•ABLE Newsletter: Traveling, Productivity & Stability
by Filipa Canelas | October 03 2021
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(A) Advice to ponder.
What do you need to feel stable?
This week I’ve been giving some thought to the concept of stability.
What does it mean exactly? Why do I need stability? Why do I actively search for it?
It is interesting how we tend to lean towards stability, even if facing a completely different path.
Even though I’m living in a new country, traveling more than usual, I still strive to find stability.
Maybe not the stability I was previously used to. But still, stability, in this new context.
I find stability in the “old” routines — meditation, exercise, waking up early, working on my desktop. The small things give me a ton of stability.
How do you find your stability?
(B) Blah, blah, blah.
Hi there!
This week I’ve been traveling through Marseille and Lyon (France). Both are beautiful cities, but Marseille gets my first vote.
I managed to get some stuff done while traveling. But the 5 a.m. flights often kill my neurons.
Still, it got me thinking about several ways to be productive while traveling:
Use dead periods to work (flights, long train rides, or waiting periods at the airport)
Wake up a few hours earlier to work (before leaving the accommodation to visit places)
Work in local coffee shops and absorb the culture/routines
Carry a notebook and let different cities inspire your work.
Do you have any productivity tips for traveling?
(L) Learn with me.
Around is Forward: The Productivity Cycle Behind Extraordinary Results
Do you want to reach consistent levels of productivity? Learn how to achieve meaningful accomplishment in a short period with Around is Forward: The Productivity Cycle Behind Extraordinary Results.
10 Excuses Holding you Back from Creating Content
When it comes to content creation, you might feel your head filled with excuses. You have deadlines coming up and not enough time in the day. You have more questions than answers.
Plus, what if no one reads it? What's the point?
These are some of the most common excuses I see when it comes to content creation.
(E) Expand your Mind.
Book: The 12 Week Year by Brian P. Moran & Michael Lennington
Quote: “Instead of interrupting, work on attracting” by Dharmesh Shah
Linkedin Post: 5.6 hours… Doing what?