Four years after launching his self-improvement site,
Raptitude, writer David Cain quit his job as a land surveyor and became a
full-time blogger. Two and a half years later, he hasn’t looked back.
“I feel more like me than I’ve ever felt,” Cain, a native of
Manitoba, Canada, told The Huffington Post.
In January, Cain will lead some 300 readers through a month
long online course on mindfulness called “Camp Calm.” The class will include
short meditation exercises and daily lessons derived from two eBooks Cain wrote
on mindfulness, the sales of which provide the bulk of his salary these days.
But the 35-year-old’s story begins more than 10 years before
he took that leap into self-employment. He was 20 years old, and for the first
time in his life he was flunking school. Faced with the harsh reality of
failure, Cain had to re-evaluate his notions about success and happiness.
“I always thought being happy or content was a matter of your
circumstances,” Cain said. “But I learned the locus of control is how you
interact with your moment-to-moment experiences.”
He embarked on a journey of self-improvement, starting with a
Google search for “what do you do about stress.” Not surprisingly, mindfulness
and meditation were among the top hits.
“One night I sat down on my bathroom mat to meditation techniques,
and by the end of it I felt different,” Cain said.
Cain continued developing his meditation practice, perusing
books by experts like Jon Kabat-Zinn and Stephen Batchelor. Roughly eight years
later he decided to share the wisdom he'd gained with a wider audience. He
brainstormed names for a website about mindfulness and self-improvement and
came up with Raptitude -- a combination of rapt, which Cain describes as an
“experience of awe with life,” and aptitude, for skill or talent.
Readers can find articles on topics ranging from mindfulness
to self-esteem to cultivating inner peace. The tagline for the site is apt:
“Getting better at being human.”
“Because I write about human life, it’s something I’m
experiencing in every moment,” Cain said. “I might ask my best friend or my mom
what’s on their mind, and there’s always something interesting there. There’s
never a shortage of ideas.”
A “congregation” of loyal readers has developed around
Raptitude in the last six years, Cain said, with 25,000 subscribers to the
site’s newsletter and nearly 20,000 followers on Facebook.
“That’s been the most rewarding part. …There are people who
commented on my first post ever and are still part of the community,” Cain
said.
He limited the registration for Camp Calm to 300 participants
in order to maintain that community feel. “I need to be able to answer all
campers’ questions in a timely manner,” Cain wrote on the blog. And there will
likely be ample questions, as Cain said the course is designed for true
beginners -- those interested in meditation but daunted by the work it might
entail.
[Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/raptitude-david-cain_us_5682eae3e4b014efe0d96c72?section=india]
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