The Greatest Evil in Self-Publishing - and 4 Methods to Fight It




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Summary: The world's greatest writers and composers have died because of it. It's caused Wars to be lost and Nations defeated. It's present in most people's lives - and keeps them broke and lonely. Most business self-help books deal mostly or only with this and it's ramifications. Napoleon Hill's "Think and Grow Rich" had fighting this one element as key to any success. You won't believe this evil - it's simple, it's well known. Worse than Cancer, it's reached epidemic proportions, yet there is no cure. DistractionYes, that's it. Distraction. But look through your own life and you can see that this was present in every failure you had - to one degree or another. Look through the lives of politicians and celebrities. Trace back both their successes and failures and you'll find the ones who won their campaigns, who became top stars - they all got their Life Distractions under control. Napoleon Hill specified that people had to develop a Burning Desire to succeed at anything. Yet it is all too simple, and that one fact keeps people overlooking how evil Distraction is. This is the nature of social media, of hours spent in surfing the Internet with no real result to your well-intentioned and very necessary research. The term "rabbit hole" was developed to tell about Internet distractions people would fall down into. And this post is written after I found another afternoon spent doing all these actions instead of just getting my next books published. It's not that I didn't have more work to do, it wasn't that it was difficult. It wasn't that it was going to cost me money - except by not doing it. How this Evil reared its ugly head - again.I was distracted from what I'd listened to on the radio as I drove around on other necessary chores. I was listening to the radio only because I'd run out of Rainmaker podcasts to listen to on the ride. What came on was one of my few really favorite radio hosts - and I had another half-hour on the road before I could get back to my desk and real work. That was the problem: it was a "favorite".  I found the host stimulating - even too stimulating. Favorite as in: more than anything else. It became a distraction from anything else. And what happened next was that the host said something so controversial that I started mentally riffing off on my own.  Kinda like watching a good movie and then you're thinking about that movie or humming the theme song for the next week. I knew I was sunk at that point - I wasn't going to get much done that day. My mental riff took over everything. In my long personal history, I've never met anyone who has conquered this completely. You may have experienced something like this in your own life. Going along, having plans for the day, all that - and then you find yourself doing something completely not on your to-do list: distracted. After a couple of decades distilling self-help and personal improvement books, I've found some solutions. Yes, there are simple ways to get this under control. Would you like to know them? How to Fight Distraction and Win1. "Plan your work, work your plan." That is probably too obvious. Make a simple to-do list, set it up in a logical sequence, work it from the top down. If you find out you are doing something else, then drop that and get back to whatever it was you were doing. That solves minor distractions. How about chronic ones? 2. Clean your room.This is that Feng Shui stuff - if your work space has anything - anything - in it which isn't conducive to what you should be doing, get rid of it.  Like Thoreau and his cabin at Walden Pond, I've read of writers who got a remote cabin with nothing in it except a table and his laptop. And that laptop had the USB and network ports filled and glued shut. Nothing else in that cabin. He could only sit there and write. That's a bit extreme. But you can see that it's one way to get work done. Another writer started when she got back from sending her kids to school and ended when they came