book because you don’t need to make yourself over. Your marvelous self possesses tools, principles, and personal power in abundance.  It is my fervent wish that each reader sees these tools, and employs them with a grin and gusto.

 

#2 – You are the sole best expert on what you desire in life. You – no one else – are the one to craft your dynamic vision. You cannot control the hand Fate deals you, but within those circumstances You are the master of your attitudes, actions, and decisions.

 

#3 – Oh, for god’s sakes have fun – lots of fun. If you’re not having fun, and you’re not waking up to a spark of spontaneous enthusiasm, well, change it Mr. CEO – change your situation and/or give your marvelous self an attitude adjustment – make it so.

 

Even this distillation has a lot of parts, Bart. Could I further distill it and say that you just telling folks to follow their passion?

 

Bart: Oh heavens no, Mike. I tried following my passion once, but then I found it was illegal in 47 states. “Follow your passion” is like telling a competitive weightlifter to “Just be strong.” ‘CEO of Yourself’ aims at setting out an entire training table for your personal fulfillment. And since you are CEO who knows what’s best for you, you simply select from each offering in this book the ones that are valuable to you.

 

You keep insisting, Bart, that others are forever trying to take away your decision-making mastery, in ways that serve their agendas, not yours.  In fact, you have an entire chapter about the “Beggars at Your Door.”  Who are these beggars?

 

They are the subtle soul solicitors who want a piece of you, because their survival depends on your obedience. Today, the average American will be assaulted by 3,000 persuasive messages urging him to vote this way, believe in this faith, work harder for the company’s profits, buy this car, or put this deodorant under your arms. Each one desperately seeks your cash, allegiance, or even your soul. They are begging you to decide in their interest. Trouble is, they typically don’t come on like beggars, but they present themselves as a grand authority, that you would be stupid or evil not to obey. They develop salvation myths: “You need this to be a good patriot, to achieve respect, to find romance.”

 

This attempt to win your decision, in one sense, makes them competition, even the enemy. Yet the good news is that you are the CEO of you. You may give them your cash or allegiance, but they cannot take it from you.   And like any good chief executive, you will hunt through their offerings, select the pieces that benefit you the best, and discard the chaff. As with any competition, partial partnerships are always an option.

 

Bart, you write about the importance of developing personal principles when creating the Enterprise of You. But you insist that every life principle must bring benefit to you. Isn’t that kind of selfish?

 

Each of us needs to forge personal beliefs – principles that we use to guide our actions. As life comes racing at you, if you already have this core of beliefs, you can handle it swiftly.  You’ve got a grounding to help you decide your course. ‘Tis vital for your business and your life. You may have worked out the belief that each individual you encounter deserves a basic respect, or that each person deserves the maximum opportunity for the pursuit of happiness.  All I am asking is that as you form these beliefs, be sure to see how they bring you personally some benefit. To follow a creed only because Dad, the President, Christ, or some other authority says so isn’t good enough. You’ve got to personally believe it and envision the reward. If you labor under some principle that demands only a sacrifice of you with nothing in return, you’ll either abandon it quickly or grind along joylessly, spiraling into bitterness.

You can find out more about Bart Jackson on his website.

Link: bartsbooks.com

Get the CEO of Yourself TODAY:

 

 

 

Categories
Culture Growth News and Politics Personal Development

In Conversation with Bestselling Novelist Sally Fernandez

When Sally met Frank she discovered her style of writing and began seamlessly blending fact with fiction…or fiction with fact…you be the judge. So, if you relish suspense thrillers with a tinge of conspiracy you will enjoy Sally Fernandez’ novels. Readers have said she pens riveting plots of intrigue and political awakening.

But she wasn’t always twisting facts with fiction. Heavily endowed with skills acquired in banking she embarked on her writing career. Fernandez’ focus on computer technology, business consulting, and project management, enhanced by business and technical writing proved to be a boon. Her books of fiction also reflect the knowledge garnered from her business experiences, while living in New York City, San Francisco, Hong Kong, and Florence, Italy.

Fernandez’ foray into writing fiction officially began in 2007 when the presidential election cycle was in full swing. The overwhelming political spin by the media compelled her to question the frightening possibilities the political scene could generate. As a confirmed political junkie, she took to the keyboard armed with unwinding events and discovered a new and exciting career.

The Beekeeper’s Secret, the latest release with multiple five-star reviews, is the sixth novel and the second in the Max Ford Mystery Thriller series. It is preceded by the Award-Winning Climatized, soon to be a major motion picture, featuring Maxine Ford as the female protagonist. Fernandez’ prior Simon Hall Political series is comprised of Brotherhood Beyond the Yard, Noble’s Quest, The Ultimate Revenge and Redemption. Each book provides an exhilarating platform for the next, with a gripping narrative that challenges the reader to put the book down. The development of the other characters has created a lasting bond between them and the reader, especially now that Max has taken center stage.

A world traveler, Fernandez has visited every continent and over fifty countries. Her adventure travels with her husband, also the content editor-in-residence, include a scientific expedition in Antarctica, four African safaris, archaeological digs in Majorca and Peru, along with high-altitude treks in Bhutan, Tibet, and Mongolia. They continue to travel extensively throughout the world. I had a chance to come up with this prolific writer on her thoughts on Climate change as her bestselling novels, this is what she shared up with me.

 

Climate Change is a major element in the plotline of your new bestselling book Climatized (Max Ford Thriller Book 1) and it evolved in a very unexpected way, can you talk a bit about this and why you made this choice when writing this rather thrilling read?

 

In my earlier series, Simon Hall Political Thrillers, I touched on the issue of Agenda 21, a non-binding treaty that was developed in conjunction with the United Nations. It dealt with sustainable development which encompassed global warming, cheered on by Al Gore. I had questions about the validity of the statements that were being bandied and I ended up following the money. Not a pretty picture, but you must read my novel The Ultimate Revenge to come to that conclusion!

 

Then in 2015, the term Global Warming had morphed into Climate Change, reportedly a phenomenon that cannot be challenged. The topic was still front and center, in fact, it was so hot that it was left out of the dining room along with religion and politics. So when I decided to create a new series to give my Maxine Ford character a stage of her own, I took a different tack and began to follow the science.

 

What was fascinating about the project is that I incorporated real scientists into my storyline. Unlike my previous novels, I paired up my fictional characters with real organizations and real-life experts. So after the manuscript was completed, I set out to contact the various scientists to explain what I had done. One of my experts was Dr. Hal Doiron, Chairman of The Right Climate Stuff research team comprised of former Apollo astronauts, scientists, and engineers. Hal and other members of his research team, especially Tom Wysmuller agreed to review the manuscript. Needless to say, I was thrilled at their willingness to read and fact-check. It turned out to be a remarkable collaboration. From their meticulous details, explanations, suggestions, and corrections, it was clear they had devoted the time and interest to read the manuscript thoroughly. Hal’s review of the book was so eloquent that it became the Foreword.

 

This collaboration offered me an opportunity to speak to a group of NASA veterans at the Johnson Space Center in Houston. I remember I opened my talk by saying that giving a presentation is not rocket science, but imparting information to a group of rocket scientists was quite daunting. However, once I got over my two seconds of stage fright, I was warmly received as they listened intently to my explanation of the misnomers of anthropogenic global warming. Sadly, both Hal and Tom have recently passed away, but their memory lives on in Climatized.

 

The Beekeeper’s Secret, the second book in the Max Ford series, is truly one of your breakout books. Maxine Ford, the protagonist, goes on a thrilling adventure, coming up against Big PhRMA and the FDA during her investigation. She is also on a quest to find the Beekeeper. Why did you choose to have a beekeeper be a pivotal character in this story? What inspired you to create this compelling and enthralling storyline – and add Big PhRMA and the FDA into the mix. Clearly, it was a brilliant and perhaps prophetic choice given the current pandemic. 

 

My publisher, David Dunham, who also sadly died a few years ago, inspired the original concept for my storyline. In David’s fight against pancreatic cancer, he decided to turn to holistic medicine. And while he researched various remedies, he discovered some disturbing events. There were reports through various sources that many holistic doctors had met their untimely, and in many cases, suspicious deaths. Several of the practitioners also had run-ins with the FDA. Through my sleuthing, I discovered that in 2015, at the time I was writing the book, taxpayers funded the FDA with $331.6 million. During that same year, Big PhRMA funded the FDA with $791.1 million, which means 71% of the FDA’s funding comes from Big PhRMA. That of course begs the question, who is really in charge? I crawled into the weeds a little further and discovered that in 2017 radiation and chemotherapy drugs produced $100 billion in revenues annually with predicted profits to increase 8% each year going forward. My conspiratorial mind kicked into gear as I began to see how Alternative Medicine could pose a threat to the pharmaceutical industry. Imagine if natural cures replaced radiation and chemotherapy.

 

Ah ha, the Beekeeper! Well, that was serendipity. I just happened to be reading an article in the Life Extension Magazine about the extensive benefits of bee pollen, including in the treatment of cancer. The fact that it is natural also meant it could not be regulated by the FDA.

 

So my story starts with a senator dying in the Amazon jungle and a beekeeper meeting his death 4000 thousand miles away in New Mexico.  And yes, a bee has something to do with it, but that is The Beekeeper’s Secret, so I can’t tell you. However, somewhere along the way, I did invent a cure for cancer.

 

You are an avid traveler, so I have to ask you, what was your favorite travel adventure, and conversely what was your most challenging one? Also, do your travels end up in your books?

For me, favorite and challenging are synonymous. So, I would have to lump together my high-altitude treks in Bhutan, Tibet, and Mongolia. When you first arrive it is always important to take a few days to acclimate to the thin air. For example, when you arrive in Lhasa, Tibet you are already at approximately 11,000 feet. Ultimately, we climbed up to 25,000. All three countries are drastically different, but I most enjoyed Bhutan and Tibet because of the peaceful lifestyle of the Buddhists.

 

I’ve traveled to 55 countries and have lived in Asia and Europe. Thus far, only Europe has crept into my stories. In fact, in my first novel, Brotherhood Beyond the Yard, half of the plotline takes place in Florence, Italy, where I was living at the time. The Italian adventure picks up again in Noble’s Quest. And then, Max goes racing around Italy in Climatized. I’m working on my third Max Ford Thriller, The Infiltrator’s Shadow, dealing mostly with people in other parts of the world…so you can be sure China will be in there somewhere!

 

Climatized is being made into a major motion picture bringing Max Ford to life in a different way. If you had control over who plays Max, who would it be and why?


Max is my alter ego, my wannabee kick-ass spy within. So of course, she is intelligent, complicated, vulnerable, and lethal. My Hollywood team is currently, polishing the script and will be approaching a series of potential directors in the coming weeks. So that is the first step. But when we are ready to cast it would be awesome if we were able to get Charlize Theron. Then there is Maggie Q. And rumor has it that Gina Carano is interested. I know they are totally different. But all of them are natural beauties, and also possess some tomboyishness. My Max has to be tough and able to play with the big boys.

 

We heard you are planning a conference with some of the most renowned scientists and astronauts in the world giving speeches and talking about our Climate, which given the Presidential Debate was a hot topic on the agenda.   I know it is a bit early to have all of the details, but would you be able to tell us a little more about the event and what others in attendance can expect? 

 

You mentioned that Climate Change is a hot topic, and I believe it will continue to be for some time. So, I originally assembled a panel of experts to place the issue of Climate Change under the microscope and separate the rhetoric from the science. Keiser University in West Palm Beach has graciously donated its facility for the all-day event that was scheduled for March 12, 2021. Unfortunately, it was postponed due to the uncertainties of COVID-19. However, in the meantime, I established The Institute for Climate Change, a non-profit foundation with the mission to revive the practice of rigorous debate into the causes and consequences of climate change, as well as the associated costs and benefits. Also, to improve the social discourse on matters of science-based public policy, thereby facilitating the participation of a broad range of experts. I think it is most important to remind citizens of their responsibilities to evaluate, and not merely advocate, different points of view on this important topic, encouraging them to pose fundamental scientific and other questions of the experts we plan to engage.

We are incredibly honored to have amazing scientists agree to both virtual and live events in the future and hope to see Dr. William Happer, American Physicist; Larry Bell, Space Architecture; Dr. Jay Lehr, Geological Engineer, Kelvin Kemm, Nuclear Physicist, and other return to the podium. The organization is in its early stages of construction, but stay tuned for coming attractions!

Categories
Growth Personal Development

BIJOU SET TO RELEASE MONSTEROUS NEW “STREET KNOWLEDGE” EP, 9.17

BIJOU is unveiling the final workings of his newest EP, “Street Knowledge”, and I have to say that this is truly a work of art. From start to finish BIJOU is an artist that takes you on a journey of sound that will not disappoint. If you are looking for a weekend vibe that you will want to download and stream over and over again then this “Street Knowledge is the EP for you. Full Support – Michael Beas, Raver Magazine. 

Full Six-Track EP Debuts on 9.17, Pre-Save Now

More Info:

Rising from the streets of Phoenix with a monstrous six-track list in hand, BIJOU is unveiling the final workings of his newest EP, “Street Knowledge”,  this Friday, September 17, 2021. Following a hefty year of studio grind, along with the album release of Diamond City, the proclaimed G-house producer has grouped everything he has learned and more to deliver this unworldly masterpieceSoon to be out on DND RECS, this EP combines a rhythmic bass with articulations by rappers such as Rick Hyde, Tony Watts, Youngworld, Chase Fetti, and ElCamino. 

“Roots are a nod to where it all started, and that’s what this project is all about. I took it to my roots in Phoenix and Buffalo. Two cities that are often overlooked and slept on,” says BIJOU. “I had the opportunity to work with some of my favorite rappers each one having their style while keeping things raw, street, and no BS. “Street Knowledge” is unequivocally every piece of me, what I’ve been through, and where I am now.”

With “Code Blue,” “Rockstar,” and “Curses” already streaming, the introspective project has already amassed hundreds of thousands of plays on Spotify. “Street Knowledge” is Bijou’s second EP of the year following 187 Proof. Expect live national and international performances this fall.

Track list:

  • “Street Knowledge”
  • “Curses” featuring Rick Hyde
  • “Rockstar” featuring Tony Watts
  • “Code Blue” featuring ElCamino
  • “Hit Boys” featuring Youngworld
  • “Quick Draw” featuring Chase Fetti

About BIJOU:

BIJOU, or Benjamin Dorman, is leading the G-house movement within the Arizona scene but is not limited to the confines of the desert. Ben has elevated his career to new heights at rapid speed after his 2016 show-stopping collaboration Hello” with G-house staple Dr. Fresch. Following an album plus two EPs released within a year period4, the growth of the BIJOU is only projected up. Dorman has consistently proven successful in the most career-defining years.

CONNECT WITH BIJOU

Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | Spotify

(Artwork credit: Anoinette Cauley)

Categories
Growth Personal Development

Exclusive Interview with GRAMMY ® nominated Trance Legends Cosmic Gate on ‘MOSAIIK’

GRAMMY ® nominated trance legends Cosmic Gate aka Nic Chagall and Bossi have proved to be a matchless musical union. The last 20 Years set them on the course to becoming Germany’s most enduringly successful electronic music duo. Smashing the biggest festivals and road-blocking clubs worldwide, got them highest climber on DJ Mag’s Top 100 chart and racked up plentiful other awards & nominations along the way. Numerous Singles like ‘am2pm’, ‘Fall Into You’ and ‘Falling Back’, countless Remixes and 9 Artist Albums, including scene-defining classics like ‘Be Your Sound’, ‘Fire Wire’ and ‘Exploration of Space’, their star on dance music’s walk of fame has long since been laid.

Cosmic Gate (aka Nic Chagall and Bossi) is thrilled to release the first stage of their hotly anticipated new artist album. Trailed throughout 2021 by vanguard single releases and stunning live streams, ‘MOSAIIK’ will platform nine sensational cuts from the GRAMMY-nominated duo.

Mirroring the same delivery system adopted by their 2017 ‘Materia’ albums, seasoned CG fans will already be familiar with ‘MOSAIIK’ release dynamic. Shared across two ‘Chapters’, ‘MOSAIIK’s ‘II’ styled title is a direct nod to the group’s eleventh artist long-player.

“One of the best albums of the year in my opinion is ‘MOSAIIK’. Every single track has a message, a deeper meaning that changes between people and persons alike. While I have been a fan of Cosmic Gate for years, ‘MOSAIIK’ to me has a vibe that is all on its own. Each track has its own element that you can take from, that you can connect with in ways that inspire. To me this album is the glue that unites and holds together after an entire year keeping us away from the music that connected us all. I had a chance to interview Nic Chagall and Bossi after their global release of the album in NYC, this is what they shared up with us”

Full Support – Michael Beas, Raver Magazine 

What 2 words describe the journey you’re taking your fans on with the release of your new album MOSAIIK?

 

FEEL IT

 

How does the title MOSAIIK reflect the world we’re living in right now?

 

The name Mosaiik was reflecting the way we worked in putting this album together, less describing what was going on out in the world while writing it, even as quite sure a lot of those to say the least unusual circumstances we lived in, reflect in the music, that’s needless to say. Mosaiik, describes the many parts of the work you do when producing an album, sometimes several tracks at the same time. put a track aside, wait for Vocals to be written, start something new, get a Vocal demo that suddenly puts attention and attraction to, so many little different pieces bits and parts, fractures which in the end become one, our own Mosaiik. About the spelling, we took the liberty to write it with two II, simply as Mosaiik is our 11th studio Album, we liked the idea and think it stands out a bit like that.


At what point did you both know it was time to start a new project following your release of “Forward Ever, Never Backward?”

 

Somehow, after the 20 Years Album (Forward Ever Backward Never), it did not just feel like a restart for a new Album, as we have seen it several times ago, the start for Mosaiik  felt a bit like the start into a new era.

 

There were some signs that our fans are as ready as we were, for an acceptance of a deeper, progressed sound and production direction, as you might know already from some of our  latest remixes or from listening to the diversity of influences when listening to our WYM Radio show. No one told us we needed to do this change, we very naturally felt this from within, as we always followed our intuitions over the years.

 

When the clubbing world was pretty much separated from their dancefloors in March 2020 on top, circumstances provided even more artistic latitude. Thus ‘MOSAIIK’s musicmaking became less symmetric and floor-focused, and all the richer for it. as weird as it sounds, we somehow became even more free in our work, while life outside was actually the opposite, we tried to take circumstances as a chance, not an obstacle.

 

After a good while then, we laid all of ‘MOSAIIK’s ideas, drafts and demos out, and started to realize quite quick, there is so much material, we will split the album into two again, as we did before with the Materia series.

Available now across all digital formats, ‘MOSAIIK Chapter One’  is ready to stream/buy from today (with a CD edition set to follow with ‘Chapter 2’).

For More Information 

facebook.com/cosmicgate
twitter.com/cosmicgate
soundcloud.com/cosmicgateofficial
instagram.com/realcosmicgate

blackholerecordings.com
soundcloud.com/blackholerecordings
facebook.com/blackholerecordings
twitter.com/BlackHoleRec

Categories
Growth Personal Development

JOACHIM PASTOR SHARES LONG-ANTICIPATED DEBUT ALBUM: ‘GREATER MESSAGE’

“After listening to Joachim Pastor music for the first time, I have to say that I was transcended into another element of trance. With a riveting twist this producer has invigorated the mind though sound and time that I myself will not long forget. My musical pallet has now been expanded and it is no wonder that Armada Music scooped him up under their label for the ‘Greater Message’ that his music is delivering. If you are like me and this is your first time listening to Joachim Pastor music I hope that you can validate what I am saying about his sound. If you are a veteran listener to his music, you know why you have come back. Regardless if you are a new or an existing fan the musical journey that the ‘Greater Message’ has delivered upon will not disappoint. Download, stream, and hit repeat so that you yourself can embark upon the Joachim Pastor’ music creation. Full Support – Michael Beas, Raver Magazine” 

More on Joachim Pastor 

For Joachim Pastor, the past few years have all revolved around change. When the French creator stepped away from Hungry Music, it was because he’d reached the end of a cycle, because there was this whole musical universe still begging to be explored. He saw the bigger picture, took the leap and joined Armada Music to unlock these endless possibilities and directions. And that jump into the deep end has now culminated in something remarkable. His debut album: ‘Greater Message’.

Listen to Joachim Pastor – Greater Message

Showcasing his innate musicality across the widest spectrum, ‘Greater Message’ takes the emotive qualities of Joachim Pastor’s melody-centric music and multiplies it into infinity. Propelled onward by his impassioned notes and chords as well as the punchy and energetic beats, all thirteen tracks on the album are steeped in curiosity and discovery, the exact things that sparked this incredible new journey to begin with.

 

“The past years have been full of inevitable change for me”, Joachim Pastor explains. “Stepping away from something familiar to jump into the unknown is always scary, but I landed at Armada Music with hope and am now proud to present my debut album. It symbolizes what I love about music, as each track has a life and a soul. I tried to combine the energy of electronic beats with the emotion of melodies to create something unique.”

As evident in productions such as title track ‘Greater Message’ (feat. Florence Bird) and the heavily inspired ‘Saint-Louis’ (feat. Nathan Nicholson), Joachim Pastor’s debut album is one of special meaning and higher purpose. And if you let the music sweep over you and allow yourself to see, you too will find that this ‘Greater Message’ is a story worth telling.

About Joachim Pastor

Inspired by the works of seminal artists such as Daft Punk, Sonata Arctica and Jean-Michel Jarre, Joachim Pastor’s melodious brand of electronica offers a sense of sophistication not easily found in today’s music world. Designed to make listeners feel with every fiber of their being, his music is an expression of emotion with a danceable twist, endorsed by hundreds of thousands of fans on Spotify alone as well as those who witnessed his performances at the likes of Dour, Tomorrowland, Paleo, Olympia, Solidays, DGTL, Pleinvrees and more.

 

Follow Joachim Pastor

Facebook: www.facebook.com/JoachimPastor

Instagram: www.instagram.com/joachim_pastor

Twitter: https://twitter.com/joachimpastor

Youtube: www.youtube.com/user/JoachimPastor

SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/joachim-pastor

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/6eNOjuJSfKkAvbiGW90AkZ?si=XxYdHmCsSAuP7q0pKZuzOw

Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/artist/joachim-pastor/286222024

 

Categories
Growth Personal Development

An exclusive Interview with the author of award winning novel Ex Libris – available now on Amazon

Ex Libris has won a number of accolades including the winner of The Global Book Awards. We caught up with the author John Oehler to discover more about the background to his Bestselling book.

 

 

What prompted you to write this book?

 

As with most of my novels, the idea for Ex Libris began with an incident.  My wife and I were on a pre-Christmas vacation in Prague when we visited a monastery with two libraries — one for so-called Forbidden Books.  I began to wonder what could be more forbidden than a text that contradicted a fundamental aspect of the Bible.  The hotel we stayed in and the Christmas Market in Prague’s Old Town Square provided settings, and a local restaurant introduced us to working-class food.

 

 

How long did it take to go from idea to publication?

 

Ex Libris took me about 5 years.  Why so long?  Because I’m meticulous about accuracy and details.  Accuracy because I want readers who’ve experienced the things or situations I describe to say, “He got that right.”  Details, including smells and taste, because they help to draw the reader into the story.  I also take a lot of care with dialogue and mood.  All of this takes time — and numerous rewrites.  My hope is that readers will cruise through the story with no idea of how much effort it took.

 

 

What was your biggest challenge in getting your book written?

 

Probably my biggest challenge was all the research I did to get the settings correct.  Paris I knew by heart.  Not so for most of the other places.  Among them, the gypsy enclave was the most fun, along with depicting gypsy culture in a way that would potentially provide new insights for readers.  Creating the character of the blind painter was also a challenge, and a fun one.

 

 

What aspects of your book do you think readers will find the most fascinating?

 

I hope they find the biblical conundrum fascinating.  It was the impetus for the story.  Apart from that, I think they’ll enjoy the mystery, intrigue, and twists.

 

 

  1. When you did the final read-through for the book what was your favorite part of the book?

 

I like the gypsy/Roma stuff.  I wanted a gypsy hero because I’d never seen one in another book, and the Roma people have been persecuted throughout their history.  Real Roma may disagree, but I like the way I developed that side of the protagonist’s character.  I also like the “forbidden” book I created, which wasn’t easy.  Fortunately, I had some excellent help from a rabbi.  As an aside, my wife, surprisingly to me, likes the parts of the story that transpire through the rapid-fire text messages.

Get your copy of Ex Libris today on Amazon