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https://accessworldseminars-ship-it.github.io/results/commit A woman once told me she believed we were already in hell—not a place of fire after death, but an internal condition we create with our own minds. I’ve met many people trapped in that personal, internal hell. The bridge out isn’t made of circumstance; it’s built from a single, powerful shift: trading a stuck mindset for a growth mindset.

Hell and Damnedness: It’s Internal

Let’s reframe two heavy concepts. Hell, I’ve come to see, is less about external punishment and more an internal state. It’s the gnawing knowledge that you gave up when you could have persisted, that you settled when you knew you were capable of more. It’s a prison of regret and self-limitation built thought by thought.

Then there’s being damned. Picture a dam holding back a mighty river. The water is trapped, contained, stagnant. That’s the stuck mindset. You are “damned” when your energy, creativity, and potential are blocked, unable to flow freely into your life. The gates need to open. The key is your willingness to change, to believe in possibility. Your mindset is the spillway. Is it open or sealed shut?

The Hero’s Journey and the Dual Reward

Adopting a growth mindset launches you on your hero’s journey. But here’s the crucial, often missed point: every hero’s journey yields two victories.

The first is the external reward we all see—the treasure, the solved problem, the victory. In our lives, that’s the income, the status, the business success.

The second victory, however, is internal and often more valuable. It’s the person you become in the process. The hero isn’t a hero at the start of the tale. The adventure forges the hero. The persistence through failure, the resilience built in the face of tests, the courage mustered—this is the real treasure. The external reward is the trophy; the internal transformation is the unbreakable character that earns it and knows how to hold it.

My $3-an-Hour Pivot

I know the ache of an external reward not matching the effort. Early in my coaching, I was earning about $3 an hour for immense work. I was running seminar after seminar, webinar after webinar. I’d do a two-hour morning routine to prepare, pour my heart into teaching—and often, it felt like my words fell on deaf ears. The external result was negligible. I felt like a failure.

But I kept filing forward, not falling back. And years later, I see the truth with stunning clarity. Those “unsuccessful” seminars were my forge. The skill, the ease, the ability to connect and communicate that I have today—that priceless internal reward—was built in those very rooms where the external payoff was almost zero. I wasn’t just building a business; I was being built into a coach.

Your Mindset Is the Spillway

A growth mindset simply means believing that every situation, even failure, contains data and fuel for growth. It means being open, learning voraciously, and investing in mentors and coaches who help you unblock your own dam.

Your commitment isn’t just to a goal “out there.” It’s to the person you will become on the way. Discover who you really are by choosing growth in every moment.