Accept 1 harsh truth if you want to make huge money writing online
I was driving to the office early in the morning the other day when I suddenly lost my cool.
A local clown made a series of poor decisions that caused me to miss a very long light, thus extending a commute I already didn’t want to make.
On my better days, I wouldn’t even notice such an offensive display of motor vehicle operation.
But in this case, my colorful descriptions of my fellow motorist were so toxic they melted the interior of my Honda.
Here’s the thing, though.
I wasn’t really mad at him.
I was mad at me.
The deeper I get into my creator journey and my Publish Every Day project — an experiment to see if I can leave commuter life behind within a year by publishing on different platforms every single day and investing my earnings — the more resentment I feel toward the life I want to leave behind.
Did I want to freeze my butt off outside, be in the car at 6:15 a.m., driving in traffic, or sitting in an office for eight hours?
Of course not!
But in that moment, it suddenly dawned on me again: It’s all my fault.
My decisions led me to a place I didn’t want to be. My decisions alone.
Most people can’t admit this harsh truth, and if you’re one of the people who can’t, I’m willing to bet you’ll never make it as an online writer or any other kind of entrepreneur.
Let me tell you about some of the bad decisions that led me to raging in the car that morning.

The hard path, untaken
I tried so many times to become an entrepreneur.
I launched so many websites that ultimately died on the table because I didn’t have the drive to get through the tough early stages, which feature a lot of work and not a lot of money.
- I decided to quit before any of my projects had enough time to get off the ground because it was too hard.
- Then I decided to get kind of drunk every night for more than a decade, leaving me sad, tired, and unmotivated.
- And then I would cry about not having enough “time” or “energy” to accomplish my goals.
Yeah right, buddy. Frickin’ liar.
In fact, as I wrote recently, pretty much anyone who says they don’t have “time” to achieve their goals is a liar.
What if, instead of making excuses, you actually took the time to consider what decisions led to you failing? Or not having enough “time”?
And then what if you made some new decisions?
Misplaced anger
So what was I really mad about the other day?
My earnings have been a little stagnant lately (you can find an update below), and I think one of the main reasons is that I haven’t been pushing hard enough in two areas:
- Developing my YouTube channel — after a big post-monetization push, I’ve only published two videos in the last month
- Creating digital products, including an audiobook and a course I’ve been planning
And whose fault is that?
Mine! Nobody else’s!
And certainly not that poor schlub in the other car whose driving skill suggests a general obliviousness to his surroundings, let alone my feelings toward him.
The anger, the resentment … it’s a distraction.
You can have a little pity party, but what does that really accomplish?
It clouds your thinking and your vision.
It pushes you toward the kind of bad decisions that delayed my progress toward legitimate entrepreneurship — stuff like drinking alcohol and watching TV instead of developing my websites.


