Raising the Barr Weekly Memo: Issue 449 The Unfinished Symphony of Life Raising the Barr Weekly Memo: Issue 449

Yesterday evening, Laurel and I drove out to Sandusky, Ohio, where she was officiating at a memorial service for a beloved community doctor who had spent his entire career at the local hospital. He was adored and praised by his colleagues and patients alike, a humble family man, who, at the height of his career, at 68 years old, was now looking ahead to December to begin winding down his medical practice and begin to really live and enjoy life...

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Raising the Barr Weekly Memo: Issue 448 Tuning Out — Tuning In Raising the Barr Weekly Memo: Issue 448

Laurel and I enjoy sitting outside in our screened porch. In fact, that porch is the reason we built this home and moved in almost 30 years ago. We love gazing at the trees, listen to the birds in our peaceful surroundings, which gives us a chance to clear our heads from the daily chatter that creeps into our thoughts and cloud the mind. It is also where and when some of our best ideas originate. Our next-door neighbors decided...

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Raising the Barr Weekly Memo: Issue 447 Consistency Takes Courage Raising the Barr Weekly Memo: Issue 447

I admire leaders, many of whom are my clients, that are consistent in what they do. I’ve concluded that it takes great courage to stay consistent. You must overcome your resistance, while fight challenges big and small, struggle with procrastination, interruptions, competing priorities, and confront surprises and the unexpected, while deal with failures. In my article, Is Everything OK With You?, I shared the story of one of my clients who used to be a prolific publisher of great content....

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Raising the Barr Weekly Memo: Issue 446 Attaining Our Personal Best Raising the Barr Weekly Memo: Issue 446

Dear Olympians, Your journey to Tokyo likely started at a young age, the first time you picked up a ball or jumped in the water, the first ride that made you feel truly free or when the backflip you thought was impossible suddenly wasn’t. Throughout the years, you nurtured your talent, sweated and sacrificed to cut just a few more seconds, reach just a few more inches, or score another fraction of a point. You ached and stumbled, you got...

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