Stop Trying to Win the Super Bowl By Yourself

In partnership with

You're trying to succeed, aren't you? You're hustling, grinding, and "manifesting" so hard your vision board is smoking. Yet, it feels like you're trying to stream an 8K movie on dial-up.

What if I told you that your solo-act, that "I've gotta do it all myself" narrative, is the very thing throttling your connection to Infinite Success?

Napoleon Hill, in his grand tour of the Gilded Age's greatest minds, stumbled upon a secret. He called it the "Mastermind."

Now, this isn't that corporate "synergy" nonsense your manager talks about, which usually just means "more meetings." This is Mind Chemistry.

Hill's big idea, which is just a wonderful articulation of the One Law, is that when two or more minds blend in Perfect Harmony, they don't just add. They multiply. A third, invisible, super-mind is created. It's not just teamwork; it's like a spiritual Voltron. You stop being two separate, limited brains and you form a focused vortex of the One Universal Mind.

Think of it this way: your brain is a broadcasting station. Hill figured that when you harmonize with another brain, you don't just get two stations; you build a massive cellular tower that taps directly into the "Ether," the cosmic library of all thought.

This is what Ford, Edison, and Firestone were doing. They weren't just three guys on a camping trip swatting mosquitoes. They were, perhaps unconsciously, forming a Mastermind that built the twentieth century. They plugged into the Universal Wi-Fi, while everyone else was looking for a landline.

So why doesn't this happen every time you get on a Zoom call?

Because Hill's key ingredient is Perfect Harmony.

The universe, my friend, is a universe of Law. It doesn't care about your feelings, but it manifests them perfectly. When you bring antagonism, jealousy, or (as Hill hilariously points out) an incompatible mother-in-law into the mix, you don't get a Mastermind. You get a "Disastermind." You create a chemical compound that is, metabolically speaking, poison.

But the real antagonists are those six goons riding on your back, the ones Hill calls the "Six Basic Fears." Fear of Poverty, Criticism, Old Age, Ill Health, Loss of Love, and Death.

These aren't just bad vibes; they are creative instructions. They are your prayers for what you don't want. You can't broadcast "I am terrified of being broke" and expect the Law of Abundance to send you a check. The Law is an impartial waiter. It only brings you what you ordered.

This is where the real work begins. You are a localized center of Divine Intelligence. You are not meant to be haunted by these phantoms. Your job is to align your mind, find your "harmonious others," and consciously build your Mastermind.

Engaging with these ideas is an active treatment for your mind. It's why the more you read my emails, the more success you will have; you are re-wiring your consciousness to align with Principle. This isn't just data. It's a change in your personal atmosphere. It is a metaphysical guarantee that after they have read my email they are left with the impression of increase, because we are touching the very substance of Infinite Potential.

So, here is your assignment: Look at your life. Who are you harmonizing with, and who are you in a state of "Disastermind" with?

And my real question for you, which I'd love for you to reply to, is this: Which of the six great fears are you finally going to stop letting order for you at the table?

Bradley Woods

A free newsletter with the marketing ideas you need

The best marketing ideas come from marketers who live it.

That’s what this newsletter delivers.

The Marketing Millennials is a look inside what’s working right now for other marketers. No theory. No fluff. Just real insights and ideas you can actually use—from marketers who’ve been there, done that, and are sharing the playbook.

Every newsletter is written by Daniel Murray, a marketer obsessed with what goes into great marketing. Expect fresh takes, hot topics, and the kind of stuff you’ll want to steal for your next campaign.

Because marketing shouldn’t feel like guesswork. And you shouldn’t have to dig for the good stuff.

Reply

or to participate.