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Podcast your way to a bigger audience for your book or blog

March 9, 2012 by Sonia Marsh

 

Just finished a fantastic interview with Dave Thackeray, The Podcast Guy. THANK YOU!

Bob @Satisfying Retirement and Stephanie @Blog in France, Dave answered your questions on the podcast. Please read the introduction on “A Gutsy Way to Grab More Readers.”

Thanks Dave, and I shall get a transcription of the podcast so you can also read the interview.

Join Dave on FaceBook, and Twitter. He is super helpful and friendly.

Be Gutsy and get started on spreaker.com At least check out the tutorials.

I’m going to record the first chapter of my book: Freeways-to Flip-Flops ASAP.

Any comments? Please leave below.

Suprise!

Dave has kindly agreed to sponsor the “My Gutsy Story” contest, not once, but twice, so two lucky winners can get a free 30-minute consultation with Dave about growing their audience through podcasting.

No excuses now so come over and submit your own, “My Gutsy Story.” You can find all the information, and our sponsors on the “My Gutsy Story” contest page. (VIDEO) Submission guidelines here.

***

Finally, remember to vote for your favorite February “My Gutsy Story” You can read all four here. The winner will be announced on Thursday, March 15th.

A Gutsy way to grab more readers

March 8, 2012 by Sonia Marsh

Dave the Podcast Guy

 

Do you want to kick things up a notch? Want to be more “Gutsy” in what you do online?

  • Start Podcasting

Tomorrow I get a chance to interview the expert on Podcasting, Dave Thackeray, The Podcast Guy, who is charming, energetic and fun. You’ll love his accent; it’s more British than mine.

If you don’t know what Podcasting is, Dave will explain, but in the meantime, think of it as:

  • “A way to turbo-charge your static content.” Dave Thackeray, The Podcast Guy

My focus will be on asking Dave how you as a  blogger, writer, or a published author can use podcasting as an extra tool (more engaging than simply writing) to connect with your audience.

After all, we’re all nosy aren’t we? We like to hear people’s “live” voice, especially writers we enjoy.

  • So you think you have nothing to say?

Don’t worry, Dave is an expert at finding “the expert in you.”

  • Do you have any specific questions you’d like me to ask Dave on your behalf?

Please leave them for me, and I shall ask him tomorrow, via Skype, when I speak to him in his office in Liverpool, U.K.

In the meantime, you can check out a brief overview on Dave’s blog called, “New to Podcasting?”

I shall let you know when the podcast will be ready for you to click on.

Thanks, and be Gutsy.

I want to thank Annabel Candy for her great post on podcasting and for putting me in touch with Dave Thackeray.

 

 

Are French Parents More Gutsy?

February 23, 2012 by Sonia Marsh

After reading an article in the Wall Street Journal about “Why French Parents are Superior”  by Pamela Druckerman, it finally hit me that some of my child-rearing methods are actually more French than I care to admit. I’m not French, but I spent a good chunk of my youth growing up in the suburbs of Paris.

My three sons are adults now, and grew up in the U.S., however, Druckerman brought up one main difference between French parenting and American parenting that struck a chord.  She said, “Who’s the boss?” She then gave the French answer:

French parents say, “It’s me who decides.”

  • Who’s the boss, you or your kids?

Right after my husband, Duke and I, made the decision to uproot our family from Orange County, California, to Belize, Central America, I remember being asked the following question, almost daily: “So what do your kids think about your decision to move to Belize?”

At the time, I thought this was a stupid question. Now I realize why.

Belize, Ambergris Caye, near our house.

Below is an excerpt from a chapter in my book: Freeways to Flip-Flops: Our Year of Living Like the Swiss family Robinson.

I’d become obsessed with Belize.

I’d tell anyone who cared to listen–including complete strangers in supermarket lines or at the gym—about how we were uprooting our family to live in Belize. Sometimes I imagined a glimpse of envy on a stranger’s face. That’s when I shifted into salesperson mode, trying to push them into doing the same.  Duke warned me, “Don’t tell everyone about Belize; we don’t want people flocking there.”

Some people thought we were crazy. Others were skeptical.  “Yeah, sure,” they said. “Let’s see if you really go ahead with it.” The second group always asked, “So what do your kids think?” to which I snapped back, “Who makes the decisions in your family, you or your kids?” Many looked shocked, but my European accent helped. It allowed people to classify me as an alien, despite my U.S. citizenship.

There are many times in life when you are faced with tough choices, and you need to make a  decision. As parents, we cannot always cave in to what are kids want; we have to decide what’s best for the entire family. We need to guide and lead, and my experience with French parents, is that they are more strict, and perhaps more “old-fashioned” when it comes to child-rearing.

I could go on about so many aspects that Druckerman covers in her article: “Why French Parents Are Superior.” For example: teaching your kids polite manners, family eating habits, and disciplining your children, because I’ve seen it done the French way and the American way.

Since I’ve lived in both France and the U.S., as well as the U.K., Denmark and Belize, I can pick and choose what’s right for my family. That’s what I love about travel, and the expat life, you get exposed to different ways of looking at the decisions you make in your life.

What about you? Who’s the boss, you or your kids?

***

Do you have a “My Gutsy Story”?

To submit your own, “My Gutsy Story” you can find all the information, and our sponsors on the “My Gutsy Story” contest page. (VIDEO) Submission guidelines here.

 

“My Gutsy Story” by Brooke Bridenstine

February 20, 2012 by Sonia Marsh

Sometimes it takes a Five-year Old

 

One thing to keep in mind: gutsy is relative. I am reserved by nature, I get that from my grandmother, who readily admits it is not necessarily one of the better traits she handed down. Allow me to illustrate:

  • The riskiest activity I participated in during those crazy high school days was forking. Forking is exactly what it sounds like; we stuck plastic forks in the ground of the front yard.
  • I took a job at the first company that gave me an offer because, as a pre-Obama 22-year old, I was concerned about my health insurance. That was a job in insurance administration, not something I ever dreamed of doing, and yet four and a half years later I am still in that line of work. I use line of work because I refuse to call it my career; insurance administration is not my career.
  • I paid off my first big purchase, a new car, in less than two years because I did not want to keep paying through the nose from the high interest rate.

As you can see, I express traits that more closely align with those of a conservative middle-aged man rather than a woman in her twenties. So it came as quite a surprise to everybody who knew me that this past November I spent a great sum of money (a figure I have not totaled yet) to see the musical Wicked thirteen times. After one of the performances, several things were offered as incentives to donate to the organization Broadway Cares/Equity Fights Aids. I made a quick decision to make a sizable donation to go backstage and meet the stars and snap a photo. It was a blast; I was shaking afterwards from the adrenaline coursing through my blood. I saw the show again the next day and actually waited at the stage door to talk to the stars again and have them sign my program and snap a couple more photos. When I relayed the story to my dad, he asked me to send him the photos so he could take a look. Later that week when I was having dinner at his house, his five-year-old son said to me, “Brooke, in the pictures of you with the people from Wicked you look really happy.” Kids, they have a gift for getting right to the heart of the matter. I looked really happy because I was really happy.

If going to the theater and writing about theater makes me happy, shouldn’t I go after that? I had started a blog a few months earlier, after thinking about it for over a year, but I was not committed enough. That moment crystallized what we all know, but can have difficulty executing: nothing will change if we don’t do anything differently than what we were doing before. Now I update at least once a week. And, though it is hard for me to swallow this fact, there is no way to know where it may lead. I won’t be able to see a show on stage every week, but if I want to change the direction of my life then I have to start somewhere. There are going to be more pictures of me looking really happy.

***

Brooke’s Bio

I graduated from Iowa State University with a Liberal Arts degree. I currently work in benefits administration. I have a passion for Broadway shows and want to follow that passion. I started blogging last year as a first step to hopefully making writing my full-time job. Thanks for following my blog

***

Brooke, your story is a perfect example of someone who is following what makes her happy. I wish you all the best in achieving your goals, and keeping that feeling of being really happy, alive within you.

Please share your comments with Brooke, who will be coming over to respond.

***

Do you have a “My Gutsy Story”?

To submit your own, “My Gutsy Story” you can find all the information, and our sponsors on the “My Gutsy Story” contest page. (VIDEO) Submission guidelines here.

Please share the “My Gutsy Story” series with others on Twitter using the #MyGutsyStory. Thank you.

Winner of the January “My Gutsy Story” contest

February 16, 2012 by Sonia Marsh

Sara Padilla won 1st Place

Congratulations to Sara Padilla who won first place in the January “My Gutsy Story” contest with 28 votes.  She gets to pick her prize from our list of sponsors. We have added two new sponsors for the contest.

Sara Padilla 1st Place

Sara’s “My Gutsy Story” is so moving, as she shows how grief resulted in a major change within her.

Kenneth Weene 2nd Place
Kenneth Weene

We all admired Kenneth Weene’s courage in his “My Gutsy Story” story about saving a woman’s life.

 

Lois Joy Hofmann 3rd place
Lois Joy Hofmann

Lois Joy Hofmann’s “My Gutsy Story” is an amazing story of courage and being Gutsy in life, regardless of  age, as Lois Joy pointed out herself.

Pamela Sisman Bitterman 4th place
Pamela Sisman Bitterman, has a “My Gutsy Story” about her desire to  “go help starving children, be a blessing in the world, touch just one life,” in Kenya.
Dodie Cross 5th place
Dodie Cross also has an amazing “My Gutsy Story” about overcoming her fears of snorkeling in the deep blue ocean.
***

You touched all of us in different ways with your stories. I thank you for submitting and to all who voted.

Do you have a “My Gutsy Story” you’d like to share?

To submit your own, “My Gutsy Story” you can find all the information, and our sponsors on the “My Gutsy Story” contest page. (WATCH VIDEO) Submission guidelines here.

 

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