Challenge,  workshops

LAST DAY OF TEACHABLE SALE

Big Beach Learning Sale!

So until late, late Tuesday Night, June 10th, everything on WMG Teachable is half price. That includes all the classes, the workshops, the challenges, everything. And all the subscriptions, including a very special deal on the EVERYTHING SUBSCRIPTION (see below).

Really great time to get a challenge or the new class on How to Achieve Your Dreams.

Remember, you can start a challenge at any point, even if you get it now with the sale.

To get anything at half price, simply scroll on WMG Teachable until you find the class you want and hit purchase, then put in the code:

BeachSale

Then hit apply and you can get it for half price.

You can get more than one class to have things to do later in the summer, but since Teachable does not have a shopping cart, you have to do them one at a time.  Questions, feel free to write me.

LIFETIME EVERYTHING SUBSCRIPTION… Special Offer.

Normally the Lifetime Everything Subscription is $10,000, but for this sale the price is $4,000. And we now can, to see how this will work, offer payments on that. If you pay $2,000 of the subscription, you can make the other half in payments that work for you. No bills, no set amounts, just what works for you.

Contact me directly for how to get the $4,000 price and also how to set up payments.

So half price on any class by using the code BEACHSALE or write me directly for information on the special LIFETIME EVERYTHING deal.

Doing our best to try to keep you learning and maybe writing through this Time of Great Forgetting. (grin)

2 Comments

  • Jessica Baverstock

    I’ve been watching the Originality Workshop on YouTube which I’m absolutely loving. Yesterday I watched the video on Wilhelm’s Law about throwing away your first three ideas because the fourth will be the original.

    How do you do that without breaking out of creative voice? It feels to me like it has the potential to bring my critical voice storming in and dictating what goes on the page.

    • dwsmith

      Jessica, like almost all learning in writing, you learn it and understand it and then forget it, which gives the creative voice permission to use it when needed. You are right, trying to do this with your front brain would not work.

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