Unlock Your Creativity To Improve Your Life


Episode Artwork
1.0x
0% played 00:00 00:00
Jul 06 2020 21 mins  

TO READ THE TRANSCRIPT SCROLL TO THE BOTTOM OF THE PAGE.


In episode 20 of the new Awaken The Possibilities Podcast, Host Terry Wildemann interviews Rober Belle on "Unlock Your Creativity To Improve Your Life”. Awaken the Possibilities Podcast features successful entrepreneurs and intuitive leaders who offer insights on how to attract success in business and life. 


_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________


About Robert Belle:


I am a champion for people to blow the lid off their creative limitations so that they can live a more fulfilling life. I am on a quest to have people return to their heart centre and unlock their unique value by believing in their crazy ideas. I work with entrepreneurs to help them navigate the challenges of starting and growing a business through by making continuous minor adjustments that yield major improvements. 


_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________


About Terry Wildemann:


Terry Wildemann is the owner of Intuitive Leadership® and a Business and Resilience Accelerator, Speaker and Certified Executive Coach.



Terry's specialty is working with tired, unhealthy, close-to-burned-out entrepreneurs and professionals and helps them leap off the stress hamster wheel. They evolve into unstoppable stress resilient intuitive leaders and practical business mystics. Terry’s timely message guides clients and students to integrate intuition, stress resilience, positive communications and leadership with grounded business systems to achieve success by positively serving and influencing others. Her leadership experience includes owning a manufacturing company, image consulting company, leadership and holistic education center.



Website URL:: www.IntuitiveLeadership.com


Facebook Page: www.Facebook.com/intuitiveleader


Facebook Group: www.Facebook.com/groups/AwakenThePossibilities


Linkedin: www.LInkedin.com/in/TerryWildemann


Twitter: www.twitter.com/terrywildemann www.twitter.com/leaderintuition


_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________


TRANSCRIPT


1

00:00:05.009 --> 00:00:05.670

Terry Wildemann: Okay.


2

00:00:09.059 --> 00:00:28.170

Terry Wildemann: Welcome everyone to today's episode of awaken the possibilities. I'm your host, Terry will demand. One of the things about this show is that we focus on bringing exciting guests on board who help you awaken the possibilities in lots of different ways.


3

00:00:29.250 --> 00:00:40.980

Terry Wildemann: You know, one of the things about being an entrepreneurial leader is that it's important for us to stay open. It's important for us to stay flexible and it's important for us.


4

00:00:41.430 --> 00:00:52.710

Terry Wildemann: To be really clear on specific steps that get us to our goals. Unfortunately, we are sometimes unclear on the steps that we need to take


5

00:00:53.130 --> 00:01:12.600

Terry Wildemann: One of the things that I know about this, about our guests for today is that this very left brain person who is an accountant has a true creative side that helps him really bring out the best in his clients. So I would like to introduce you to Robert bell


6

00:01:13.440 --> 00:01:25.890

Terry Wildemann: Robert, is a transformational speaker a mentor and an ACC a qualified accountant. He helps people who feel stuck in their career or life journey.


7

00:01:26.220 --> 00:01:31.800

Terry Wildemann: To break away from the norm and find new paths that revealed their true value.


8

00:01:32.160 --> 00:01:44.280

Terry Wildemann: He focuses on dismantling the line between licensed professionals and the creative world. And that's really important because it's important for us to really integrate both sides of our brain.


9

00:01:44.700 --> 00:01:52.110

Terry Wildemann: He shared his secrets of creative success at his numerous speaking engagements, as well as on various TV and podcast interviews.


10

00:01:52.470 --> 00:01:59.580

Terry Wildemann: He also spent much of his time mentoring and guiding men of all ages to have a strong positive impact on their families.


11

00:01:59.940 --> 00:02:10.950

Terry Wildemann: And society as a whole is the winner of the 2019 advocate of the year. Congratulations by the ACC for his work, assisting other accountants.


12

00:02:11.190 --> 00:02:22.260

Terry Wildemann: To embrace their creativity and reach new growth potentials, both personally and professionally. Welcome to the awaken the possibilities podcast Robert bell


13

00:02:26.040 --> 00:02:29.040

Robert: Yeah, thank you so much, very excited to be here.


14

00:02:29.520 --> 00:02:34.920

Terry Wildemann: Very nice to be here. Now Robert, as you can see I've got my angels on this side, which is my right side.


15

00:02:35.430 --> 00:02:39.420

Terry Wildemann: And I've got all my left brain books on this side and I sit in the middle.


16

00:02:39.750 --> 00:02:45.540

Terry Wildemann: I bring together the practical tactical a logical with the emotional the energetic the intuitive in the spiritual


17

00:02:45.960 --> 00:02:55.080

Terry Wildemann: So we create practical business mystics here on the making the possibilities and I get a sense that that is what you do your own work. So can you tell us about it.


18

00:02:55.410 --> 00:03:03.000

Terry Wildemann: What is it that got you to this place of integrating the left brain, the right brain and helping people to play with all of it.


19

00:03:05.730 --> 00:03:08.220

Robert: Thank you again for having me on the podcast I am


20

00:03:09.660 --> 00:03:26.790

Robert: I just decided to listen to the call of Nature and Science is not telling us that we were meant to not just be political or not just be creative only, but to be together is the way our brains are wired. It's how we are, we can all possibilities is how we thrive and not just merely survive.


21

00:03:28.380 --> 00:03:37.740

Robert: You know, I've always was different kid growing up. And initially, I thought, is because I wasn't good enough. You know, we all hold go through that. But when I say


22

00:03:38.850 --> 00:03:39.270

Robert: You say,


23

00:03:39.750 --> 00:03:40.890

Terry Wildemann: I think a lot of us do.


24

00:03:42.390 --> 00:03:50.160

Robert: And we do that because we we tend to look at our value based on what's happening on the outside and then when you get inside we realize we


25

00:03:50.520 --> 00:03:59.370

Robert: Would have inside is different from what everyone else has. So let me just hide a part of me so that I can fit in. And that was me. That was just me. I was just going into flow.


26

00:03:59.940 --> 00:04:08.910

Robert: Really hiding parts of the not exploring the you know the vast world that lives inside of me and I just decided, you know what


27

00:04:09.570 --> 00:04:13.290

Robert: I can't do it anymore. I will. I literally couldn't fit in well. Like I struggled


28

00:04:13.590 --> 00:04:24.210

Robert: And every time I tried to fit in, people will push me without me. No, you can't fit in here and I didn't understand what you're telling me I thought they were saying I'm not good enough. But you tell me know you're just unique you don't fit in here.


29

00:04:26.070 --> 00:04:30.510

Terry Wildemann: And what is it that made you different from the rest of them.


30

00:04:33.150 --> 00:04:34.020

Robert: Hopeless dreamer.


31

00:04:36.960 --> 00:04:46.350

Robert: Curiosity imagination. I just couldn't accept the things just the way they are not that I didn't believe it, but I always believed, like we can do what we want to do.


32

00:04:46.710 --> 00:04:55.590

Robert: Things that have to be the same. We can live in a world that we can create the world that we want to live it. We don't just have to accept it. So we can make steps to get there. When


33

00:04:56.160 --> 00:05:09.000

Robert: Everyone around you like just crazy living in the clouds. You know, you just dream too much this is reality, he has. So why can't we make it a reality and I refused. I could never get an answer a question. So I decided to look for the answer myself.


34

00:05:09.870 --> 00:05:11.250

Terry Wildemann: What did you find Robert


35

00:05:14.160 --> 00:05:15.120

Robert: Pandora's box.


36

00:05:16.950 --> 00:05:18.840

Robert: When I started my journey I realized


37

00:05:19.980 --> 00:05:25.620

Robert: I can start the journey by looking to figure out where I need to be I first needed to recognize where I was.


38

00:05:26.070 --> 00:05:36.330

Robert: Which is a place that wasn't supposed to be. So before I could even get to figure out my why I had to figure out what's, why not I had to remove all the limitations and


39

00:05:36.840 --> 00:05:46.470

Robert: Whenever I work with clients they always say you're taking steps backwards. You're going the wrong direction. But I said, No, we have to deconstruct all the stuff that we put in our lives, all the things we've accepted.


40

00:05:46.890 --> 00:05:56.400

Robert: All the, you know, it's a Pandora's box. A lot of the good things are going to come out but also we have to deal with some, you know, hot, the part issue. So I started that journey and it was


41

00:05:56.760 --> 00:06:07.320

Robert: Was a bit rough because there was no one to guide me and I realized, whoa, I have so many things that I believe are true that weren't really true. I mean, I could do what I want to do. I don't have to be an accountant and not be creative.


42

00:06:07.650 --> 00:06:09.810

Robert: And that was the big push back and people can say


43

00:06:10.350 --> 00:06:17.160

Robert: How can you come up with an idea you and our content, I think. So how does that limit me. It's just a profession. It's not who I am and I


44

00:06:17.460 --> 00:06:27.420

Robert: Worked hard to make sure that people realize that I'm not limited by my profession are not limited by where I was born, or anything. I am a human being, and I am created to be unique.


45

00:06:29.190 --> 00:06:33.030

Terry Wildemann: And isn't an unfortunate that so many people


46

00:06:34.320 --> 00:06:38.460

Terry Wildemann: Have a hard time realizing that they themselves are also unique


47

00:06:40.530 --> 00:06:44.580

Robert: It is, and that's why I started this journey. I said, I can't be selfish about it because


48

00:06:45.750 --> 00:06:54.390

Robert: The person I am today is I could never have even dreamt about it. Yes, I was a big treatment green. Oh, but I would never have imagined.


49

00:06:54.720 --> 00:07:03.990

Robert: I tell people, one of the big things. I came up came I conquered was public speaking. I could not speak in public I shivered I shaved ice sweat. I


50

00:07:04.920 --> 00:07:23.640

Robert: It was really embarrassing. And if you tell me today like to introduce our speaker, I would never have imagined that absolutely not. And so many of us, we try to achieve the things we can see ahead of us. We don't go beyond that we don't try to do things that will even shock us


51

00:07:25.980 --> 00:07:28.470

Terry Wildemann: So who do you speak to Robert


52

00:07:30.810 --> 00:07:33.930

Robert: I call them a hidden misled creative


53

00:07:35.130 --> 00:07:35.850

Terry Wildemann: Hidden


54

00:07:36.180 --> 00:07:38.250

Terry Wildemann: Misled creatives.


55

00:07:38.700 --> 00:07:40.980

Terry Wildemann: And where do you find these hidden miss


56

00:07:41.190 --> 00:07:45.600

Terry Wildemann: Lead creators and what organizations do they belong to.


57

00:07:46.830 --> 00:07:54.960

Robert: So I find them. My filler content in the back office who have ideas, but just keep quiet. The lawyer who's working nonstop always


58

00:07:55.260 --> 00:08:00.840

Robert: You know, trying to prepare for case or something, who's just unsatisfied, someone who is I call them.


59

00:08:01.260 --> 00:08:07.740

Robert: Superman Clark Kent, try to transition into Superman, they play the clock and rules so well in the nine to five.


60

00:08:08.100 --> 00:08:15.810

Robert: But when they get into the domain of the craft or cookie and or just something they come alive and they leave that part of them there. So,


61

00:08:16.320 --> 00:08:24.750

Robert: That's where I find these people people. What is granted people who don't necessarily want to climb the corporate ladder. But who wants to have value. Want to have an impact.


62

00:08:25.980 --> 00:08:30.330

Terry Wildemann: Nice. Nice. Nice. Now do you find them or do they find you.


63

00:08:31.950 --> 00:08:32.460

Robert: Both


64

00:08:35.400 --> 00:08:37.680

Terry Wildemann: So what is that about you, Robert. That


65

00:08:37.680 --> 00:08:38.520

Robert: attracts me


66

00:08:39.630 --> 00:08:40.140

Terry Wildemann: Because


67

00:08:43.980 --> 00:08:54.960

Robert: share my story. I still I can I, that's all I can say I share my story and I keep getting comments. Wow, how did you do that, how did you transition. How were you able to overcome these things.


68

00:08:55.380 --> 00:09:04.260

Robert: Are you able to stay calm during this pandemic. You know, I just keep getting questions and they come to me when they come to me. Then I explained to them. And I just keep consistent with my message in


69

00:09:05.640 --> 00:09:17.640

Terry Wildemann: Congratulations. Can you share. I know you've shared your story, is there a different message that you share or is there is your message and add on to sharing your story.


70

00:09:20.040 --> 00:09:24.660

Robert: So as I mentioned, my story. My people closer to me I flipped the script.


71

00:09:25.260 --> 00:09:31.680

Robert: I stopped sharing the story and I asked them to share their story indirectly, they don't even know what I'm doing. I asked them to share their story.


72

00:09:32.100 --> 00:09:38.490

Robert: I turned the tables to them and turn them into them and they start speaking and as they start hearing them so speak, they realize okay


73

00:09:39.360 --> 00:09:42.180

Robert: There is actually something here. For instance, if I sit with someone


74

00:09:42.960 --> 00:09:48.210

Robert: And I say, Hey, I'm a, I'm a creative, but I'm also account is like now I'm not creative and I do have a creative, one of my body.


75

00:09:48.630 --> 00:09:53.910

Robert: And I flipped the script and I just let them tell their story like Okay, tell me about a time when you come alive when you really feel


76

00:09:54.420 --> 00:10:04.860

Robert: Energetic and so yeah when I'm doing this when I have these ideas and by this of declarations, like, All right, well, maybe I'm creative. Tell me more. And then we take it from there.


77

00:10:06.480 --> 00:10:10.980

Terry Wildemann: So you are an advocate of asking open ended questions.


78

00:10:12.210 --> 00:10:12.840

Robert: Absolutely.


79

00:10:14.040 --> 00:10:30.240

Terry Wildemann: So I bet you really enroll folks when you're interacting with them, so can you please share with me one of the best clients that you not their name, but the experience of one of the best clients that you've ever had.


80

00:10:33.030 --> 00:10:36.870

Robert: That's a very, very nice question not sharing names, like you said,


81

00:10:38.130 --> 00:10:46.680

Robert: The best glide. I've had is someone very close to me. She is a singer and she has been a single all her life and


82

00:10:47.160 --> 00:10:53.010

Robert: She just always had a limited belief that she was not a singer yesterday she would sing absolutely phenomenal.


83

00:10:53.400 --> 00:11:02.400

Robert: And I took him under my wing and she she studied a bit of graphic design. So, you know, more on the creative side what very logical and sequential, etc.


84

00:11:03.030 --> 00:11:14.910

Robert: Mexico under my wing. And I said, You need to blossom this gift that you have, you know, don't worry about people accept it or reject it. You need to do it for you first before you can serve others. And we worked. We worked on.


85

00:11:16.140 --> 00:11:16.680

Robert: Building


86

00:11:17.730 --> 00:11:28.290

Robert: A very holistic approach. So we built on setting up a business structure around her music and we're working on our finances personal finances motivation help contain to exercise and, you know, mindfulness


87

00:11:28.740 --> 00:11:41.070

Robert: In the know she does have positive affirmations and she released her first single last year and in less than one week it hit the top 100 trending songs and apple on iTunes and


88

00:11:41.100 --> 00:11:44.610

Robert: She's just dropped her album. So she was just the best client because we


89

00:11:44.880 --> 00:11:47.910

Robert: We took our time and we had to get to all of stuff.


90

00:11:49.200 --> 00:11:50.400

Terry Wildemann: Congratulations.


91

00:11:51.510 --> 00:12:03.810

Terry Wildemann: I think that speaks volumes that speaks volumes. So is there anything else special that you would like to share with you awaken the possibilities audience.


92

00:12:05.850 --> 00:12:17.100

Robert: Yes, we creativity is is not something you need to learn, it's very natural inside of you, creativity, something you want to learn, you know, think back to when your child.


93

00:12:17.370 --> 00:12:18.300

Terry Wildemann: I'm going to read that.


94

00:12:18.360 --> 00:12:21.840

Terry Wildemann: Creativity is something you on learn


95

00:12:22.500 --> 00:12:23.790

Terry Wildemann: Yeah, I like that.


96

00:12:24.600 --> 00:12:26.820

Robert: Yeah, being creative is something online and


97

00:12:27.390 --> 00:12:38.490

Robert: You, let's break down what creativity is it's not artistic expression only it extends beyond that, it extends into the scholarly spaces access to every aspect of our lives into the kitchen into play in


98

00:12:38.910 --> 00:12:49.920

Robert: Everywhere because creativity simply connecting the dots putting as many dots as possible on the on the table and then trying to connect those dots and we have many dots in our lives. We have experiences we have failures. We have victories.


99

00:12:50.310 --> 00:12:58.560

Robert: We have so many things. And if you look at the dots connected in your life in the lives of people around you. The society, you will come up with something


100

00:12:58.890 --> 00:13:12.630

Robert: Magnificent. And that's what an entrepreneur does entrepreneurship simply sees things that others aren't seeing or perhaps aren't looking closely at. So the special thing is that you don't have to fight. You don't have to


101

00:13:13.860 --> 00:13:21.270

Robert: Struggle to be creative, but the fight struggle is is to remove the barriers that stop you from being creative. Because your mind, your body


102

00:13:21.570 --> 00:13:32.520

Robert: Everything on you is conspired free to be creative, everything around you. I mean, if you go to the science. They tell us that the primary blood relates creative relax, is you know bluejeans is called a blue


103

00:13:32.850 --> 00:13:41.850

Robert: Is the color of the sky. So if you just type. What I you know everything around us already priming you to be creative. It's the way or not. Our brains are just meant to work.


104

00:13:43.560 --> 00:13:54.930

Terry Wildemann: Okay, sounds so delicious. Just, I love that phrase to be creative, you need to unlearn it all. And it's really true.


105

00:13:57.270 --> 00:14:11.520

Terry Wildemann: And I do believe that our environment ends up either squashing us or elevating us so it is about getting rid of all of that emotional baggage that we've learned from under the age of 10 specifically


106

00:14:12.630 --> 00:14:24.510

Terry Wildemann: That held us back as adults. So congratulations and it's so delicious to hear of the kind of work that you're doing, especially in the accounting field because I've met a lot of very


107

00:14:27.780 --> 00:14:28.590

Terry Wildemann: Stale


108

00:14:29.730 --> 00:14:33.210

Terry Wildemann: Just, just account enter


109

00:14:33.360 --> 00:14:35.130

Robert: Nice. I was one of them. I was


110

00:14:37.650 --> 00:14:40.230

Terry Wildemann: The I'm bringing it out so you


111

00:14:40.740 --> 00:14:43.110

Terry Wildemann: Fail accountant. OK. Now we're getting juicy.


112

00:14:43.350 --> 00:14:48.180

Terry Wildemann: How did you help out of being a stale accountant.


113

00:14:50.880 --> 00:14:54.420

Robert: I every day I reflect on that just what what pushed me to do it.


114

00:14:55.470 --> 00:14:57.870

Robert: And the conclusion I come to every time is that


115

00:14:58.260 --> 00:15:06.150

Robert: I was convinced with my message I was convinced. Somehow, I have no idea how but I'm just convinced the ideas that I had


116

00:15:06.360 --> 00:15:16.890

Robert: Actually had a value I picture myself speaking even or skill of speaking I picture myself raising my hand in the meeting, although in the meeting in the boardroom our silent. Like, like, like alarm.


117

00:15:17.370 --> 00:15:32.940

Robert: But I just had the confidence. I had the confidence that my ideas are good and how it got to the point is that I started putting daily deposits in my mind. I started putting daily deposits in my mind I saw the deposit in, in my mind, and we neglect that a lot of the times, so


118

00:15:33.150 --> 00:15:33.810

Terry Wildemann: I was really


119

00:15:34.320 --> 00:15:35.040

Terry Wildemann: Positive


120

00:15:35.700 --> 00:15:36.630

The positive


121

00:15:38.700 --> 00:15:41.250

Terry Wildemann: Daily negative deposits in our brains.


122

00:15:41.280 --> 00:15:49.290

Robert: Very true. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I just started putting daily deposits in my life. I started listening to myself. I really started to listen.


123

00:15:49.680 --> 00:15:58.890

Robert: To what I'm saying, you know, try to get away from the fear and anxiety in the you know the science tells us that when you're in a flight or fight mode.


124

00:15:59.430 --> 00:16:08.880

Robert: You know, thinking logic takes a backseat. Right. And we focus our attention. And so I started to just be still, I started to center myself. I started to think


125

00:16:09.180 --> 00:16:16.020

Robert: Spend time with myself to get rid of all the noise around me and I said you know what, this is a good idea. And even if it doesn't work.


126

00:16:16.470 --> 00:16:30.810

Robert: I just need to get it out. I can't live with it staying inside of me anymore. And that's what I started to do. So I started to go out of it. Step out of my box I transition from accounting rules. I started, I went to sales actually went to sales customer fee. I went to the front line and


127

00:16:32.010 --> 00:16:38.520

Robert: It was it was interesting and but I removed the pressure because I had prepared myself to realize that you know what


128

00:16:38.850 --> 00:16:42.690

Robert: Everything in life is about connections. I don't need to worry about home. Same things


129

00:16:42.930 --> 00:16:50.460

Robert: Or if I'm the most eloquent. I just need to make a connection with the person. So in sales. I just need to make a connection with the person. How do I connect them to whatever selling


130

00:16:50.910 --> 00:16:58.320

Robert: Connected problem to solution. That's all I have to do and then their attention will move from me. So I started moving attention away from me message.


131

00:17:00.090 --> 00:17:09.390

Terry Wildemann: That is brilliant and is really, really cool to go from a stale accountant to a creative sales accountant.


132

00:17:11.100 --> 00:17:11.700

Terry Wildemann: Brilliant.


133

00:17:15.000 --> 00:17:19.320

Robert: You know, if you were to ask me, you know, the first step is always the hardest step.


134

00:17:20.880 --> 00:17:24.450

Robert: Do not want that first step, everything just has to open up


135

00:17:24.840 --> 00:17:35.460

Robert: You have seen the science, you know, back to the science of what brings the reticulum activating system when you make that first step, your brain is going to go to work to look for all the signals that will help you to get in that direction.


136

00:17:35.730 --> 00:17:43.110

Robert: So I started getting feedback from people I started getting comments, of course, there were moments of failure. Several lots of them. But I started getting


137

00:17:43.890 --> 00:17:50.970

Robert: Lots of feedback I started seeing the expression in people's faces. And I think that's what's priceless. You can't quantify it.


138

00:17:51.300 --> 00:17:57.000

Robert: You feel the connection because I was looking for the connection when I saw it, I was like, yes, even though I was a total failure.


139

00:17:57.270 --> 00:18:04.710

Robert: I could see, even if I didn't get the sale or whatever it was, I could see the connection. And I realized creativity is on the board conviction is committed ideas that you have


140

00:18:05.070 --> 00:18:12.840

Robert: Two problems that exist or two situations that are there. And, you know, everything just started to, you know, build up slowly but surely


141

00:18:13.650 --> 00:18:15.900

Terry Wildemann: Sounds like you'd become a master of law of attraction.


142

00:18:17.910 --> 00:18:19.350

Robert: I guess you can say that. Yeah.


143

00:18:19.410 --> 00:18:19.770

Terry Wildemann: Yeah.


144

00:18:20.220 --> 00:18:21.000

Robert: Very cool.


145

00:18:21.060 --> 00:18:31.860

Terry Wildemann: Very, very cool. So Robert, do you have any last words that you would like to share with our awaken the possibilities audience before we wrap up the show.


146

00:18:37.290 --> 00:18:39.660

Robert: My last words will be prioritize


147

00:18:42.660 --> 00:18:43.980

Robert: Life don't


148

00:18:44.010 --> 00:18:47.400

Terry Wildemann: get so focused repeat that again. Robert you froze. I'm sorry.


149

00:18:47.580 --> 00:18:49.980

Terry Wildemann: Prioritize life. Oh.


150

00:18:51.720 --> 00:18:55.350

Robert: It's creativity in your life, you need to make it a priority.


151

00:18:55.770 --> 00:18:59.250

Terry Wildemann: And there are times creativity in our lives. Got it.


152

00:19:00.450 --> 00:19:00.930

Robert: Yes.


153

00:19:01.200 --> 00:19:01.650

Terry Wildemann: X and


154

00:19:02.040 --> 00:19:03.090

Robert: The secret that the


155

00:19:03.120 --> 00:19:07.800

Robert: Most successful people tell us early in the morning, you start your journey meditation.


156

00:19:08.220 --> 00:19:17.910

Robert: You will have to get yourself in that mind space. So you have to prioritize creativity, make it. The first thing that you do so that your actions become a consequence of your thinking.


157

00:19:18.330 --> 00:19:24.660

Robert: Don't spend all your time doing actions and then whatever is left over. Do your you're thinking, you have to first learn


158

00:19:25.050 --> 00:19:36.510

Robert: To pause read think and then you add, you know, Abraham Lincoln said if you give me a task to cut down a tree you spend the first couple hours sharpening the axe and that is going to be


159

00:19:36.810 --> 00:19:49.020

Robert: Mean take home for the weekend, the possibility audience here the listener who's listening or watching it make creativity, a party and you will blow the lid off like why


160

00:19:50.550 --> 00:19:56.310

Robert: Look it up and you'll just get possibilities that will blow you away. Trust me.


161

00:19:57.060 --> 00:20:06.450

Terry Wildemann: Well, thank you so much. Robert, for coming on the show your mindset, your energy. It's so positive and absolutely delightful. I really appreciate it.


162

00:20:06.750 --> 00:20:14.490

Terry Wildemann: I love learning all about you and listening to your story and to the awaken the possibilities audience. Can you share where they can find you.


163

00:20:17.370 --> 00:20:32.790

Robert: You can find me on LinkedIn and Robert Bell, etc. And then, Tim. I'm on other social media platforms, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, or you can check out my website WWW dot Robert E mail.com


164

00:20:33.300 --> 00:20:36.870

Terry Wildemann: And Bella spelled be E double L. E. Correct.


165

00:20:37.200 --> 00:20:38.910

Robert: Yes, absolutely correct. Yes.


166

00:20:39.210 --> 00:20:42.450

Terry Wildemann: Okay, so I need to make sure we add me to add that L at the end.


167

00:20:42.870 --> 00:20:44.070

Terry Wildemann: Yes, else


168

00:20:44.670 --> 00:20:45.030

Robert: Yeah.


169

00:20:45.120 --> 00:20:45.990

Terry Wildemann: Oh. Thank you, Robert.


170

00:20:46.530 --> 00:20:56.820

Terry Wildemann: For being here and for my waking the possibilities audience. Thank you for being here this week. Remember to please drain our waking the possibilities Facebook group at


171

00:20:57.330 --> 00:21:09.360

Terry Wildemann: A way of facebook.com forward slash awaken the possibilities. Also, you can download my stress management gift quick should zone.com and it's a simple very


172

00:21:09.840 --> 00:21:23.250

Terry Wildemann: Simple four step gift to help you reduce stress in 60 to 90 seconds with practice. It's the tool that I use every single day to keep me grounded centered and focused and that's the quick


173

00:21:23.610 --> 00:21:41.970

Terry Wildemann: Shift SH if T zone.com Q UI CK S H I T zone.com. This is your host Terry woman. And thank you so very much for being here and I look forward to seeing you next time, take care.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.