It’s All in the Name

I google myself randomly, often. I want to be kept up to date with what comes up when people search for me.

Today, I realized something. I have an edge on the blade of search engine optimization. Nobody else has my name. At least, I haven’t seen any other “Lolita Allgyer” pop up on a Google search. Continue reading It’s All in the Name

My Time is Now

Month 2 of the Praxis bootcamp is focused on building a portfolio project. I love this module: it falls perfectly into my education ideal of project-based learning. My project is a podcast, focused on education. Read my previous project update here.

A key part of my project experience is focused on the marketing and sales aspect of the podcast.

Continue reading My Time is Now

Musings On My Life: a Free Verse

What is life, if I live with little impact?

What is freedom, if I do not free another soul?

My life cannot have meaning if I have no legacy.

My life will be in vain if I miss my destiny.

My destiny? to break the chains that bind the broken hearts;

To give the suffering spirits wings to soar the heights of life.

To thrive, and spread the message:

“Life is meant for living!”

So I hold close each heart entrusted to me.

I speak, to fill another soul with hope.

I love, that in my love another may find truth.

I’ll walk with passion, never looking back,

And live one moment at a time:

And as the moments turn to hours,

The hours into years,

Mark my words: my destiny will be completed.

Worst Work Fail?

While working for a dog breeder, I faced one of the biggest possible fails I could have ever imagined.

Princess was a poodle we had just bought. I had been earning her trust, spending time with her every chance I had.

This was the day I decided to let her run loose for the first time. The country property was around 3 acres. But on the north side of those 3 acres ran the county highway. I knew Princess was headstrong, and I didn’t want to risk her running onto the highway. So up until this day, we had taken walks on a leash.

The poodle did just fine, until I called her to come to me. Then I saw the look: that fiery glance of denial, recognizable in every strong-willed character. Princess turned and ran straight for the highway.

“No, Princess!” I screamed in my mind. But my voice managed to remain calm as I softly called her.

She turned, and like a spoiled, haughty heir to the throne, she pranced onward toward her doom.

I watched the scene happen in my mind, before the catastrophe actually struck. I couldn’t run; Princess was a hundred yards ahead of me and determined that she would not be managed. And she ran out onto the road like an idiot.

That very moment, a small car sped down the road into the dog. Princess was gone in an instant. But I stood there, thunderstruck. I couldn’t get the sights and sounds out of my head: that thud of the car hitting her little body, then watching her roll on the road and lie still.

Not only was I emotionally traumatized because of seeing an animal I loved die; I felt awful because I knew she was a $600 dog. Besides, her worth to my boss was much more, as each of her potential pups would sell for at least $400 apiece. I was in charge of a huge loss for this small business.

So I slowly trudged my 13 year old self out to the road with a shovel.  Not going to lie: I leaned on the shovel and cried. Thankfully a friend of our saw me and stopped to help me take poor Princess off the road.

My boss had watched the whole situation through the window. She understood that I had done everything I possibly could. That made the whole situation easier to bear. The battle was in my own mind.

I had faced the worst thing that could happen in the job that I was holding. But through this experience I gained an incredible mindset.

Even the worst possible scenario can’t take you down. Not unless you allow it to control you. I got up the next morning and loved those dogs with all my heart. I worked as hard as I could to make up for the loss. And greater than everything, I determined never to stop growing. Even if it means running into the biggest work fail ever.

 

But What If It Scares Me?

The book Go for No introduced a beautiful concept to me: Your comfort zone is not a static entity. It is constantly expanding or contracting.

That’s why it makes sense to do something that scares you every day. Push those limits of your comfort zone.

That’s why I’m starting a podcast. Does it scare me to make a commitment that large? Absolutely. Do I know everything about podcasting? Absolutely not. But that’s the fun in the journey, right?

I’m expanding my comfort zone. Here’s the ways starting a podcast will push my limits every day:

  • Audio Editing: What makes content pleasing to the ear? How can I maximize the time I spend editing?
  • Interviewing Skills: What makes a conversation flow? How do I bring out the best in each person I interview?
  • Technology: How much can I learn about the stats, the ins and outs, the background that makes each episode come together?
  • Relationships: How can I create healthy, strong connections by holding fun conversations with people?
  • Goal Setting: Can I make a schedule and stick to it over a long period of time? What is the best way to optimize my performance and make the most progress?
  • Education: What can I learn from each person I connect with?

Sure, it scares me! But that only makes me want to pursue it more. On to the next adventure!

Bored? Try Something New

There’s a magic involved with stepping out on a limb. The risk of attempting something previously uncharted makes a wonderful pathway in a  human’s brain. Personally, I have found that learning something completely different from anything I have ever pursued before spurs my creativity more than anything else could.

We were made to do some things on impulse. So look up that question you had, right away. Write down the ideas that fly into your brain. Learn something new.

Today, pursue something different; learn a fact you never had known before; experience life a new way. You’d be surprised to realize what kind of perspective it will give you! Who knows: you’re probably one idea away from changing the world!

Forward Tilt: One Year of Growth in a Podcast

I won’t forget the day I was researching alternative educational opportunities and I came across a recommendation for the podcast associated with the Praxis program, Forward Tilt. Being a go-getter and wanting to learn more about the mindset behind the program, I started the first episode. Several hours later, I had listened to all 10 episodes that had been created up to that point, and was bouncing on my toes waiting for the next episode release. (In other language, I was hooked.)

Continue reading Forward Tilt: One Year of Growth in a Podcast