TRANSCRIPT: Ep. 014 Creativity is Your Life Purpose with Baeth Davis

THE INSPIRATION PLACE PODCAST

So last week had a really exciting interview with Mike Michalowicz and if you hadn’t had a chance, go back and listen to episode 13. Mike Michalowicz is the author of the best selling book, Profit First, and the latest book Clockwork. We talked all about how getting help in your art business is a game changer. Now I did say this week we’d talk about tools but it’s such a broad topic that I went into the Facebook group and I hope you’re a part of that. There’s a free Inspiration Place Facebook group. Just go to schulmanart.com/group or you can search for the Inspiration Place on Facebook, either way, and request to join my free group. I went in there and asked what people wanted to learn about software and tools. And a lot of you wanted help on getting started on a website and even if you have a website and you’ve had one for a long time, it seems like this is something that needs to be changed, updated, and refreshed every 5 to 7 years. So in the future, I will be inviting a guest expert to come in and talk about the differences between WordPress, SquareSpace, Shopify and what the different options are and whether it makes sense to build you own. So I’m gonna be dedicating a whole episode to that. The other thing you told me inside the group is that what you really wanna learn is how to become more productive. So again, my fair way of helping you is to invite an expert where I can pick their brains and we can learn together on their topic. So subscribe to the podcast so that you can get that episode as well. In addition though, I do have some free resources on the blog about my productivity. So I’m gonna be sure to link to those blog posts in my show notes, so this is schulmanart.com/14 to get all the links for today’s episode including those blog posts that I already have on productivity. So I hope you’ll take advantage of that. 

 

And now let’s go on to our show. I have a very lovely guest today. Her name is Baeth Davis and we’ve been friends for a really long time in real life. We went to college together and we actually met at freshman year in the fall in an Intro to Theater class. She is actually very colorful, a lot of fun, very insightful. She actually is a podcaster herself and what she does is help people find their life purpose. Baeth is the secret sage to global leaders including spiritual teachers, healers, artists, celebrities, scientists, and entrepreneurs. Baeth is devoted to helping you unleash your life purpose and uncover the number one thing that is holding you back from achieving it. So welcome to the show Baeth. I’m so glad you’re here. 

 

Baeth Davis:

It’s so lovely to be here. Thank you for that nice introduction. 

 

Miriam Schulman:

And for people who don’t know, Baeth and I have known each other for 30 years. Thirty years ago?

 

Baeth Davis:

30 years.

 

Miriam Schulman:

And proud of it right?

 

Baeth Davis:

Yes, right. Here we are.

 

Miriam Schulman:

I gotta touch up all the different, you know.

 

Baeth Davis:

Yeah, I do too. 

 

Miriam Schulman:

I haven’t done it in a while.

 

Baeth Davis:

Fillers. Botox. And the next time I’m gonna do is get this neck lift thing where they just use this laser and it just releases your natural collagen. The guy at the place told me that we stop producing collagen at like age 65. So if you get ahead of the curve, your body keeps producing it without surgery.

 

Miriam Schulman:

Good to know.

 

Baeth Davis:

I don’t think I would cut on my face.

 

Miriam Schulman:

Cut? You mean face lift?

 

Baeth Davis:

I think it looks dumb.

 

Miriam Schulman:

My grandmother did it and they didn’t attach something correctly like her eye, yeah. So my family doesn’t do that, anymore. And my 71 year-old mother looks stunning. So if I have any of her genes..

 

Baeth Davis:

Yeah, you look great. You look fit. You look rested. You look great.

 

Miriam Schulman:

You look gorgeous. And I’m so happy to see that you’re acting. I don’t know if that’s again or you’ve been doing it and I didn’t know.

 

Baeth Davis:

Well I started acting when I was about 8 or 9 years old. And then I was a Theater major in Dartmouth and then I moved out to L.A. I did some movie stuff and got my SAG card. And then at about 25 I quit. I knew my body was being called in a spiritual quest and it led to the work I do now, and it just has come full circle living here in L.A. There are just some opportunities coming so I decided to sign up for the classes just because I was getting a little rusty, to brush up on my stage chops and I’m just loving it. 

 

Miriam Schulman:

Good for you. 

 

Baeth Davis:

It’s so fun.

 

Miriam Schulman:

It’s so funny how life takes us full circle. I was trying to fit myself in as an engineering major but always doing my art on the side. And you initially went on to do advertising and marketing, is that right?

 

Baeth Davis:

Marketing. But mostly direct sales type of marketing. 

 

Miriam Schulman:

Yeah. So I just find it incredible how we know ourselves best when we’re young and then we kinda lose it before we find ourselves again. 

 

Baeth Davis:

That’s right.

 

Miriam Schulman:

And you remember when you visited me when you first started doing hand analysis and you did my hand?

 

Baeth Davis:

Yes. I do remember that. I think we went to a restaurant in Connecticut or something. 

 

Miriam Schulman:

That’s possible. Yeah, cause I used to work there. 

 

Baeth Davis:

Like Stamford or Greenwich, or something.

 

Miriam Schulman:

Yeah. Before I became an artist, I was working in a Greenwich hedge fund which sounds so weird coming from my mouth right now. But I desperately try to find that hand analysis tape you did but I think, because we no longer have tape recorders, I must not have kept that. 

 

Baeth Davis:

Yeah, probably not.

 

Miriam Schulman: 

Could you explain to my listeners what is hand analysis? And also, what’s the difference between hand analysis and palm reading?

 

Baeth Davis:

Sure. It is an understanding and reading of the palms themselves. It is scientific from the standpoint that it’s teachable and learnable and it’s repeatable and demonstrable. So it follows the scientific principles. The data in your hand, should it appear in someone else’s hand, would mean the same thing. Palmistry, which we have a lot to thank for because a great deal of it is actually accurate, dealts in a lot of predictions. I suppose, so people will feel more in control of their future because they didn’t know a lot about the natural world from a scientific standpoint. Scientific hand analysis takes the best of Asian palmistry, that which is accurate, and then has updated it with an understanding about the fingerprint patterns, gift markings, challenger markers, and so forth. 

 

Miriam Schulman:

So how do you use hand analysis in your business when you’re working to coach people?

 

Baeth Davis:

Well the first thing that we do is we send people printing kits ideally, and they send their handprints back to us. And when I work with someone, we get into a webinar like this and I can bring the hand print on the screen and annotate it and show the person what I see in their hands. Typically, in an initial reading, I will identify their life purpose which is their big why, their bliss zone, the area that comes easiest. I’ll also identify the life lesson which is our blind spot, and the life lesson is pivotal and key to our life because we bring consciousness and awareness to the lesson, our life feels better and it works better. It also allows us easier access to our purpose. So in that initial reading, my goal is to show you your purpose but also the blindspot that might stall you in your progress towards your purpose.

 

Miriam Schulman:

And one thing I really wanted to dig in with you that we talked about prior to coming to the show was when you work with creative people, cause I work with mostly women, who they spend their whole lives putting themselves on the back burner and creativity comes last. Children and family come first and not that family is not important but they don’t see nurturing their creativity is also important. So when you work with somebody who, within your work together, discovers that creativity is their life purpose, can you share a story like that for my listeners?

Baeth Davis:

Sure. Creativity is the number one life purpose in the world. It’s the purpose that shows up most often. So this purpose is very common and it shows up alot. And I think a lot of women in particular, like you said, have lost touch with this creativity. Now if I press them with some questions, they’ll reveal things such as “Well, I did get my MFA” or “Well, I was an architect” or “I did win a bunch of art awards in grade school”. And then something happens, then they’ll say to me in the reading, “I’m not creative” and I’m like, “Did you hear what you just said? You’ve got an MFA from Brown in Art but sure, you’re not creative because not creative people go for their MFA in Art. What are you talking about?” And it’s so interesting because I’ve had so many moments like this over the past 20 years of looking at people’s hands where the person who says, “Oh my gosh. I have blocked out that part of my identity and I didn’t even connect the two.” Years of studying art, years of making art might make me creative, and one day I just decided I wasn;t and forgot about it.

 

Miriam Schulman:

Yeah. And I hear that alot. People will say, it’s such a common story, that I-haven’t-picked-up-a-brush-since-college story and these are women who are out of college for 30-40 years and suddenly they wanna get back into it. But now, all those excuses they had for not picking up a paint brush are suddenly gone. So if they’ve been putting themselves in the backburner because of their children or their career, well now they are recently retired or they’re empty nesters so those excuses are suddenly gone. 

 

Baeth Davis:

Precisely. And to your question about a story. Years ago, I read a woman’s hand and sure enough the artist was her life’s purpose and she said, “I can’t even draw a stick figure.” That’s the other one I hear a lot.

 

Miriam Schulman:

Yeah, I hear that too.

 

Baeth Davis:

I can’t draw a stick figure. As if that were the hallmark that you’re creative, you can draw a good stick figure. And I asked her, “When do you remember being creative?” And she has this flashback to age 5, which I believe she was in kindergarten, making some kind of craft and very very involved and the teacher criticized it. And she said, “I just stopped making art after that.” I said, “At age 5?” She said, “Yes, I became a good student. I became very good at reading. I became a good daughter. I didn’t cause my parents trouble. I buried that part of myself.” And then we went on to coach together, some of the clients then went to coach with after the initial reading to begin to integrate the information into their everyday life. And she started writing screenplays and actually became a filmmaker and got funding for her projects. And she said that that reading, the initial reading, opened the door to this part of herself that at age 5 she had put away. 

 

Miriam Schulman:

It’s so common that people can go to that one event that happened where they were told a story that became their story like it became a limiting belief for themselves.

 

Baeth Davis:

Yes, that’s right. 

 

Miriam Schulman:

And I do hear that “I want to but I can’t draw” and I have to say to them “Well, it’s kinda how I learned to play tennis. I didn’t know how to hit a backhand either until somebody thought me.” So a lot of this also comes down, for me, to two things. There’s the desire and then the skill. 

 

Baeth Davis:

Yes.

 

Miriam Schulman:

But the skill, nobody is born with the skills. The skills are taught. 

 

Baeth Davis:

Yeah. the skills you learn through practice and experimentation.

 

Miriam Schulman:

Practice. Experimentation. Mentoring. Teaching. Of course, like anything in life, you could figure it out yourself if you had unlimited time. It’s much faster to learn when you have a coach, a mentor, someone to show you the way. 

 

Baeth Davis:

That’s right. 

 

Miriam Schulman:

Skip over a lot of the experimentation of art.

 

Baeth Davis:

Yes.

 

Miriam Schulman:

And of course it’s like learning the rules so you can break them. And you said I’d rather stay ignorant of my life purpose  than know it and fail to do it. 

 

Baeth Davis:

Yes, that quote is something I’ve heard repeatedly from people over the years as to why they do not want to know their specific purpose in their hands. Why I’d rather stay ignorant about it than know it and live my life and fail to do it which is sad and kinda lame. But there it is. I don’t even know how to respond to people for when they say that to me. I think to myself, “Really? What are you gonna do, watch netflix and flip burgers? What are you gonna do with your life without taking some kind of risk to actualize your potential?” I think, sometimes, the fear of failure is so profound, the fear of ridicule and judgement and being excommunicated is so big.

 

Miriam Schulman:

But I think it’s more than that because I think it’s the fear of success. 

 

Baeth Davis:

Oh, that too. 

 

Miriam Schulman:

Because if you’re no good at something, if you try something and you’re no good, it’s like “See, I was no good at it? I didn’t waste the last 30 years of my life being an artist because I’m really no good at it.” So the fear of success can be a much greater thing because if you were actually good at it then “What the heck was I doing for the last 30. Why wasn’t I an artist all this time?”

 

Baeth Davis:

Precisely. Then there’s the regret and the self-judgement. 

 

Miriam Schulman:

Exactly! So I think that’s what comes in when they don’t wanna know what they should have been doing for the last 30 years of their lives or 50 depending on when you wanna put that time marker down. That if there was something else should’ve been doing, why weren’t they doing it and then that’s hard.

 

Baeth Davis:

Yes. It is hard but are you gonna spend the last 20 years of your life?

 

Miriam Schulman:

Right. We’re gonna live a long time.

 

Baeth Davis:

I mean at a certain point, I think it’s valuable to hit the reset button. When I have a bad day or challenging day, I say to myself, “Well, tomorrow’s the first day of the rest of your life.” Because I’m allowed to be a newborn. I’m allowed to learn everyday. I’m allowed to fall on my face everyday and miraculously I get better at things because I’m allowed to be a learner. 

 

Miriam Schulman:

That’s beautiful. So when you work with people, how do you connect their gifts to succeeding in business?

 

Baeth Davis:

If you know your life purpose, let’s say your life purpose is to be an artist in the spotlight the world’s number one life purpose, and you have a gift marking that says you have the Midas touch, which means you’re good with money, well your hands would indicate that’s important that you get paid for you art. And in the coaching, it comes down to how do I grow as an artist. Well art shows are a great way to do that but what kind of art shows? And you wanna go to art shows where people are gonna buy your art, etc. What’s gonna be your online presence? So once that person makes the decision: Yes, I’m gonna be paid as an artist.  Now we can actually figure out what’s your first step. And then that person is in motion because they’ve made a decision: I’m gonna accept the truth of my map. It’s basically a map of your brain. The structure of our hand mirrors our personality. You can do any personality test, Kolbe, Myers-Briggs, DISC assessment, astrology, and they’ll tell you all the same thing about yourself. It’s not like you’re gonna be getting new news from any of these assessments whether it’s a corporate test or an astrology reading, wherever you go there you are because you carry your map with you. Once that person has made the decision, yes, I’m actually gonna accept the data, I’m gonna accept that nature actually gave me a blueprint from my genetics. So the universe is very orchestrated, it’s mechanical, and when you line up with your correct mechanics, miracles start to happen which you’ve experienced. Miriam, you decided to be an artist and you got serious about it. So while making money doing these other things, why not make money doing what I want to do. That first decision puts you in alignment with your design. 

 

Miriam Schulman:

I wanna share something with you that you might not remember. So you did my hand analysis and back then, I forgot if I was still in finance or just recently left, I don’t remember which. But I wasn’t an artist.

 

Baeth Davis:

You were contemplating leaving as I recall.

 

Miriam Schulman:

Okay, so that’s it then. So after you did the hand analysis, I actually had an accident where I cut my hand and I still have a scar across one of the lines and I reached out to you and said, “Baeth, so what does this mean now? I have this line across.” Do you remember what you told me?

 

Baeth Davis:

I don’t remember. Tell me what I said.

 

Miriam Schulman:

You told me “You’re about to make a change in your life” which I did. A very dramatic one. I quit my job and I didn’t become an artist right away. There was a period where I was just exploring and not just really being. And when 9/11 happened, that’s when I took it as a sign from the universe. “Heck no, I’m not going back to that. I’m gonna be an artist now.” It’s just so interesting that you had that clarity. I don’t know how much, is it the hand or is hand analysis just a tool to tap into the intuition that you already have. 

 

Baeth Davis:

It’s both ends because my hands show my ability as an intuitive. You know I have an incredibly open third eye so one of the scary things about that is I essentially can remote view. I don’t do it that often because seeing what’s going on in Saudi Arabia or wherever is not really that fun. And I can’t necessarily do anything about it. So I won’t terrify your audience with what I’m seeing. But you know, I do occasionally, if you watch my Facebook lives, if anyone dares, I kinda tell people what’s coming. And some people listen and some people don’t and that’s alright. But anyway, did I answer that?

 

Miriam Schulman:

You did and I also wanted to talk about.. Laugh it out. I also wanted to dig into the idea that finding your gifts are actually what help people prosper so I got a lot of resistance from not so much my students, but when I talk to parents of my daughter’s friend, she’s 20, who are interested in going to art. And they’ll say, “Well she wants to major in art but you know you don’t make money as an artist.” And I’m like, “Who are you talking to? Who do you think you’re talking to? No! There are a lot of people who are making a very good living with their art.” So why do people struggle so much about really making that connection of using their gifts and prospering?

 

Baeth Davis:

It’s a wonderful question and I can go at it many different ways so I wanna start with the meta-picture which is that social conditioning probably since the dawn of agriculture and it just escalated from there, when people had to start proving paternity which was the start of misogyny, so we know who owned the land. With good things comes a shadow, it’s just the nature of life. With every good thing, there’s a cost. Every negative thing, there’s a cost that could be good. And as society became more streamlined, more structured, it became necessary for the methods of production to continue for people to be willing to show up to work, to really do boring, unpleasant stuff. And religion is structured in this way “yeah, your life sucks now but boy when you die…” I can’t even tell you. I read comments like that everyday on Facebook. “Well this life’s just an illusion, and then you’re gonna die.” I’m like “Hmmm. Sorry, no. This is what you got right here. This is it, heaven and hell right here.” So I’m like “Where’s that belief come from?” Nobody knows.

 

Miriam Schulman:

Even if there’s something later. Why not make today great?

 

Baeth Davis:

But the thing is nobody knows. Nobody knows what will happen in the future, not really. Even though I can see things, they may or may not play out. So I’m not a religious person, so I’m not a good person to talk about that. I got kicked out of bible study but what I see consistently is this. Ask me the question again. I swear I’m very menopausal, my brain. 

Miriam Schulman:

It’s about connecting the idea that you can prosper when using your gift.

 

Baeth Davis:

Right. Thank you. I remember.

 

Miriam Schulman:

It’s gonna make you prosper regardless of what comes easy to you.

 

Baeth Davis:

Yes.

 

Miriam Schulman:

And not to have to feel guilty around that.

 

Baeth Davis:

Right. But what I’m saying Miriam is that there’s a conditioning process by the powers that be to make good factory workers. The whole United States public education system is not about creativity. They don’t teach you one damn thing in school other than how to read and use an abacus that you can actually use as a grown-up. Like they don’t tell you how to balance a checkbook, how to sell you services, how to actually communicate with another human being, what intimacy is, safe sex. All this stuff you actually need to know like how to invest your money so you’re not working and destitute when you’re 65. Like that’s what all they taught me in school is how to become an empowered citizen but no, what they teach you is how to be a crippled drone. And it’s institutionalized all across the world because the powers that be want people to go to work and suck it up, pay their penance and then go to either heaven when they die. So the artist, how dare the artist have the audacity to say “Not only am I not going to be a factory worker, I’m gonna make stuff. I’m gonna make stuff that never existed that’s pretty, that’s inspiring, that moves you emotionally and I’m gonna be paid for it.” How dare you be such a renegade and yet it’s the world’s number one life purpose because most human beings need to be seen. They need to be acknowledged. They need to be praised. And I will tell you, nothing makes a human being happier than being praised for their creative expression. “Oh what a beautiful song you sang.” “Oh Miriam, I love that painting behind you.” It’s amazing by the way. 

 

Miriam Schulman:

Thank you.

 

Baeth Davis:

I love it. It’s amazing.

 

Miriam Schulman:

Thank you. Your mermaid.

 

Baeth Davis:

Right. My mermaid. You can see the lower half right? I took up painting and you’re one of my inspirations. Like I’m gonna start painting. So I hired an oil painting teacher. You know the painting caused me thousands to paint because of course I go for the most expensive. My frame was $400 you know. Anyway, so who are you? Who are you to dare to be so audacious to say you can get paid to have fun? We can’t so you can’t either. You need to be an accountant or something boring. So a lot of it, the parents are well meaning with the creative child because they want their child to not live in their basement when they’re 25. They wanna make sure they can get paid but because of hundreds of years of conditioning that being an artist is a no-no. I mean think about it, when there’s a revolution, who do they kill first? The artist, the philosophers, and the scientists,and then any race that they’ve decided is also the problem. But that’s basically how a revolution goes right? Oh and the homosexuals, take them all and put them away because those people live on the edge. So the artist has always symbolically been the person who exposes beauty, exposes ugliness, exposes the unspeakable. And it’s very hard to put beauty into any kind of language, it’s an experience right? Beauty’s an experience. 

 

Miriam Schulman:

And artists really help the world see.

 

Baeth Davis:

Yes. Exactly!

 

Miriam Schulman:

That’s our job to help us know..

 

Baeth Davis:

Precisely my point. See beauty. See ugliness. See the truth. See in another perspective. 

 

Miriam Schulman:

But to go back to your other point. That art is so necessary if you think about it. Thousands of years ago, they were making art in caves. It is important.

 

Baeth Davis:

Yes because art is our original language. “Let me draw you a picture to explain to you what happened at the battle yesterday. Let me draw a picture to show you what I saw taking my walk.” We’ve reached a time in history where we no longer have to worry about paying bills and you can test it out for yourself. The way our body has become genetically engineered over the past couple of hundred years is when we line up with our purpose, and we make a decision, you have to make a decision, a full committed decision to fulfill that purpose, the right people, the right resources, the right timing will show up for you, everytime.

 

Miriam Schulman:

I love that.

Baeth Davis:

And the right amount of money will always come in. Now I hear people say things like “Oh I want a million dollars.” For what? Really, what you need is 20 grand to get that project finished. How about just focus on the 20 grand? Sure enough the 20 grand shows up that week. “Baeth, the 20..” Yes because that’s what you needed for the project. Now as we continue to line up, we start making revenue and then we can build investments, and yes really create with money as well as safety nets for as selves so we don’t have to work if we don’t want to. And I have many friends who don’t have to work and they work anyways. Some of them work like dogs because they love their jobs so much, in fact, they’re almost…all of them are artists who retired early because they were smart about money. So when you line up with the truth of who you are, that’s the first step. The second thing is this. Probably the most important thing I could tell anyone these days. With all the fracture going on in the world, and the uncertainty, well there’s always been uncertainty, I don’t know if things are better or worse you know they are what they are. We have a lot of media now so people can communicate a lot faster right? So news travels and people getting bombarded and overstimulated and there’s way more input than what our brain can really handle. So this makes people anxious and think that all is going to hell in a handbasket. Nah, not really. However there is a lot of chaos, there is a lot of fracture. So one of the things that I encourage everyone to do now is to take their power back. I’ve heard that phrase a lot but I mean really take it back. The only authority in your life is you. The only person that can keep you safe, make you money, create prosperity for you is you. That’s it.

 

Miriam Schulman:

I love that. That’s so terrific.

 

Baeth Davis:

It’s you. And any reliance on your spouse, the government, your mother-in-law, you’re screwed because that source is not reliable. You are reliable. You can count on you. And so that saying that all of our resources are within, I finally understand what it means and I’ve broken it into these two things. First make a decision to align as a creative artist in the spotlight, sharing your art and getting paid for your art. Two, make the decision to trust your inner authority which is your intuition, your emotions, and your heart’s desire. And when that lines up, life is easy.  Even if it’s challenging, it’s easy. It takes you where you’re supposed to go.

 

Miriam Schulman:

And I just wanna interject, like one way I always put this. I actually have a saying over there, you can’t see, but it says “Be what you need.”

 

Baeth Davis:

Yes!

 

Miriam Schulman:

Like you said, you have everything you need and it’s up to you to create it and not to rely on the external to find it because you can create it yourself. 

 

Baeth Davis:

So I encourage every human being listening to this interview. Choose to be creative, choose to live your life your way, and just listen to yourself. Just don’t listen to the conditioning. Just stop. 

 

Miriam Schulman:

Right. Just let go of all the noise. Yeah.

 

Baeth Davis:

Just get rid of all that. 

 

Miriam Schulman:

Your third grade teacher or whoever that was.

 

Baeth Davis:

Let go.

 

Miriam Schulman:

Baeth, this is so inspiring. I’m so honored to be your friend. And thank you so much for spending this time with me and my listeners. 

 

Baeth Davis:

Likewise.

 

Miriam Schulman:

Where can they find you?

 

Baeth Davis:

They can find me in Baeth.com or Palmreadingpro.com. Baeth.com is my mentoring site and Palmreadingpro.com is where they can learn hands and if anybody just wants to have a phone chat with me, I do a free 15-minute chat if somebody sends me a picture of their hands. And if you just email at schedule@yourpurpose.com, I know I have a lot of domains.

 

Miriam Schulman:

I’ll put all of this in the show notes.

 

Baeth Davis:

And if you schedule@yourpurpose.com, my beloved Jennifer will put you on the calendar for a 15-minute call and we can chat about your purpose and how you might take steps to actualize it. It would be my honor.

 

Miriam Schulman:

And by the way, Baeth is spelled B-A-E-T-H. And I will put everything in the schulmanart.com/baeth spelled B-A-E-T-H so our listeners can find all those links that we’ve talked about today. Hey! MAybe we’ll even throw in a picture of that painting behind you. Alright. So that’s it for today’s show. For anything we’ve talked about today, you can go to my blog schulmanart.com/14 to get links to Baeth, to get links to any of those productivity blog posts I talked about at the beginning of the episode or anything else we have mentioned during the show. Now next week, I will be talking with the author of Rest, Dr. Alex Pang. It is probably one of the best self-development books that I’ve read in 2018 and I can’t wait to share our insights with you. Be sure to subscribe to the podcast so you can get a notification as soon as it goes live. I don’t always email my list every time I get a new podcast out so the best way to make sure you get them as soon as they are live is to subscribe wherever it is that you listen to the podcast, so whether that’s iTunes or Spotify or Google Play or however those things work, subscribe. And if you’re feeling extra loving, I would really appreciate it if you left a review. This does a few things. First of all, it lets me know what it is you like about the podcast. It helps other people, other artists, find the podcast. And also, it’s another for you to get your name out in the world.I often do shoutouts on the blog to the people who leave reviews on my podcast, and I will include not only your review but if you have a picture on your website and also a link to your website. So for all that, I would love it if you left a review. Go to schulmanart.com/iTunes and leave a review there. Okay. That’s it for now. See you next week, same time, same place. 

 

Have an inspirational day.

 

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Are you subscribed to my podcast? If you’re not, I want to encourage you to do that today. I don’t want you to miss an episode. I’m adding a bunch of bonus episodes to the mix and if you’re not subscribed there’s a good chance you’ll miss out on those. Click here to subscribe in iTunes!

Now if you’re feeling extra loving, I would be really grateful if you left me a review over on iTunes, too. Those reviews help other people find my podcast and they’re also fun for me to go in and read. Just click here to review, select “Ratings and Reviews” and “Write a Review” and let me know what your favorite part of the podcast is. Thank you!

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