Randy Cantrell

Episode 176 – Turning A New Life Over

green leaves
New leaves are sprouting

I feel the hiatus coming to an end. It’s time to turn a new life over.

Here’s what that means…

• Checking Facebook no more than twice daily. Think 10am and 7pm.
• Checking Twitter no more than twice daily. Yep, think 10am and 7am again.
• Checking email no more than three times daily. Maybe a Dr. Pepper routine of 10, 2 and 4.
• Writing something – anything – every single day.
• Taking photographs of something – anything – every single day.
• Talking with somebody about something emotional – happy, sad, frustrating, thrilling, etc. – every single day.
• Reading fiction regularly.
• Reading biographies regularly.
• Avoiding books, articles, blog posts, podcasts or videos that are all about business and only business.
• Listening to more music. This may be hard because I listen to a LOT of music.
• Singing more (why don’t people sing more?). I need more privacy for this.
• Drawing (I used to do this all the time). This will require discipline.
• Picking up my guitar and for the first time with purposeful intention to learn 5 cords (G, D, C, A and E). This will require greater discipline than drawing.
• Interviewing at least 2 people a week for the project – Chasing DFW Cool (I’m planning this and hope to get it started after the July 4th holiday).

It’s that last thing that is the professional thing. I say “professional” and not “business” for a reason. I have no idea about making money with it. That’s not the point. I don’t even care about it. I’m going to launch Chasing DFW Cool because I want to. Because I know I can do it…and do it well. Because I know there are tons of people in this area – Dallas/Ft. Worth – doing cool things. Because I want to hear and share their stories.

Making a living? Yes, I have to keep doing that. I’m not quite yet financially independent. Probably never will be. But I’m comfortable and debt-free — so that’s a good thing. A few months ago I went all in with a single client. It was the right thing to do. I’m fully vested – emotionally and otherwise – in helping him build his business. That’s the business part of life and for now, it’s the only business part of life. Mainly, because that’s how I want it and need it.

I’ve always loved to plan and strategize. I’m known in business circles for being a very strategic thinker, but I’m working without a net these days because I feel it’s something I need to do. I need to just take the leap and GO! And I need to take the leap in creative endeavors, not business ones. Because I’m sick of business. Hey, these things happen after 40 years. I’m tired of business. Bored with it. Except for helping a single client.

As for the podcasting – oh, that’ll continue. I’m going to get back on a schedule here very soon. I’m still sorting through all that. And I could use your help.

Randy

 

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Top 10 Ways To Prepare For The Funeral Of Your Best Friend

Jonathan Winters in "It's A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World"
Jonathan Winters in “It’s A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World”

The funeral for my friend, Stanley, is tomorrow morning at 10am. It remains to be seen if this strategy works. I’ll let you know.

10. Watch “It’s A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World.” Twice.

9. Look at cartoons of Ballard Street and Herman…almost constantly.

8. Watch the Bathroom Sessions with Ed and Steven (yes, it can make you sad that they parted, but still…)

7. Listen to recordings of Hudson & Landry, especially “The Prospectors.”

6. Watch episodes of The Andy Griffith Show, especially episodes with the Darlings.

5. Go to the gym more often and stay longer.

4. Watch Stanley Cup hockey, even though your best friend’s name was Stanley. He’d appreciate the irony.

3. Re-read Bill Bryson’s “The Life And Times Of The Thunderbolt Kid.”

2. Watch Mark Knopfler play the guitar.

1. Pray often. Followed by another one that’s important to me, reading the Scriptures.

I’ll be back, Lord willing, in a few weeks. In the meantime, enjoy the Saturday’s Smiles. We all need them. Smiles, that is.

Randy

P.S. Thought I’d leave you with a Wednesday smile since every midway point of a week could likely use a smile.

ballard street

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Special Episode – Blue Is The Color Of Melancholy, But What Does It Sound Like? (Finding Profit In Setbacks And Disappointments)

melancholy
We have to fend off sadness or it will swallow us.

Melancholy

Noun: A deep, pensive, and long-lasting sadness.

Adjective: Sad, gloomy, or depressed.

How long is long-lasting? From my experience, it’s always too long. But I can be given to feeling melancholy.

A friend recently described his own family as being prone to feeling blue. Instantly, I could relate.

Amazement is the only word to describe my feelings toward people able to remain upbeat under the saddest circumstances.

When I was younger I was more stoic, but even as a child I was prone to bouts of melancholy. It might be something others thought stupid. Like the time a distant cousin took shots at a turtle in the yard with his BB gun. Shooting it repeatedly in the head until he made sure it was dead. The cruelty of it overwhelmed me. I didn’t cry, but later when he got some old boxing gloves out and wanted to box – I bloodied his nose.

Maybe that’s a key to overcoming melancholy – physical exertion or aggression. Surely not, but when I was a kid and boxing gloves were around, it was a viable option.

Melancholy has value I think, but I also think it can become too close of a friend. A friend unworthy of our love or kindness.

Let’s be clear. I’m not talking about depression, at least not in the clinical sense. That’s a very different malady.

I’m talking about feeling blue. It can range from momentary feelings of sadness to hours, maybe days, spent feeling sorrow or even heartbroken.

Music has almost always been part of my melancholy. Not a cause and effect part, but the music in my life has often been chosen because of my mood. I confess that I rarely select music to jolt me from my melancholy mood. No, I usually embrace it and feed it the sounds that seem most fitting.

John Prine's 1971 debut album
John Prine’s 1971 debut album

I was 15 when I first heard John Prine. There were many things for me to love about him. For starters, he wrote some great pensive, sad songs (Hello In There, Sam Stone). But he also wrote some sarcastic, snarky songs, too (Illegal Smile).

As I look at the sounds of melancholy in my life some of my favorite records of all time are steeped in sadness. In fact, one of my all-time favorites is a record by Jackson Browne, Late For The Sky. The title track and Fountain of Sorrow have been lifelong favorites.

For me, the lyrics, the story and the melody are integral components of the sounds of melancholy. Nobody typifies them better than Prine and Browne.

100 dollar bill
Money isn’t the only measurement of profit.

Setbacks. Disappointments.

Business disappointments are not unlike other disappointments. They range in severity from devastating to annoying.

We all have them, but there are two kinds of disappointments that sting the most: the ones we didn’t see coming and the ones that represent the enemy of something we really wanted.

The more personal the disappointment, the more it hurts.

Disappointment doesn’t care who you are or how much power you’ve got. It doesn’t knock. It just blows the door off the hinges, comes right in and camps out where you can avoid it. It may hit people a bit differently, but it hits everybody. Sometime.

Disappointments can be sometimes be measured in time, distance, money, impact and recovery.

Time.

I remember the day the phone rang. It was the worst kind of setback. A death. Of our founder. He was only 32. I was in my 20’s. His life was gone. Mine was changed.

We thought we had more time to build more stores. To grow our business. Together.

We were wrong. Time ran out and there wasn’t anything we could do.

Distance.

When my children were quite small I found myself mired in a bad circumstance. We lived in one city, but I was working in a different city. The real estate market was pitiful at the time and we had to live apart through the week, looking forward to very short weekends together. It was painful disappointment.

I hated it, but like so many disappointments in our lives, I had to endure it until I could figure out some solution. Disappointments wouldn’t be so bad if you could fix them…and quickly. It’s not always possible.

Money.

Missed sales goals. Lost bonuses. Frozen compensation. Increased insurance premiums. Elevated lease rates. Money disappointments are endless.

Because business is all about generating sufficient profits to sustain the enterprise, money tends to be the end-all, be-all. Most of us measure success or failure with a dollar sign.

An advertising campaign that we felt sure about falls flat. A landlord tells us the lease renewal demands a 20% increase. Our insurance rep informs us that workman’s comp insurance is going up 15%. Meanwhile, our profit margins are stretched because vendors aren’t taking less, but customers are giving us less. It’s the ying and yang of business. The push/pull tug of war that every business owner or leader feels constantly.

Impact.

When a founder dies in an automobile accident the impact is sudden, unexpected and irreversible. Depending on the size of the business, it can be vast, too. Vendors, financial partners, suppliers, employees – everybody hurts.

Some business disappointments impact us in the moment, but it’s more like ripping a Band Aid off a scab. Painful at first, but it’s over before you know it.

Recovery.

Recovery is tied to impact. The more severe the impact, the more difficult the recovery. The lower the impact, the quicker (and easier) the recovery.

A devastating blow might just do you in. Failure to meet payroll can be deadly. Failure to meet payroll habitually is sure death.

So with all these facets of disappointments and with all the varying degrees of disappointment, how can we possibly find profit in them?

Can we always find profit in them?

I think so.

That’s literally the bottom line for today’s show…finding ways to profit from our disappointments and setbacks. That’s what I intend to do by tapping the brakes for just a bit. Lord willing, I’ll be back soon. Recharged. Refreshed. Reenergized.

Be safe. Take care of yourself. Take care of business. I’ll be talking you soon with one more pre-hiatus episode.

Randy

 

Subscribe to the podcast

bula network podcast on itunesTo subscribe, please use the links below:

If you have a chance, please leave me an honest rating and review on iTunes by clicking Review on iTunes. It’ll help the show rank better in iTunes.

Thank you!

Special Episode – Blue Is The Color Of Melancholy, But What Does It Sound Like? (Finding Profit In Setbacks And Disappointments) Read More »

Special Episode – So Broke I Didn’t Have $1.25 To Get Through The Tollbooth

toll_booth
I needed $1.25 to pay the toll, but I didn’t have it.

I was following people in another car. We were headed to a gentleman’s office. It was business.

I didn’t know a toll road was involved, but I was faithfully following along in my own car. Alone.

As we entered the toll road I was desperately looking for signs to tell me how much the toll might be. Why?

Because I was broke.

I didn’t have a single dollar on me.

Panicked, I opened the center console hoping to find some loose change. I did. Just not enough. Not nearly enough.

45 cents. I wasn’t even half way there.

I couldn’t pull the car over to the shoulder and scour under the seat cushions or the floor board for more money because I was following another car. I certainly wasn’t going to let them know my situation.

I felt sick at my stomach. How in the world had I gotten to this point? What sort of horrible decisions had I committed to drag me down this low?

Today’s show is about coping with despair, defeat and the bewilderment of wondering, “Will I ever escape this?”

If you’re feeling down and out, this show is for you. If you’re feeling all alone, this show is for you. If you’ve ever felt like you couldn’t fall any farther, this show is for you.

Okay, you’re right – today’s show is for EVERYBODY because this is a universal experience!

Hang tough.

Randy

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Inside Randy’s Book Bag: Homer Simpson & Mr. Potato Head Carry My Knowledge

Randy's Book Bag
This is one side.

My Ambidextrous Book Bag Will Soon Turn 8

I’d like to introduce you to my book bag. Rhonda (my wife) made it for me in 2005 (as you can see). It’s an ambidextrous book bag. Depending on how you want to look at it – it’s got neither a front nor a back OR it’s got two fronts and no back.

Randy's book bag 2
This is the other side.

That’s how I roll. I’m a front facing guy. Well, I’m trying to be…more so.

Do you have a book bag? I’m fearful that book bags like this will go the way of the dinosaur thanks to digital media. I love digital media, but I still like thumbing through a physical magazine or book. And nothing will replace a notebook and pen. Not for me!

The irony is that my Kindle is inside my book bag. That’s fitting really though because I’m a guy stuck in between analog and digital. And not just with books or magazines or notebooks. It’s true of The Yellow Studio, too. I’ve got loads of analog gear connected and producing digital files.

My book bag will turn 8 in May. Well, THIS book bag turns 8. I’ve got older, well-worn bags that are much older. They’re retired now though. Mostly stuck in the closet housing some old papers or something. This bag is relatively young yet though…with lots of life left.

So let’s get on with it and let me show you what’s in my book bag today. There’s no importance to the order of items in the bag. It’s just how they stack up as I thumb through.

Inc. magazine
Inc. magazine

1. Inc. magazine – I’ve been a longtime reader of Inc. I’m very bad at waiting until I’ve got 2 or 3 issues of a magazine before I read them. That’s a habit I developed within the last 10 years. I’m not sure why. I used to devour an issue the day it arrived. Now, I pile them to the side, put them in my book bag and get around to them whenever I get around to them.

Inside Randy's Book Bag

 2. Fast Company – I started subscribing to this magazine when it first came out in 1995/1996. It’s still staple reading for me.

Inside Randy's Book Bag

3. Entrepreneur – I’ve been in and out on this magazine through the years. It’s been a much less steady habit than Inc. or Fast Company, but about 6 years ago I returned to it as a subscriber. There are still quite a few things I love about it and other things that don’t interest me at all (like all the franchise stuff in the back).

Inside Randy's Book Bag

4. BSWUSA.com catalog – Yeah, it’s a guilty pleasure. Catalogs have always been a fascination. Even as a child I loved a good catalog. Toys. Sporting goods. Hi Fi gear. Electronics. SkyMall. 😉

BSW is a pro audio gear provider specializing in the broadcast field. Much of my gear Inside The Yellow Studio came from them. I have no use for much of this gear as it’s focused on terrestrial radio stations, but microphones, processors, mixers and the like are still capable of fostering gear envy. There is almost always a gear catalog inside my book bag.

I suspect this book bag – Homer/Mr. Potato Head – will last me the rest of my life. Earlier bags had to handle heavier loads. I always over stuffed earlier book bags with physical books because I could never leave behind a book I was reading. And I was always reading 6 or more books at one time. Seams would burst. Handles would break. Tears in the fabric would compromise the integrity of the bag. I don’t see that happening with this bag because the Kindle changed all that. I now pack the Kindle and at most, two physical books.

That’s good news. I’m pleased that while Homer/Mr. Potato Head will turn 8 next month…they’ll likely be with me the rest of my life, along with the knowledge and wisdom of the contents carried by them.

Randy

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