2011: Don’t Move, Improve
Success will come only to those who are willing to have a little blind faith–in themselves, in their art, and in their ability to stand tall and take the world by storm.
Ashley Ambirge, The Middle Finger Project
With 2010 now over, a lot of people have been writing about their meditations on the previous year and what they have planned for the next (examples: Murray, Tristan, Steve Pavlina, Ingrid). I have spent a lot of time reflecting on 2010 myself, because it was a landmark year for me. My daughter was born December 31st, 2009, so 2010 was a full year with her changing dramatically. I had moved to a new city at the end of 2009, too, so 2010 was my first full year here experiencing the (hot) summer weather, exploring the city, adjusting to dealing with agressive idiots and morons. There have been many problems to deal with, too. It’s turning into a laundry list, and I write them here for me to remember in the future, and maybe some will find it unbelievable.
- January 2010, discovered black mold throughout our basement suite after having only lived there two months. Had to find a new place ASAP because of our newborn.
- March 2010, a month after living in our new apartment, my vehicle was broken into. Passenger side window smashed, GPS stolen, etc. The incredible thing is we have underground parking. It was someone within our building doing it.
- April, the transmission on my Jeep starts to act up and not shift properly. Not incredibly expensive to fix since it is just one part, not the entire transmission failing.
- June, make a road trip to see family with a side trip to see one friend. Said friend keeps delaying when to connect with us, and when we do connect, only has 30 minutes with us. Hotel + ferry + parking + food = $300 for a 30 minute visit.
- July, the month where I committed to sticking to the Primal Blueprint and setting up this blog. To date, I’ve lost 45 pounds and am under 200 lbs for the first time since University. The blog started off slowly, but I’ve learned a few things and reached 1,000 unique views in the month of December. Never thought I would get to that point after six months, so I’m happy.
- September, picked up a side gig for a week escorting a meeting group around the city. 70 hours during the week, and it was an absolute gong show of a job.
- October, mother-in-law lived with us for six weeks. An experience I hope I never have to go through again because it’s incredibly awkward at times – but we do get along so it could have been much, much worse. Also received a notice of a possible eviction from our place, for a few drops of oil in our parking stall of all things. To celebrate our first year in the Okanagan, we spent a few nights at the Sparkling Hill Resort, which I really should write up properly.
- November, turned 31. All downhill from here, I imagine!
- December, the most eventful month of the year. Vehicle was stolen this time (parked outside) and driven 5 blocks before being ditched because the transmission acted up on them. $300 for towing, $400 in repairs. I had three job interviews this month. With one of them, I had an offer at the end of it, but was told to wait a few days to think it through. When I called back, someone from another of their hotel’s had applied and they have a policy to hire internally first. That was a real bummer. I was short listed for another position, had a great interview, but never heard back either. Not even a courtesy email. Some people these days. In the last two weeks, there was my girlfriend’s birthday, my daughter’s first Christmas (spent with my girlfriend’s family), and my daughter’s first birthday on New Year’s Eve. It’s quite a whirlwind of a period and I will get to go through it every.single.year.
And that brings us to 2011. After enduring all the changes the past year and making some personal triumphs, how do I keep that up for the next year?
Don’t Move, Improve
It is tempting to move away from some of the problem areas in my life and start over, but I think the better solution is to improve upon the current situations that are problems. Moving away from them is, in a sense, quitting, and quitting is a negative experience in my opinion. Looking ahead to the new year, I am taking a cue from Meryl Evans who writes:
The experts’ suggestions for goal setting and planning overwhelm and paralyze many folks, including me. Rather than commit myself to particular goals at the beginning of the year, I watch my business and professional lives, do a little temperature-taking throughout the year, then make decisions based on what’s actually happening.
Here are my three simple steps:
- Figure out your passion.
- Create rules to support these passions.
- Make decisions based on the first two steps.
For 2011, I want to focus on three items that I know I am and can be passionate about 365 days of the year:
- My young family – daughter and girlfriend
- My health – mind, body, and spirit
- Four Sides blog
The first item is a no brainer. The second, is a common item for most, but I feel as though I’ve made huge strides with it in 2010 and can easily keep it up. I have read The 4 Hour Body by Timothy Ferriss (review part 1, part 2, part 3 is coming), and wish to focus more on body composition than fat loss. As I mentioned before, I have lost over 40 pounds through following The Primal Blueprint, but I want to improve upon these successes and make my body better than before. The diet is the main component of it, and now that my girlfriend is on board with it, I think both of us can go a long way with this.
The Four Sides blog has been growing, but isn’t at the level I would like it at. Here is the traffic summary from the stats provided by Squarespace.
I have discovered that my traffic remains consistent even when I do not post anything, and that my most popular posts are in regards to people/products, and not entirely my own ideas and opinions. Of course, my own ideas posts spark more conversation in the comments. I have been thinking about how to improve upon this mix, and improve the blog, without a major change in course (ie writing about a specific niche). Here are the three rules I want to stick with on this blog:
- Write one review (book, blog, product) a week, and one pensée post. Ideally, write at least one 1500 word pensée a month.
- Migrate the blog to WordPress when the contract is up in April with Squarespace for better control.
- Focus any inspirational reading on certain blogs and magazines to eliminate distractions.
I have decided that my overall motto for the new year is going to be:
Enhance the Personal
I want to make this blog more personal and passionate; make my life more personal and start living and working for my own needs, not to fill someone else’s.
If you have suggestions on how I should be doing things differently on this blog or want to share your own rules you are going to live by this year, please do share them. I have an insatiable curiousity to learn more.
And, because I simply can’t resist sharing this, here is my daughter, reading a book:


Jan 06, 2011 @ 18:40:52
Why have I just found your blog James? Someone should have tweeted about their post a long time ago. I like your theme. Sometimes geographical change is needed but I so agree with you that our primary concern should be the inner space. I have responded to that by attending to myself more too. You are on my feed now.
Jan 06, 2011 @ 22:01:50
I'm not sure why you just came across it now, because you should be seeing some of my posts show up on Facebook, and I have been putting them into Twitter, too. One of the things I did not do very well in the past year was say that the link was mine. I need to change that and mention my site in the tweet with the post title too. I keep hoping to find a post on your blog that I can write about here, but while education, classroom theory, etc. is interesting to me, I find it difficult to add anything to that conversation. Maybe some day.
For anyone else, Alan's blog is quite interesting if you're into technology being tied into the classroom and other improvements to how kids are being taught these days.
Jan 07, 2011 @ 03:46:54
We really appreciated your writing and your thoughts. An amazing and challenging year you have had! We definitely need to keep checking in and reading your work more often. It is very revealing about you and we admire your sharing on such a personal level. We're learning so much from you. We were interested in Meryl Evans – three simple steps and plan to try and use this model ourselves. We'll keep you posted.
Jan 08, 2011 @ 23:46:36
Sure bad things seemed to have happened, but at least you can say that you had an action packed year – not many people can get around to having such an eventful year like you
Jan 10, 2011 @ 10:25:53
I would much rather have a quieter year that wasn't quite so painful on the wallet. Having things happen is exciting at times, but not when it costs you several hundred dollars each time – keeping in mind, I was on employment insurance most of this past year. I suppose that things could always be worse than they were for me, though.
Jan 10, 2011 @ 13:41:04
Hi James,
I wandered over here from Tristan's blog to see your 2011 goals. Congrats on the birth of your gorgeous little girl and also on losing 40 pounds!
I like that you listed out your 3 main goals. #1 is doable and #3, focus, will take you places. I look forward to watching your journey and success in 2011.
Thanks,
Peggy Baron
Jan 10, 2011 @ 20:42:37
James sounds like you had the sort of year thats amazingly normal for parents. Not to good for finances or career, but a baby going from 0-1 is something else. Every day is precious.
I've just written a post about priorities, but yours are spot on. Business is important, but before you can really succeed you need a solid family behind you, so concentrate on the personal – you're absolutely right.
Jan 10, 2011 @ 22:42:15
@Peggy Thanks for your warm wishes. I'm really hoping to go places in the coming year and rediscover myself a bit. The past year has been tough not working, but I'm more comfortable with having a small family around than I was in January of 2010.
@Lesley It's true that every day is a precious moment potentially lost with a small child. On a daily basis, she's changing and discovering new sounds that she can make. I can already see her developing looks that are going to drive guys crazy when they're teenagers – I'm hoping she'll lose touch with it in the coming years so I don't have to deal with all the guys lining up at our door!
Without a solid household behind you, life will be more difficult to conquer. A show like Mad Men demonstrates this better than I could ever describe.
Feb 07, 2011 @ 13:10:00
Wow! Honored for the quote.
Also – you lost 40 lbs doing primal? I just started 6 days ago. Exciting!
Feb 07, 2011 @ 19:40:00
It’s over 50 pounds now, and feeling much better than I ever have before.
You look great in the pictures on your site. Are you changing to the primal
lifestyle for other health benefits?
You are one of the few writers that I follow that every word must be read. I
am sure I will quote you again in the future!