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><channel><title>American Peyote &#187; life</title> <atom:link href="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/tag/life/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" /><link>http://blog.americanpeyote.com</link> <description>Photographer, director, thinker near Zurich Winterthur Switzerland</description> <lastBuildDate>Mon, 30 Jan 2012 12:12:53 +0000</lastBuildDate> <language>en</language> <sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod> <sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency> <generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=3.3.1</generator> <item><title>Pro Blogging and Life Lessons</title><link>http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2007/06/05/pro-blogging-and-life-lessons/</link> <comments>http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2007/06/05/pro-blogging-and-life-lessons/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Tue, 05 Jun 2007 13:00:55 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Mark</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[Blogging]]></category> <category><![CDATA[going_Pro]]></category> <category><![CDATA[life]]></category><guid
isPermaLink="false">http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2007/06/05/pro-blogging-and-life-lessons/</guid> <description><![CDATA[I learned about a new profession about half a year ago, Professional Blogger.&#160; The tie-in to professional photographer is amazingly similar and the concept is simple: You write about stuff that people on the internet want to read about in such a way that they continually check-back to your site, you sell advertising space and [...]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I learned about a new profession about half a year ago, <em>Professional Blogger</em>.&nbsp; The tie-in to professional photographer is amazingly similar and the concept is simple: You write about stuff that people on the internet want to read about in such a way that they continually check-back to your site, you sell advertising space and make money, enough to quit your day job.<br
/> <br
/> I find pro blogging interesting because it&#8217;s a prominent example of how the internet has changed the way advertisers and the modern economy enable individuals to form economically feasible escapes from the traditional workforce.<br
/> <br
/> Much like with professional photography, there appears to be a tendency for people to quit their jobs and put their energies into their blogs with the hope of pulling in six-figure incomes from writing stuff on the internet.&nbsp; With blogging, as with any easy-entry market like photography: some might succeed, but many will be barely sustainable or just flat-out flop without a clear understanding of the market and a sound business plan.<br
/> <br
/> Blogging is an even riskier industry to enter than photography since the number of possible imitators increases dramatically.&nbsp; Now it&#8217;s not just every person who picks up a <span
class="caps">DSLR</span> and puts in the time to learn, it&#8217;s also anyone with an internet connection.&nbsp; The start-up investment is essentially just time, you can get a free blog from a number of sources and start publishing immediately.<br
/> <br
/> <a
target="_blank" href="http://problogger.net/">ProBlogger.net</a> is one of the most popular and no-doubt economically successful blogs on the internet today.&nbsp; Problogger is successful because it publishes information about the niche that so many bloggers on the internet want to read about: <em>Making Money from Blogging</em>.&nbsp; Everyone goes there to learn how to make a 6-figure income from typing on cyberspace.&nbsp; In my view, it&#8217;s similar to photography, in that the best way to make money in a creative industry such as photography or blogging is to show other people how to take photos or blog.<br
/> <br
/> Consider <a
target="_blank" href="http://luminous-landscape.com/">Luminous-Landscape.com</a>, it probably has the largest wealth of quality information related to photography on the internet.&nbsp; I started out my technical photo education there.&nbsp; The primary author, Michael Reichmann is a successful professional photographer based in Canada.&nbsp; However, a great deal of his success seems to be tied to producing video tutorials on photography and organizing photo workshop tours around the world, which is all promoted on his website.&nbsp; The power of his words when it comes to cameras and photo equipment is impressive, but I don&#8217;t think he would be the icon that he is if it were not for the position he has very smartly put himself in &#8211; <em>A Photo Guru of the Internet Age</em>.<br
/> <br
/> Another rising Internet Guru Star in this regard is David Hobby from <a
target="_blank" href="http://www.strobist.blogspot.com/">Strobist</a>.&nbsp; As a photographer for the Baltimore Sun, he obviously knows his craft, but it&#8217;s the position he&#8217;s put himself in as the <em>Off-Camera Flash Guru</em> which will for sure provide an excellent platform for his future success.&nbsp; Plus, he can create waves.&nbsp; If he mentions a new flash, like the Vivtar 285HV, or the Westcott double fold umbrella reflector, there&#8217;s a good possibility that Midwest Photo Exchange will get a large number of orders almost overnight.<br
/> <br
/> What about those that just blog, without it would seem, any specific niche?&nbsp; The thing I like about <span
class="caps">RT </span>Cunningham is that he doesn&#8217;t really have a niche, he just writes and people read it.&nbsp; The interesting thing about <a
target="_blank" href="http://www.untwistedvortex.com/">www.untwistedvortex.com</a> is that in general, it doesn&#8217;t tell you how to make money or fulfill any creative ambitions, but it&#8217;s ranked high and I can&#8217;t stop reading it.<br
/> <br
/> In the past year that I&#8217;ve started doing the American Peyote blog on a normal basis I&#8217;ve learned many things, which aside from making money on the internet, I find very applicable to many facets of my life.&nbsp; Producing blog entries keeps my mind moving and my writing skills primed.&nbsp; Exploring money making opportunities from photography or blogging is exposing me to the marketing and economic realities you don&#8217;t learn about in engineering classes.<br
/> <br
/> I gotten a better feeling for how information is digested in the internet world.&nbsp; As a consequence, I started <a
target="_blank" href="http://www.klugmat.org/">Klugmat.org</a> to more effectively disseminate the knowledge gained from my PhD work.&nbsp; Turning my PhD into a website means more exposure to more people for my work, since normally the number of folks who read your dissertation is extremely small.&nbsp; There&#8217;s no money to be made, but I have faith in smart materials, and the prospect of exposing more people to this technology just seems like a cool thing to do.<br
/> <br
/> I also discovered something else, one of my biggest visitor days was March 24th 2007, the day that I gave a presentation on Photography and Writing for Blogs at <a
target="_blank" href="http://barcamp.ch/BlogCampSwitzerland">BlogCamp Zurich</a>.&nbsp; Despite the power of internet communication and high-speed connections, Technorati and BlogJuice, it was the act of physically giving a presentation to a group of real-live people which increased my blog exposure in Switzerland.<br
/> <br
/> I don&#8217;t know if I&#8217;ll ever make a real go at monitizing the American Peyote blog or entering the stock photography game, but the things I&#8217;ve learned from studying these possibilities has greatly contributed to my success as a smart materials researcher and will no-doubt play a roll in my future adventures in life.</p><div
class="shr-publisher-266"></div>]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2007/06/05/pro-blogging-and-life-lessons/feed/</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>1</slash:comments> </item> <item><title>Top Five to Do While You Live</title><link>http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2007/05/08/top-five-to-do-while-you-live/</link> <comments>http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2007/05/08/top-five-to-do-while-you-live/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Tue, 08 May 2007 12:33:53 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Mark</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[Deep Thoughts]]></category> <category><![CDATA[life]]></category> <category><![CDATA[pro_blogger]]></category> <category><![CDATA[top_five]]></category><guid
isPermaLink="false">http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2007/05/08/top-five-to-do-before-you-live/</guid> <description><![CDATA[1) Hit Rock Bottom When all is gone to shit and there&#8217;s nothing good left in your life &#8211; there&#8217;s nowhere to go but up.&#160; Hitting Bottom generally results from a combination of the notions that your life is pointless, that you&#8217;re unloved, your career plans have all failed, your significant other has left you [...]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>1) Hit Rock Bottom</strong><br
/> <br
/> When all is gone to shit and there&#8217;s nothing good left in your life &#8211; there&#8217;s nowhere to go but up.&nbsp; Hitting Bottom generally results from a combination of the notions that your life is pointless, that you&#8217;re unloved, your career plans have all failed, your significant other has left you or your favorite dog-cat-goldfish has died.&nbsp; It could be worse.&nbsp; Often Hitting Rock Bottom can be looked back upon as a marker in life, that point when you refused to continue taking things as they were presented and decided to find your own way.&nbsp; Like many of the great experiences in life, you can&#8217;t &quot;try&quot; to hit the lowest of the low points, you have wait until your life gets so bad that there&#8217;s nothing else to call it.&nbsp; It&#8217;s not the act of hitting bottom that means anything, it&#8217;s how you crawl out of the muck that&#8217;s important.<br
/> <br
/> <strong>2) Go Nowhere, Do Nothing</strong><br
/> <br
/> I did this in Europe for a month and it was fantastic.&nbsp; The premise is simple, clear your schedule and take off somewhere.&nbsp; It&#8217;s hard to do nothing and go nowhere in the same location that you live your normal life.&nbsp; I opted to take the night train to Vienna and then jumped around Eastern European cities until making it through Germany to Berlin and eventually back to Zurich before catching a flight to Detroit.&nbsp; I only visited one museum and traveled with a backpack full of film and cameras, just one change of pants and a few shirts.&nbsp; I had no purpose, just a universal train ticket that allowed free travel on any train in Germany, Austria, Poland, Czech, and Slovakia.&nbsp; I traveled where and when I wanted, walked around photographing and writing in my journal with visits to a few friends here and there.&nbsp; The experience can never be duplicated and I wouldn&#8217;t want to try &#8211; but once you&#8217;ve done it there will be no regrets.<br
/> <br
/> <strong>3) Accomplish a Feat</strong><br
/> <br
/> Ulysses was the first to make these popular.&nbsp; In this context, a feat can be anything that you didn&#8217;t previously know how to do.&nbsp; Make a website, paint a picture, build a house, bake a cake, write a book, make soap, build a bike, run for public office, teach a class, whatever you&#8217;re interested in.&nbsp; My feats have mainly included mountains.&nbsp; In reality one of my first and most important feats was driving from Michigan to Colorado during Dec. 2002 to climb up Mt. Elbert.&nbsp; It was only my second mountaineering experience. For a long term resident of sea-level Michigan, the climb was a crazy amount of physical exhaustion and an adrenaline hit like no other escaping the avalanche that was released during the descent to my base-camp at about 8:30pm on New Year&#8217;s Eve.&nbsp;&nbsp; The point is that it should be new to you and a challenge.&nbsp; Otherwise it&#8217;ll just be another day doing another job.<br
/> <br
/> <strong>4) Confront Our Legacy</strong><br
/> <br
/> If you Go Nowhere and Do Nothing in Europe be sure to check out Krakow.&nbsp; It&#8217;s a beautiful city with quiet streets, cheap beer, and awesome pierogi.&nbsp; Sometimes we know via books and stories about the horrors humanity has perpetrated and think that we understand it.<br
/> <br
/> Words don&#8217;t mean anything if there&#8217;s no connection to something tangible.&nbsp; That&#8217;s the way we humans are most of the time.&nbsp; If we don&#8217;t form a mental imagery connection to the words, then they might not really mean anything tangible.<br
/> <br
/> <br
/><div
align="center"><img
alt="" src="http://d2riyf9w9i1hd0.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/oblivion.jpg" /></div><br
/> <br
/> You don&#8217;t know what <em>tall</em> is till you climb a mountain and the tern <em>vast</em> is just another adjective until you walk through the gates at Birkenau and look at the train tracks stretching out into forever.<br
/> <br
/> <br
/><div
align="center"><img
src="http://d2riyf9w9i1hd0.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/razorwire.jpg" alt="" /></div><br
/> <br
/> Most of the place is gone and burned.&nbsp; The razor wire fence is still standing and it stretches into the horizon.&nbsp; If Auschwitz is an example of simplicity then Birkenau is a testament to vastness.&nbsp; You walk the razor-wire corridors and break down and cry and you don&#8217;t know why.<br
/> <br
/> <br
/><div
align="center"><input
type="image" src="http://d2riyf9w9i1hd0.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/simplicity.jpg" /></div><br
/><div
align="center"><img
src="http://d2riyf9w9i1hd0.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/memorial.jpg" alt="" /></div><br
/> <br
/> At the end of the train tracks is the crematorium.&nbsp; There&#8217;s a monument to the victims.&nbsp; Read any basic history book and you&#8217;ll get the feeling that the Holocaust was the story of Nazi Germany exterminating the Jewish people of Europe.&nbsp; If this is what you take away, you&#8217;re missing the point.&nbsp; <br
/> <br
/> &quot;Never Again.&quot;&nbsp; Is what we say.<br
/> <br
/> &quot;Never again&quot; will the industrial machine of humanity seek to exterminate our brothers and sisters and neighbors like was done at Auschwitz.<br
/> <br
/> We say this and we remember and we miss the point.&nbsp; This is our history.&nbsp; It&#8217;s not a collective failure to be laid on the heads of German History.&nbsp; It&#8217;s not a deep wound to be eternally nurtured by the current generation of Jewish peoples.<br
/> <br
/> It&#8217;s our history.&nbsp; What&#8217;s our present?&nbsp; What&#8217;s our future?<br
/> <br
/> <strong>5) Become Vulnerable and Find Love</strong><br
/> <br
/> Few things in life are harder than letting go of inhibitions and fears and the emotional wall you&#8217;ve built to protect your tenderness.&nbsp; I can&#8217;t imagine how one person could fall in love without letting down their guard fully and completely.&nbsp; And I can&#8217;t imagine what a drab exercise in boredom my life would be like without love.<br
/> <br
/> If you allow yourself to be vulnerable then love will creep into your life.&nbsp; Love for a person, a painting, a piece of cake, a movie, the sunrise, the sunset, the beach, a song, a cat, a dog, your unborn children, a stranger, a sister, a brother, your parents, your in-laws, and everything else in between.<br
/> <br
/> It&#8217;s the strongest power that exists and with it we have the ability to define our legacy and to save us from ourselves.</p><div
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