I got an email from a reader asking about The Cellular Patch and whether or not I actually use them and endorse them. The price of this device came into question at $100 for a month’s supply which got me thinking about the topic for this week’s podcast, investing in yourself.
I invest in myself each and every month. I purchase books, audio’s, food products, nutritional formula’s, The Cellular Patch, organic food and personal development courses.
If I can get even once piece of information out of a book or a course that I can apply to my life and improve, then it’s well worth it.
Then, to compound on the success of that “piece of information”, I get to use this blog to tell you about it as well, thus possibly changing another life if you take action on the recommendation.
I recommend things.
This week’s podcast is about investing in yourself because YOU, dear reader are important.
[audio:17-sept-07-investing-in-yourself.mp3]
Links mentioned in the podcast: Burn The Fat, Millionaire Mind Intensive, The Cellular Patch, Sunrider Foods
I invest in myself because how I’m my most important commodity. My body and my brain are here to serve me.
I truly hope that you invest in yourself as well
Maybe it’s just me. Maybe I’m reading too much into these couple of emails that I got. What’s the standard opinion out there?
Please, leave a comment. Do you invest in yourself? Do you buy books, magazines, subscribe to things that cost money? Do you eat a particular line of nutritional products like Sunrider yourself?
Leave a comment, I’d like to know
i definitely invest in myself. its important to do that. i purchase nutritional products and certain foods. i even purchase “exercise” gear.
I do invest in myself but I am also a wise consumer. I read about and investigate things before I purchase it. I also use my gut instinct.
I also believe for most things, you have to really try it for yourself and see if you notice a difference. I have tried some products which did nothing and I have also found some gems that I use on a continual basis.
Exactly Michele. Research the item, do your due diligence, then make an educated decision.
Then, give the product, book or advice a good try. I suggest committing to 3 months or 6 months.
then again, make a decision based on results. Keep a journal of the changes as well. The results might not be what you expected, but may also be an improvement you hadn’t thought of or even related to the product at first glance.
I had a client that wanted to lose weight. He started on the product. He lost not a pound. However, his doctor realized that his blood pressure had improved and removed the blood pressure medications. My clients’ desire was weight loss, but his body wanted to deal with the blood pressure issue first.
That’s why you have to consider all the improvements and give it a good 3 to 6 month test
Thanks for the comment, both or you