Rich Schefren
For the past month I’ve had the privilege of participating in Rich Schefren’s Guided Profit System program. For those of you who don’t know who Rich Schefren is, it is my pleasure to be able to introduce you. But before doing that, I want to tell you that the first time I heard Rich speak I decided I didn’t like him. At all.
In September 2006 I attended an event in San Diego hosted by Ed Dale and Frank Kern for their Underachievers program. Rich was one of the internet marketing superstars who were presenting. As soon as he began his talk, I decided I didn’t like him. That’s not fair, I know. But it is the truth. This guy in a suit, with a New York accent, telling the audience about all his business accomplishments just didn’t sit right with me. This was about the time he released his free report, The Internet Business Manifesto. I hadn’t read it before I saw him speak. If I had, I would have been anxiously waiting for him to take the stage and would have hung on every word. Instead, my just punishment has been having spent two years trying to learn just part of what he’s taught me in a month.
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At my age, you’d think I’d know better
When I went to vote yesterday I found that I was not a registered voter. This came as quite a shock because I’ve been registered to vote since I was 18. I’m now 55.
I moved to another part of the state about a year and a half ago. I registered to vote at my new (now old) location, but didn’t realize that I had to register again when I moved ‘back home’ (old, now new location). When they say there are X number of voters in the State of California, they really mean there are ‘this’ many voters in Los Angeles County, ‘that’ many voters in Orange County and so on. I thought I was a registered voter in the State, not the county. After talking to the examiner at the Registrar of Voters yesterday, I am now clear on this matter. I was advised the only way I could vote was to drive to Ventura County (where I no longer live), 120 miles one way, in rush hour traffic, which in LA starts anytime after 2:00 PM. It was, unfortunately, 4:00. On the best of days it would take about 2 hours to get there; at this time on a typical day, it was questionable whether I could make it there in the 4 hours until the polls closed.
As embarrassing as it is to share this mishap with you, Read more






