20 benefits I have enjoyed since having a blog focused on Chinese Medicine

blogging_benefits_chinese_medicineAs a follow-up to my previous popular post about Why all natural health care practitioners should have a blog, I thought I would put forward a list of the benefits I have noticed so far in having my blog about Chinese medicine.  I want to create this list because I feel that there could be so much benefit to patients if more health care practitioners would face their fears and put their thoughts out there.  This is particularly true in the field of natural medicine, because there is so much low-quality information on the Internet about various natural healing modalities.  By flooding the Internet with high-quality personalized content, we can be a force for change in the minds of the world’s citizens.  A noble goal!  Now, the list.

  1. Connections with peers : I have a lot of good friends at school and in the Portland acupuncture and herbal medicine community.  I wouldn’t trade those connections for anything.  However, it’s really wonderful to be able to connect with Chinese medicine students and new practitioners all over the world.  Some of those connections seem to be bearing real fruit that will enrich my life for years to come.  Lesson - if you want to network within your profession, become a blogger!
  2. Connections with patients and future patients : In the post I linked to above, there was some discussion about whether blogging is an effective way to bring in patients.  I won’t really know until I thoroughly test it, but I have found that my current patients at the clinic enjoy reading my thoughts.  At least one patient has rescheduled because she received her email update and it reminded her to reschedule!  In the end, though, it’s really about helping to educate patients about the power and promise of Chinese medicine.  Lesson - If you’re interested in keeping in touch with your patients, consider blogging and having them sign up for email updates!
  3. Free critique of my own ideas, refining my thinking about Chinese medicine : Many people are afraid to write about their thoughts concerning Chinese medicine.  I’ve never supposed I have all the answers.  Sometimes (gasp) I’m even just wrong.  But, you really don’t know what you don’t know until you write about it and put it out there.  It can be scary, but exhilarating and I truly believe I have grown as a student and scholar by blogging.  Lesson - Want to be an expert in your field?  Write about it and pay attention to corrections and criticism.
  4. Writing practice : I guess this is self explanatory, but it’s always easier to learn how to write by … writing.  :)  Lesson - If “you’re not a writer,” the best way to become one is to start writing.  It’s funny like that.
  5. Crash course in Internet marketing : Because I decided I wanted to grow this blog as large as I could and make some money with it, I had to start learning a lot about Internet marketing.  I’ve consumed a whole lot of information on the subject and while I’m no expert, I’m happy to say I get it for the most part.  Lesson - Blogging is a multi-skill activity that will expand your knowledge in many different respects.
  6. Staying abreast of trends in technology : I’m not obsessed with gadgets (really, I’m not!) or even Internet trends.  However, in an effort to keep reasonably well updated, I do learn quite a bit about what’s going on and what’s coming up.  I like feeling like I know what’s going on and I learn by doing - so running a blog (or three) is an effective way to keep up to date.  Lesson - Similar to the one associated with #5.
  7. Higher standard of personal organization (more projects means more organization) : For some people, more to do means less organized.  Naturally, this leads people to believe that they can become more organized if they just simplify their lives and take on fewer projects.  For some people, this may be appropriate.  In my case, I find that (to a certain limit) the more I take on, the more efficient I become at managing it.  When I have relatively little to do, I actually become less likely to fulfill my basic obligations!  Many people have asked me how I do what I do - to them I say that the event that most shaped my ability to do a lot was the birth of my daughter.  This surely has many dimensions, but one of them was that because of the compression of my available time, I had to become better at managing my time.  My schooling, blogging and other activities just add to this.  Lesson - You’re capable of more.  Maybe much more.
  8. A higher than average tolerance for thoughtless comments : If blogging doesn’t give you a thick skin, nothing will.  I have been blessed to have a lower than average number of “trolls” and my comment spam catching software is quite effective, but I still get a few folks who think it’s fun to be intentionally antagonistic.  You learn to ignore them.  Lesson - Don’t let a few bad apples spoil the whole crate.
  9. Less tendency to goof off on the Internet : I know, I know.  This sounds crazy.  But, because I see being online as part of my job, I really don’t want to use it very much “for fun.”  I get off as quickly as I can unless a good friend is online and interested in conversation.  My friends who primarily use the Internet for shopping and email seem far more likely to wander the crazytube of the Internet aimlessly.  Poor things.  Lesson - You can learn to be productive on the Internet.  Yes, really.
  10. Helping others gain study skills : There are lots of ways that I feel that my work on Deepest Health has helped others - and this is truly the greatest benefits I have received by blogging about Chinese Medicine.  I’ve listed just three ways I’ve helped here, but there are others.  Lesson - If you are a person who likes to help people, blogging is one way you can fulfill that divine desire.
  11. Helping others understand Chinese medicine concepts : Countless examples abound, from talking to people about the six conformations to talking about the organ clock and so much more.  I really enjoy sharing what I’m learning with others.  I learn so much in doing so.
  12. Helping to promote friends’ businesses and hobbies : I’ve promoted others blogs but also businesses like Paul Rosenberg’s Sacred Tea.
  13. Walking farther along my spiritual path : While I certainly would have made spiritual progress without this blog, the connections I’ve made and conversations I’ve had have really helped me move along.  Because I feel empowered to discuss spiritual matters on this blog, it’s been relatively simple to use my blogging as a medium to walk my Path. Lesson - Technology does not negate spirituality.
  14. Money and other material benefits : Of course it has been nice to get some material benefits from blogging.  I’m nowhere near making even a part-time income, but it grows with every lesson from Yaro I am able to implement.  I have enjoyed receiving review copies of books and software as well.  While I wouldn’t blog ONLY for the material benefits, they are nice.  Lesson - Blogging can be profitable in more ways than one.
  15. Lateral networking : Because of the nature of the Internet, people run across Deepest Health from many different walks of life and professions.  While I do come in contact with all sorts of people in the offline world, I generally keep within a certain group of friends and colleagues.  The connections I have made with people in very diverse fields has helped me to think differently about Chinese Medicine, and I’m profoundly grateful for that.  Lesson - Reaching out on the Internet helps you connect with the whole world.
  16. Ability to say, in conversation, “I’m a blogger” : A silly one, perhaps.  But, it is always interesting to see people’s reactions.  More often than not, they try to ignore that I said it.  Sometimes, they ask what that means.  Sometimes, they launch into a diatribe about Myspace.  It’s entertaining.  No lesson required.
  17. A greater appreciation for the immense diversity of our planet : This is connected to some degree with #15 about lateral networking.  Again, because of the nature of the Internet, you just end up connecting with a wider variety of people than you would normally when you blog.  Particularly when I use various forms of social media, I get a sense for what’s going on in Cairo or Melbourne or anywhere else.  I understand the struggles that normal people go through in places different from my own.  I also begin to see how similar we all are.  Lesson - The world is a vast, fascinating place.  You don’t have to pay an arm and a leg to connect with it.
  18. Better posture : Over time I’ve gone from sitting in a somewhat ergonomically structured plush office chair to a kitchen chair to my current seat - a simple short flat bench.  Strange?  I find that I am able to keep better posture when I have less support.  I don’t know if this makes any biomechanical sense at all.  Regardless, I have never paid so much attention to my posture as I have on long days of blogging.  Lesson - Just because other people slouch at the computer doesn’t mean you have to.
  19. A greater than average tolerance for sitting in long, long, long classes and seminars :  This one goes with #18 to a certain degree.  Instead of making me less tolerant to sitting, blogging has increased my stamina when it comes to sedentary activity.  I should note that while I do have long periods of sitting and writing, I do get up to do a couple of minutes of exercise about every 30 minutes.  I will sometimes do this in seminars when it is possible (as when I end up in the back of the room and it is not very quiet).  I’ll just get up and stretch my legs.  But, in general, I find that my ability to sit when necessary is much increased, and this has been tremendously helpful in some circumstances.  Lesson - Yeah, sitting all the time is no good, but you have to count your blessings.
  20. Greater finger strength for needling : I have fingers of POWER from all of this typing, I assure you.  Seriously, though, I pay close attention to my finger health, which includes finger exercising.  I don’t know if this has actually helped my needling, but let’s just pretend.  Lesson - See lesson#19 above.

Thanks for reading,

Eric

If you like what you read here, you may want to keep updated by using my RSS feed. Want to know more about RSS/feeds? - read more here. Thanks for visiting!

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

Related posts

Shameless self promotion?

deepest health link postThis Saturday’s links are, perhaps, a bit self serving.   I hope you won’t think it’s too much - but if you do, I apologize. I just started two new blogs that I hope you will be interested in reading. They are both just brand new - like a baby still covered in various tissues, squinty eyed, bright red and squalling. The designs are fairly stable, but the sidebars will get more complex and certainly lots of new free content will be added over the next several months. Remember how fun it was a the beginning of  Deepest Health? No? Well - get in on these while the fun is still building. :)

1. Naturalmedicinesuccess.com : This blog has multiple purposes. At base, it will be a blow-by-blow chronicle of the building of my medical practice with my partner, Amanda Barp LMT. We will take you through our process from nascent vision statement to opening day and beyond. Along the way, we hope to offer tons of value. We’ll do reviews : of herb and other types of companies, of software and hardware, of organizations, of anything that warrants a review. We’ll do interviews : of prominent business people in the field of natural medicine, of folks in various companies in natural medicine, of our peers who are struggling to do what we’re doing, and so on. We’ll tell stories : of the adventure that is working with your spouse, of the even greater adventure that is integrating your whole immediate family into one’s business, of interacting with patients (confidentiality preserved, of course), peers, vendors and official persons of all stripes. We’ll offer our take on the best of the best and the worst of the worst. We may have other folks joining us in the writing as well. I think it will be a great read for beginning entrepreneurs in any field but the particular bent will be, of course, natural medicine - since that’s what we’re doing.

2. Ericgrey.com : It’s time for me, finally, to have a personal site. There’s just so much I do that has little to do directly with Chinese medicine. I want to keep Deepest Health as focused on Chinese medicine and the things it directly connects with in my mind. I hope you appreciate that. Ericgrey.com will be far more personal, and it is the one of the two that you may be less interested in as Deepest Health readers. No offense taken, I promise. I’ll talk about a variety of subjects, but because of the nature of my life I will almost certainly focus primarily on the following topics:

  • My eclectic spiritual practice (that takes Christianity as its base but involves Daoism, Confucianism and Buddhism)
  • Veganism and raising a vegan family in a wacky, wacky world
  • Personal development, including personal organization and various technology involved
  • Raising a conscious and compassionate kid (again, in a wacky, wacky world)

I reserve the right to go off-topic there. It’s mine, ok? :D

Okay, so I owe it to you to put a non-me link in the list.  :)

3.  I’m not sure how many of you know Steve Pavlina.  I acutally read most of Steve’s stuff before I started Deepest Health, so I may not have talked about him much on this site.  Steve has nothing to do with Chinese medicine, but his personal development philosophy (focused on love, compassion, and clear thinking) certainly resonates with many of the principles of the medicine.  I’ve linked specifically to a great month of his blog archives - nearly every article is a winner.  He has an extensive archive - I recommend you read through the first two years in particular.  Great, great stuff.  Very helpful for practitioner development.

Thanks for reading,

Eric

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Related posts

What is Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM)?

chinese_medicine_languagePreliminary note:  If you are really looking for a definition of TCM and want to learn more about Chinese medicine in general, please check out this page of articles written especially for folks who are new to the world of Chinese medicine and want to learn more.

——

I was just reading over some old journal entries from when Deepest Health began last year.  One of the blogging techniques that I was taught by Yaro Starak during the Blog Mastermind training program was creating definition posts.  I did use that format to define various things, including Qigong, acupuncture and herbal medicine.  However, because I started to get interested in a lot of more complicated things and attracted some fairly sophisticated readers, I moved away from those basic types of posts.

I found a note that I should write a post about TCM - which really got me thinking.  There’s a fundamental problem with my blogging purpose.  I am interested in getting good information out there about Chinese medicine, it’s practice, power and philosophical foundation.  I’ve been putting that information out as I learn it, revising points as I’m able and hoping that my good intentions and transparency will make sure that the good information overcomes the bad.

But, I’m trying to do too many things at once.  How so?  Well, consider terminology.  When most people think about Chinese medicine, they think about acupuncture.  This is so much the case that most people simply call all of Chinese medicine “acupuncture,” even some practitioners.  One of my mentors even names his business using the word acupuncture and says nothing about herbs.  Why does he do this?  Because when most people think about contacting a Chinese medicine physician, the word that comes into their mind is “acupuncture.”  It just makes good business and marketing sense.

Which, apparently, I don’t have.  :)  By talking constantly about Classical Chinese Medicine on this blog, I end up missing out on picking up on a lot of folks who are searching for information about this medicine.  What do they search for if they are little more savvy?  Maybe “Chinese herbs” or even “traditional Chinese medicine,” and if they’re REALLY on it, “TCM.”  Those words appear very few times in any of my content.  :D  So, while I’m sitting here pumping out quality content, fighting the good fight, I’m missing probably half of my intended audience. In some way, I’m hoping to change the language around Chinese medicine.  I honestly don’t care if the word “classical” makes it in there - simply calling it Chinese medicine would be fine.

So, if in the coming months and years, you see me using TCM or Traditional Chinese Medicine or Acupuncture a little bit more in the way that I write - do forgive me.  I’m simply using the common vernacular to try and get the information out to the people who are looking for it.

All that aside, I’m interested to know how terminology plays into your life around Chinese Medicine. If you have a business or work at a school, how is Chinese medicine discussed in your marketing materials?  Do you think there is some value in trying to change the language through marketing, or is that just dooming one to failure?  Do you find that your patients/students are confused about the language used to describe what we do?  Please leave your thoughts in the comments and, as always, thanks for reading.

Eric

Tags: , , , , , ,

Related posts

7 Reasons why cool people don’t blog

too_cool_to_blogOne of the greatest benefits of blogging is the many relationships you build with other bloggers and blog readers.  I believe this is the especially case in a small niche like Chinese medicine.  There simply aren’t many active blogs (or even, really, non-blog websites) out there.  This creates a pretty small pond in which for fishes of any size to swim.  It’s a positive thing in some ways - it’s easy to get to know the folks in the field and the relationships built are pretty intimate.  But, having more folks as part of the conversation makes for a more robust conversation!  Further, when there are a lot of folks working in a given niche a kind of ecosystem evolves that allows for lots of fruitful cross-pollination, traffic building and ultimately more potential profit for everyone.

I’ve done a lot of thinking about why there aren’t more active bloggers in the world of Chinese medicine.  In my research, I’ve discovered that there are a number of niches in the general category of “conscious living” that are bizarrely unfilled or under filled.  While there are plenty of people searching for information about more “alternative” topics (like veganism, meditation and Eastern spirituality, simplicity, naturopathic medicine, homeopathy, eco-consciousness, local food, etc…) there aren’t that many people having robust and interesting conversations about these topics.  In talking with my friends and reading through some forum and email exchanges, I think I have at least one (mildly tongue in cheek) reason why this phenomenon is occurring.

Simply - consciously living folks who are knowledgeable about these topics are too cool for blogging. :)  What can I possibly mean by that?  I’m obviously joking a bit, but I do encounter a quite perplexing attitude when I talk about blogging to people in the Chinese medicine and naturopathic community.  They look at me as if I’m a creature from another planet, a traitor to my kind or some hybrid of both.  After some long thinking, I think I’ve discovered some reasons that these wise, conscious and unbelievably cool people haven’t yet discovered the power of blogging.

—-

1.  They don’t want to spend so much time with computers : I think this is the most crucial item on the list.  There is a perception that, in order to be a blogger, you have to be married to your computer.  Seeing me blogging probably doesn’t help that perception much.  But many people have managed to create active, exciting and profitable blogs on around two hours of active work per day.  Further, even creating a blog and posting your thoughts just a couple of times a week can do a lot to counter the weak and outright bad information out there about all the topics I’ve listed above.  My point is simple - you don’t have to have your computer glued to your hands in order to be a successful blogger!

I think behind this is the latent idea in the natural medicine community that computer technology is inherently bad.  I meet and greet this misperception nearly every day.  I understand where it comes from.  Many people who use computers frequently don’t lead very healthful lifestyles - long hours of sitting, staring, eating whatever is at hand, terrible posture, etc… it can be a detriment to balance, to be sure.  It doesn’t have to be that way.  I’d argue that it isn’t that way in the majority of cases.  In my time blogging, my lifestyle has become MORE healthful - not less.  I don’t believe that I am being invisibly eviscerated by rays of death emanating from my machine.  I simply haven’t seen or felt any evidence that this is the case.  I think it’s high time that we as natural medicine practitioners and supporters of all kinds of alternative lifestyles take another look at our perceptions of computers and computer technology.  Let’s find a way to make it a boon, not a bane.

2.  They don’t have time because they’re doing cooler things : A lot of us are very busy.  I’m very busy.  Oh man, you don’t even know.  So very busy.  A quick glance at my active project lists shows over sixty currently active projects pulling at my attention.  I’m not exaggerating.  I have an eleven year old daughter (going on sixteen), I’m in my intern year, I’m student body president at NCNM, active in a number of other organizations, working on projects for both of my main mentors, I’m starting a business and trying to keep up in a number of fields by self-educating.  That’s just for starters and doesn’t include my personal projects.  What keeps me alive?  Self cultivation and the power of the relationships I cultivate both online and offline.

Regardless - this “reason” is related to the first — that blogging has to take a lot of time.  It doesn’t.  To be truthful, at first it does take some time to get set up and to get used to the work flow.  After that, things get easier and only have to get time consuming if you decide to change or expand something.  At the most basic level, it can easily be 5 hours or less of your working week.  Easily!

3.  They’re not self absorbed : As I discussed in a recent article, many people have the perception that you have to be very into yourself in order to project your thoughts to the universe online.  I don’t think this is the case.  When you’re blogging about a topic that you care about, even if you blog in very personal terms, your focus is the topic - not yourself.  Even if you do a little self-promotion (like in promoting your private practice, or a lecture series or a product you just released) the focus is really on informing people about something that might be of interest to them.  Further, if we keep in mind that the desire should be to get great information about natural medicine (or whatever topic) out there for people to find - you can have a very giving mindset and be somewhat ego-less in the whole process.

4.  They communicate in other, cooler, ways : Some people don’t understand the blogging format and feel that their thoughts are better projected in other, more traditional, ways.  Perhaps they have a mailed newsletter or publish articles in industry journals.  Perhaps they are fortunate enough to have book deals or a regular newspaper or magazine column.  All of these types of people can benefit from blogging.  By leveraging this simple and powerful communication medium, they can help magnify the positive educational effects of their print media offerings.  My friend and colleague, Abdallah B Stickley, provides a good example of this method with his blogging about his Chinese Medicine Times article.

5.  They know it doesn’t make any difference what people say on the Internet:  I have been on the Internet since the Internet was born.  That’s just a simple truth that, I think, explains why I believe so much in the power of this medium of communication.  From the very beginning, I saw how it was changing how people talked to one another (in good and bad ways) and when blogging first began, I rejoiced at how it might allow ordinary people to discuss their experience of life and how they live it.  There is something very powerful in sharing one’s take on the world with others and something even more powerful about stumbling upon the works of someone from a very different background with whom you have some resonance.  This is made more possible, in my opinion, by the Internet and blogging in particular.  I have been changed by the things I read on blogs, and I know people have been changed by what I’ve written here.  If that doesn’t matter, I don’t know what does.

6.  They’re not techno-savvy because of number one and two above : I think the first two things I mentioned on this list keep people from becoming acquainted with the technology involved in blogging.  At my school, NCNM, I would say about 50% of the student population gets confused by simply checking their email.  Though it puts me at risk of offending them, I want to say that I feel like this is a kind of feigned helplessness.  Because many have this ideological stance against technology (as I’ve said, I think its an erroneous stance) and because they believe themselves to be too busy - they do not learn the requisite skills needed to blog.

What are those requisite skills? Well, checking email is a good start.  The ability to navigate a basic word processor is necessary - since most blogging software has similarities to basic word processors.  You have to have some familiarity with how the Internet works and how to find information using search engines.  From there, you can learn the rest as you go.  As I mentioned in my article yesterday, there are training programs available for people who would like to learn to blog - and I can highly recommend Yaro Starak’s Blog Mastermind program.  Please read those above linked articles if you want to learn more about the program.

7. Secretly, they don’t think they have much to say : I think the majority of people, at least in the United States, have been trained to think of themselves and their thoughts as fundamentally meaningless.  The vast majority of public education in this country kills creativity, makes people question their ability to think and generally tries to produce a buzzing hive of listless worker bees.  To put it mildly. Because of this, most people grow up thinking that OTHER people have important things to say and that noone could possibly want to hear what they are thinking or what they believe.  It may be that you don’t have much to offer in the way of blogging content - but I doubt it.

Have you faced a major illness, whether in yourself or in someone else?  Have you started a business?  Do you specialize in something within your field?  Have you travelled to a foreign country?  Learned another language?  Do you have a garden?  Do you have any hobbies?  Do you have strong political beliefs?  Are you an avid researcher of one topic or another?  Do you have a family with a strong tradition in something?  Do you have allergies or particular food preferences that other people don’t have?  Do you excel at finding interesting photographs or stories?  The list of questions could go on - if you can answer yes to any of these and similar questions - you can be a blogger.  In fact, you SHOULD be. Your adoring public awaits.  :)

Note:  I should mention that a subset of this last point is the group of people who may have something to say, but don’t think they can write.  Yaro actually goes into some detail about the “but I can’t write” objection - but let me assure you - you don’t need to write the next Great American Novel.  If you can get your point across, you can blog.

Thanks for reading,

Eric

PS: If you’re interested in blogging and even making some money at it, feel free to download the Blog Profits blueprint written by Yaro Starak, my blog mentor.  Also, please check out the articles that I linked to above if you haven’t already.  Finally, I’m always happy to talk with folks some more about my experience with Blog Mastermind - just email me at d e e p e s t h e a l t h @ g m a i l . c o m, with no spaces between the letters.  Also, as always, feel free to share your thoughts and questions in the comments!

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Related posts

A fun and effective way for you to start earning money blogging

networking_bloggingAs I discussed in my earlier post, I believe that healthcare providers should start blogging in bigger numbers.  But, really, I think everyone should start providing high quality, easily accessible content via blogs, regardless of profession.  It does take time, it’s true, and no small amount of bravery (putting yourself out there can be scary) but the promise of earning an income may help you to overcome your fears.

But can you really make money blogging? Yes.  A little over a year ago, I began a blogging course called Blog Mastermind with blogger and Internet marketer, Yaro Starak.  I was drawn into his way of thinking first by reading about his incredible Blog Profits Blueprint which he offered for free on his blog, Entrepreneurs-journey.com. I read the blueprint in about 45 minutes - once I picked it up, I couldn’t put it down.  Here was what I had been waiting for, a way to make money simply by sharing what I’m learning, thus helping my family and eventually (hopefully) taking the pressure off of patient visits when I’m in clinical practice!  Fantastic!

I started this blog, Deepest Health, immediately.  Unfortunately, my way through the course got a little choppy and I actually ended up having to quit before the end.  However, the information I gleaned from those couple of months was more than enough to catapult me from making nothing to making several hundred dollars.  I have to admit that, because of the intensity of my schooling (and the rest of my responsibilities) I wasn’t able to do things exactly as Yaro instructed.  However, going back over my notes and really implementing what he taught me now has already brought great benefits - resurgences in traffic and a threefold increase in daily income!  He’s really got something special.

He’s opening his training program again, newly updated, incorporating the lessons he learned during his last implementation. I can recommend this to anyone who is interested in making an income blogging.  I’m happy to talk to you about my experiences in the course - through email or comments.

As is Yaro’s way, he’s offering some great free content as he launches his new membership site. He does this first and foremost because he likes sharing what he learns - but of course he hopes that you will be impressed enough with the free content to consider becoming a paid member.  I should also disclose that if you buy into Yaro’s membership program through my link, I will get a commission.  I appreciate that extra income and pledge to use it to improve my blog here and also put together my new blog, naturalmedicinesuccess.com, coming soon.  On to the free resources…

First, definitely check out the Blog Profits Blueprint - this is an incredible FREE guide that will help you understand the basic way that blogging works and how it generates income.  Download the Blog Profits Blueprint.

Second, head over to Yaro’s site and watch his excellent, informative videos that cover his unique take on how to take making money online with blogs to the next level.  I was amazed at the quality of this content - I’m already using it to help take Deepest Health to an even wider audience.

Third, sign up using the links on any of those pages I sent you to or by following this link directly to Yaro’s sales page. I promise that you will not be disappointed in your experience.  Yaro will take you through the earliest stages (setting up the blog) and step-by-step help you to get up to full functionality, making money and having a great time.  I have learned that there are some things that don’t work as well in the natural medicine niche of blogging, and that’s why I’m considering developing a course of my own.  But you can easily get up and running and making a profit while getting your face, your name and your unique perspective out there using Yaro’s methods.  He offers excellent customer service and connects you with a community of folks who are walking the path alongside you.  I found that the member connections were one of the best parts of the program - I think you will, too.

Anyway - thanks for letting me go slightly off topic, here.  I really believe that the more natural medicine (and associated) bloggers we have out there, the better health we will have as a community of human beings.  I hope you share this opinion and are ready to share your voice with the world.  If you do sign up and get a blog going, please contact me as soon as you do and I will put your blog address up on my soon-to-be-created natural medicine blog subpage.  I’ll be your first high-quality link, helping you build traffic from search engines and starting your meteoric rise to the highest strata of blogging.  :)

Thanks again,

Eric

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Related posts

Next Page →