Keeping Your Momentum Going After a Seminar – Video One

Seminars. Speakers. Workshops. How many have you attended?

Probably more than you can count.

The memories, the learning, the strategies, are great to recall.

But be honest with yourself, just for a moment.

How many times have you left a seminar, a workshop, or a speaker with the best of intentions, a commitment to implementation, but then did little or nothing? How many times have you gotten back home or to your office and let the demands of your life, and your old habits, get the best of you?

That experience is much less pleasant to recall. It’s embarrassing.

So you put it behind you, and go to another one, sure that this time will be different. And the cycle continues.

But what if you knew three simple brain strategies that would change the pattern? What if you could activate brain circuits that would carry your momentum into the future, into practical implementation?

I was at a seminar recently, and a friend asked me the question you should be asking yourself every time, “How can I keep this momentum? How can I make this time different?

Over these three blog posts, I give you the three simple strategies I taught my friend. She said they made an immediate difference.

Here’s the best news: She got results starting with the very first strategy!

Discover what I told her, in this week’s video.

Make sure to leave me a comment below the video! I’d love to hear your results, and what seminar learning you are going to make a part of your new identity.

Comments

  1. Great stuff, Brad! I just did a webinar about real estate investing and got so re-enthused I bought more training material, which of course, requires action. The 2-chamber exercise was helpful in decreasing my fear and increasing my faith in myself.

    • Brad Pendergraft says:

      That’s great, Lisa! Visualizations are so powerful in our brain. It’s amazing how it changes our ability to take action. Watch for the next video coming out on Friday. I think you’ll like this one too.

  2. Great strategies for such a relevant topic and problem. Nice work, Brad!

    • Brad Pendergraft says:

      Thanks Danielle! It’s a topic that hopefully keeps coming up for all of us as we keep learning. We get to keep going “forward home” over and over! 🙂

  3. Hi Brad,
    You video is encouraging because it makes me want to remember some of the great things I have learned in the past and didn’t implement. I now realize I can pull them up again and drive into the chambers to reactivate my comment for change. Thank you. I look forward to the next blogs. It is kind of you to share.

    • Brad Pendergraft says:

      Thanks Jacki! Yes, the great thing is that it is always possible to claim old learning and make it a part of our new identity. The brain doesn’t care when we learned it. The brain wiring is there, so if we claim it and begin to act on it, it can be just as effective as when we first learned it.

  4. Thanks for the new ideas. I too want to try the chamber. It makes sense to me becsuse it engages both the brain and the body st the same time. I have worked with a releasing prayer that incorporates both and have had success. This method seems to be working on releasing and taking on the new learning together.

    • Brad Pendergraft says:

      Interesting way to think about it. Visualization is very powerful in the brain, and so any visualization that activates a release of old habits will shift the brain. Let me know how it works for you.

  5. Hi Brad,
    My first session was lesson number 2. So, I moved my furniture first. This really helped! I certainly feel more organized and in charge than before I moved my furniture. Matter of fact, this worked so well that tonight I listened to the other 2 sessions. Here’s the results:
    Session 1 helped me move forward because I shifted my perspective. Instead of living in a home where I work, I now acknowledge that I have two separate spaces – a home and a work space – even though they are still in the same structure. It has only been 10 minutes since I watched this, but already I am thinking that this change in perception will help me with delegating time between home chores and business chores. And this feels better.
    In regards to session 3, I now think: I used to not like working at home because I had to achieve both home and work chores. Now I think: I divide my chores between home and work, so living and working in the same space does not overwhelm me like it used to. I did get immediate relief, as you indicated. By thinking differently it helped my subconsciously. After thinking about this, I realized that one reason I hadn’t liked having home and workspace in the same place was because I had been telling myself to do everything all at once. Now I know better and will not think about it in this manner.
    Happily,
    Lynn

    • Brad Pendergraft says:

      Hi Lynn, nice job! It shows how all three strategies work together. Set yourself a goal of keeping the new language and new identity in mind. Link it with the new set up of your furniture, so that when you see it you are reminded of your new strategies. To your dreams!

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