Yesterday I told you about the birds who fly into my room in St. Lucia, an island in the eastern Caribbean, where I'm at a
resort whose rooms don't have a fourth wall.
They eat, they relieve themselves, they make a racket -- they're not all cuteness and light, I'll tell you that.
But:
I have not harmed a single one of them.
Instead, I've spent my time learning more about St. Lucia. Tourism evidently accounts for two thirds of the island's economy.
What does that mean for the average resident?
It means you're probably going into the hospitality industry.
There's nothing wrong with that, of course. It's a perfectly honorable profession. But the overwhelming dominance of tourism in the island's economy carries with it a cloud of inevitability when it comes to many natives' future careers.
And yet.
Despite people's complaints about the 2019 economy, I doubt there's ever been a time when breaking the chains of inevitability has been easier to do.
People all over the world have figured out how to create location-independent businesses.
And these businesses are cheap to zero-cost to start, since they require no physical overhead or inventory.
You can learn how people are doing this by buying a super-deluxe course with 417 training videos.
Or you can watch my info-packed 30-minute video that describes for you and even advises you on every step.
How to get it, before the clock runs out?
Click here:
Tom Woods