
The Artist's Oath
The Artist’s Oath is a personal commitment to how I show up creatively. It is a reminder to lead with integrity, to resist the pressure to perform, and to make work that reflects truth, not just what gets attention. It is a compass for navigating the tension between expression and permanence, and a way to stay rooted in what matters: presence, process, and purpose, not perfection.

Stanford Confirms My Research Findings
AI is changing how people relate to each other at work.

Not My First Rodeo: Minting SuperRare Ghost Tokens
The story of how I minted art on SuperRare in 2021 while banned.

The Artist's Oath
The Artist’s Oath is a personal commitment to how I show up creatively. It is a reminder to lead with integrity, to resist the pressure to perform, and to make work that reflects truth, not just what gets attention. It is a compass for navigating the tension between expression and permanence, and a way to stay rooted in what matters: presence, process, and purpose, not perfection.

Stanford Confirms My Research Findings
AI is changing how people relate to each other at work.

Not My First Rodeo: Minting SuperRare Ghost Tokens
The story of how I minted art on SuperRare in 2021 while banned.
>100 subscribers
>100 subscribers
The single best piece of career advice I read was in Jack Canfield’s The Power of Focus. He quotes Jim Rohn as saying,
“if you read one book every month about your industry, in 10 years you’ll have read 120 books. That will put you in the top 1% of your field.”
It’s been over 20 years since I was inspired by that quote. And I’ve read hundreds of book since. That said, I’m not sure it would hold the same exact weight today because the internet has changed how we find and consume information so dramatically.
However, what I also learned from all of this consuming was how to get better at identifying the nuggets of information that I can use in my own path to success.
Over the last 20 years, I’ve been able to use YouTube, blogs, Blinkist, eBooks, Masterclass, ChatGPT, and other amazing tech to enhance and target my information consumption habits.
Each time learning how to get better at identifying and retaining the information I need to be in the top of my field.
The single best piece of career advice I read was in Jack Canfield’s The Power of Focus. He quotes Jim Rohn as saying,
“if you read one book every month about your industry, in 10 years you’ll have read 120 books. That will put you in the top 1% of your field.”
It’s been over 20 years since I was inspired by that quote. And I’ve read hundreds of book since. That said, I’m not sure it would hold the same exact weight today because the internet has changed how we find and consume information so dramatically.
However, what I also learned from all of this consuming was how to get better at identifying the nuggets of information that I can use in my own path to success.
Over the last 20 years, I’ve been able to use YouTube, blogs, Blinkist, eBooks, Masterclass, ChatGPT, and other amazing tech to enhance and target my information consumption habits.
Each time learning how to get better at identifying and retaining the information I need to be in the top of my field.
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
1 comment
https://paragraph.xyz/@epr/the-best-career-advice-i-received