Anthony Weaver and Richard L. Weaver II will be shooting new videos this week. Dr. Weaver has authored many books about relationships, motivation, and optimism. Relationship Rules, SMOERs, You Rules, and And Then Some Publishing's first book And Then Some Book 1 all have have something in common. They all need videos to help explain more about each book.
Specifically, And Then Some Book 1 is hard to explain. To start it was their first book. Anthony and Richard L. Weaver II (Dick) didn't know if they were going to be able to produce another one. There were many complications from technology, building the first website, beginning blogs, and then some! From the book conception to the finished product the book took two years to complete.
When you take the complications into consideration and the wonderment if another book would be produced, everything and the kitchen sink was put into And Then Some Book 1. Containing 50 essays with subjects that include family, humor, education, travel, and more, this book reads sometimes as advice, a little bit of education and learning from personal life experiences, or as a short story about Dick's travels... and then some!
And Then Some Book 1 covers a wide gambit of essays and is a fun read... and now Anthony and Dick will be shooting a video to better explain this book.
We hope to start releasing the first videos from this shoot by next weeks news, however we're not sure which videos will be released first.
Thursday's And Then Some Essay preview:
Thursday’s essay is called, "Take healthy risks for positive rewards." You have to learn how to take healthy risks. The important thing to remember when it comes to taking risks is that you live life only once. Life is too short to be wasted on things you don't want to do or on things that you have done over and over. That’s how comfort zones develop.
Take healthy risks for positive rewards
by Richard L. Weaver II
Excerpt:
There were several important learnings that emerged from my run for student-council president. First, and this is supported by research, I never regretted the effort. A report in the journal Psychological Science reveals that whether you miss achieving a goal by a little or a lot, you won’t lament going after it nearly as much as you think you will. The failures from risk-taking behavior, for the most part, don’t last long with respect to regret, sorrow, sadness, disappointment, or residual unhappiness.
And Then Some Works
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