Episode Transcript
[00:00:01] Hey, good morning. Hey, boo boo. It's early. Here's some bigoting biscuits. I mean San Francisco paradise is not always perfect. Bradley Sharpener here. Little Thursday Thunder coming to you live from San Francisco, California. Here we go. Where? It's not exactly paradise, frankly. If you're looking the street where I used to live, the first year we moved in, they took down the electric wires. What's my next year? And you know, it rained often and it was cold and it was foggy and it was dark in the winter. Not my best, you know, I think it's paradise. I mean I've been posting from America and I've been posting about burritos, I've been posting about tacos, taquitos. Oh my goodness. Yummy.
[00:00:42] And yet this is reality as well. If you live in San Francisco, you live in a place. Is it always perfect? I mean, only in San Diego I'm pretty sure that's about it. But otherwise it's a party in paradise. And the party is perspective.
[00:00:58] How can you get perspective on your paradise? I lived here.
[00:01:04] What part of perspective are you taking into consideration to make it your perfect paradise? And how often? What is the ratio of perfection?
[00:01:17] Create your paradigm energy that I kind of wasn't expecting. I don't know when this happened, but the work week is five days a week and then the weekend is two days. What is that? Two? Seven?
[00:01:31] So two. No, no, no, sorry.
[00:01:35] And you're interested? Five days of work and two days of leisure on Facebook. So is that it? Is that the ratio? Is that why we work five days a week and we paradise on two? Is that the ratio? Do we, do we need to live by that? Is that what we are confined to? Is that what society tells us? That that's the ratio that we should live by, not just a book? I don't know the answer. Do you maybe rather flip it on his head? Actually, I'd rather have two days of hard work and five days of leisure to release. What does leisure mean to you? For me, I'm a creator at heart and frankly I convinced that we are all creators. The question is, how much of the creation will you allow yourself to do? From some I don't know. For me, create. Creation is terrible.
[00:02:22] I'm allowed to create when I have the freedom to create what I want. I'm a happy. Not like, but I like I have to do stuff like, oh, I don't know, sort through boxes. Mark Twain, Shane D. Sort through my trash and my junk and my. I'll give you the theme boxes and my it hasn't been paradise. But I am good with paradise, not perfection of all time. Let me rephrase that. I want variety, I want contrast, Abraham Hicks would say, because the contrast is what allows us to enjoy the beauty. That's when the math turns into the magic. The work hard all week makes the magic more interesting, more pleasurable, more exciting. If we went out to dinner every night, at some point going out to dinner would no longer be special by definition, interpretation, because we are only going out to dinner. That is what we do in that sense heavily turned the paradise into the non commentary. Have we turned the magic into the magic? If we go out to dinner every night and I just picked an example there, we'd go out to dinner every night.
[00:03:39] That turns what used to be magical into something.
[00:03:45] In my humble opinion. Here I am traveling. I have been working like 10 hour days the past four days. I can finish it off with you going non stop, non stop dealing with stuff, administration and junk and stuff and moving in storage, sorting and filtering and tossing and turning and throwing out and I want three judging and deciding all of that in the past getting a lot of help from people, a lot of love from old friends and it is running around joy and at the same time mathematical. At the same time the hard work. I am telling you I am going behind it.
[00:04:25] I've done 10 years old magic, super fun and great and then organizational stuff. The flights, the cars, the we enjoy and we're ready for the next one services and getting things done and making appointments months in advance. That is how I turned the math into the mast energetic, loving, caring cloudy day here in San Francisco in November. It's Thursday thunder. And the thunder is because that lightning has been striking all week because I've been doing the math many, many years. That is this. How are you? Tell me in a comment comment on this podcast comment on this YouTube video. How are you doing? How is your balance of mathematics?
[00:05:12] So I'm not interested in what is mathematical for yourself.
[00:05:17] Why would you like more magic in your life and where do you maybe have methodology too much so too many systems, something like hard work is and you're not somehow getting them the magic out of your mouth.
[00:05:34] Tell me, share it with me in the comments and I would love to see if I can help you. One of my magical traits is helping people different people twice and I love doing it. I want more magic in people's lives that brings more magic into the world by December Franklin December 31, 2024 and we launch on like February 1. So must be trash day coming around here. I'm actually really traveling quite a bit. December. But hey, San Francisco, I think this could be a move. I'm going to sign off with a little magic for you. Still listening. A little bit of a mumbling mania here in San Francisco. As I wrap up my time here in San Francisco, we're off to Austin, Texas next week. I hope to either send this to you next Thursday from Austin, Texas or Phoenix, Arizona, where it's going to be bright sunny and blue sky.
[00:06:28] We're having some barbecue and if you want some of that energy, come on, join the train. Hop on. The doors are open, not dangerous.
[00:06:37] I am clearly going off script here. So I'm gonna cancel this Thursday thunder and I wish you some magic time. Although it's not without some math. That's the message I wanted to bring to you today, Bradley Schner. Every week there is a thunder here on the video and on the podcast at the Repossible podcast. Take it easy. And look, there's more electrical wires. Is it, is it a party in paradise? You know what? It is, cuz that's my perspective. See you next week.