advice
Advice that will put you on the path to success; tips, tricks and nuggets of wisdom from trusted experts and motivational mentors.
Why You Should Not Waste Money on Traditional Dropshipping. And What to Do Instead
For years, traditional dropshipping has been marketed as one of the easiest ways to make money online. Social media feeds are full of screenshots showing sales dashboards, rented luxury cars, and influencers promising income with minimal effort.
By Kelmik DTabout an hour ago in Motivation
The One Decision That Changed My Life Forever
I still remember the night my life split into two parts: before the decision... and after it. It was 2:17 a.m. The house was silent, but my mind was loud. My phone screen glowed in the dark room, reflecting a tired face I barely recognized. I had spent hours scrolling, comparing my life to strangers who seemed happier, richer, more successful. Every swipe felt like a reminder of what I wasn’t.
By imtiazalamabout an hour ago in Motivation
My First Article Took Three Coffees and Zero Ideas. AI-Generated.
The cursor was blinking at me like it had somewhere better to be. I had been sat at my kitchen table for forty minutes with a cup of coffee going cold and absolutely nothing on the screen.
By CurlsAndCommasabout 5 hours ago in Motivation
what make you-you?. AI-Generated.
We live in a world where everyone is labeled like the things in the world like the name of a street or the name of a clothing brand. When in reality behind all our flaws and rawness is who we truly are. The world, society has written a rule many years ago, thousand years ago it seems what our value is in this cold world. When in reality it is really simple one should except people as they are, everyone is unique in their own way but the world, society define us, our value by riches. In the world your personality and who you are as a person is based on beauty, fashion, a job title, the town you live in, the car you drive in and who you date or marry.
By Miss Beyabout 8 hours ago in Motivation
A Letter to My Younger Self
Dear Younger Me, I don’t know exactly how old you are as you read this. Maybe you are sitting in a small room, dreaming big but doubting yourself. Maybe you are comparing your life to others and wondering why everything feels slower for you. Or maybe you are smiling outside but fighting silent battles inside. I wish I could sit next to you for just five minutes. Not to change your future — because every mistake you make shapes me — but to make your heart lighter. First, stop being so hard on yourself. You think every failure defines you. That one bad result, that one rejection, that one moment of embarrassment — you replay it in your mind again and again. But let me tell you something important: those moments will not destroy you. In fact, they will quietly build you. One day, you will look back and laugh at the things that once made you cry. You worry too much about what people think. You analyze every word you say. You fear judgment like it’s a final exam you must pass. But here’s the truth: most people are too busy worrying about themselves to analyze you the way you imagine. Live more freely. Speak more honestly. Take more chances. You don’t need to be perfect to be worthy. There will be days when you feel behind in life. Friends will move ahead. Some will earn money earlier. Some will seem more confident. Some will look happier. And you will question your own path. Don’t. Life is not a race with a single finishing line. It is a personal journey. The timeline that scares you right now will not matter in a few years. What matters is growth — slow, steady, unseen growth. Be patient. I know you want success quickly. You want recognition. You want proof that you matter. But the strongest foundations are built slowly. Every skill you practice, every book you read, every silent struggle you survive — they are preparing you for something bigger than you can imagine right now. Trust the process, even when it feels invisible. And please, take care of your mental peace. You often ignore your emotions. You act strong when you feel weak. You smile when you are tired. It’s okay to admit you are overwhelmed. It’s okay to rest. Strength is not pretending you are unbreakable. Strength is knowing when to pause and heal. Protect your energy. Not everyone deserves access to it. There will be people who misunderstand you. Some will leave. Some will disappoint you. And it will hurt deeply. But understand this: not everyone is meant to stay forever. Some people are lessons, not lifelong companions. Let them go gracefully. Now let’s talk about dreams. You have big ones. Bigger than you admit out loud. You’re afraid people will laugh if you say them clearly. So you shrink them. You adjust them. You make them “realistic.” Don’t shrink your dreams to fit other people’s comfort. Dream loudly. Even if your voice shakes. One day, you will realize that the only limits that truly existed were the ones inside your mind. Fear will try to protect you by keeping you small. But growth only happens outside comfort zones. Take that risk. Start that project. Share that idea. Even if you fail, you will gain something more valuable than success — experience. Money will matter. Yes. Stability will matter. But don’t let money become the only definition of success. Success is peace. Success is self-respect. Success is sleeping at night knowing you didn’t betray your values. Stay honest. Even when shortcuts look tempting. There will be moments when you feel lost. Completely unsure of your direction. Everyone around you will seem confident about their path, and you will feel like the only confused person in the room. You’re not. Most people are just better at hiding their confusion. It’s okay not to have everything figured out. You are allowed to explore, to change your mind, to start again. Reinvention is not failure. It is growth. Be kinder to your parents. They are fighting battles you don’t fully understand yet. One day, you will see their sacrifices more clearly. Spend more time with them. Listen more. Life moves faster than you think. Also, build discipline early. Motivation will come and go like weather. Discipline is what keeps you moving on days when you don’t feel inspired. Small daily habits will shape your entire future. Consistency is more powerful than intensity. And please — celebrate small wins. You have a habit of ignoring your progress because it doesn’t look big enough. But progress is progress. Every improvement matters. Every step counts. You don’t need a huge audience to validate your efforts. Keep building quietly. Your time will come. Finally, remember this: You are not behind. You are not incapable. You are not invisible. You are becoming. And becoming takes time. If I could give you just one piece of advice, it would be this: believe in yourself a little earlier. It would save you years of unnecessary doubt. But even if you don’t, don’t worry. You will survive more than you think. You will grow stronger than you expect. And one day, you will write a letter like this — smiling at how far you’ve come. With patience, With understanding, With pride, Your Older Self.
By Shahid Zamanabout 18 hours ago in Motivation
How One Hour a Night Turned Her Side Hustle Into Financial Freedom
At 6:03 p.m. every weekday, the office lights flicked off behind her. At 6:17 p.m., Maya unlocked her apartment door. At 6:45 p.m., after reheating leftovers and changing into sweatpants, she opened her laptop again.
By MIGrowtha day ago in Motivation
Full Moon
There are days when it feels like my body is arguing with itself. Multiple sclerosis already demands negotiation. Fatigue shapes my energy. My legs can feel unreliable. Sensations appear without warning. Some days they feel heavy. Other days they feel like they are vibrating from the inside, a constant electrical hum that no one else can see.
By Millie Hardy-Simsa day ago in Motivation
The Marathon of Hope: The Story of a Man Who Never Ran Out of Courage
Sometimes life takes away something very precious from us just to see how strong we really are. This is the true story of a young man named Terry Fox. Terry was a very active boy who loved sports. He was a basketball player and a runner. He had big dreams for his future. But when he was only eighteen years old, he felt a sharp pain in his right knee. When he went to the doctor, he received the most terrible news: he had bone cancer.
By Hazrat Umera day ago in Motivation
How Great Leaders Communicate
The moment she walked in the room, skeptics. The business was losing money. Moral reached its lowest point. Engineers updated their resumes without fuss and board was three weeks away from pulling the plug completely. Maya had no PowerPoint deck, no images and no expensive corporate script when she stepped to the front of that conference room.
By StoryNesta day ago in Motivation









