The Art of the Unseen Turn: How to Lead an Audience Somewhere They Didn’t Expect—and Leave Them Changed

Great storytelling is often misunderstood as an act of invention.

In reality, it’s an act of recognition.

The stories that truly resonate don’t succeed because they surprise an audience with something new. They succeed because they reveal something already present—something the audience sensed but could not articulate.

That is why the most powerful stories don’t end with applause.
They end with stillness.

And that stillness is not confusion.
It is comprehension arriving late.

This article is about how to build that moment deliberately—not through tricks, but through structure, restraint, and honesty.

Step One: Start by Giving the Audience Solid Ground

Before you can take a reader somewhere unexpected, you must first give them something stable to stand on.

This is the most overlooked skill in modern storytelling.

Audiences don’t resist depth—they resist instability. If they don’t understand the basic rules of your story early, they will never fully surrender to it.

Actionable principle:
Your opening act (or first 10–15% of a piece) should do only three things:

  1. Establish tone
  2. Establish a clear surface goal
  3. Establish emotional logic

Nothing else.

Avoid theme statements.
Avoid clever subversion.
Avoid “mystery for mystery’s sake.”

The audience must believe they understand what kind of story this is before you can change what the story is actually about.

The Surface Goal vs. the True Question

Every strong story operates on two levels:

  • The Surface Goal: what the characters think they’re pursuing
  • The True Question: what the story is actually interrogating

For example:

  • A survival story’s surface goal may be “get home alive.”
  • The actual question may be “what does survival cost the soul?”

The unseen turn happens when the surface goal is resolved—or rendered irrelevant—and the actual question takes center stage.

Practical exercise:
Write down, in one sentence each:

  • What does my protagonist want?
  • What does my story demand they confront?

If those two answers are identical, the story will likely remain predictable.

Designing the Turn Without Telegraphing It

The biggest mistake storytellers make is signaling the turn too loudly.

If the audience senses manipulation, they will emotionally disengage. The turn must feel like an emergence, not a maneuver.

To do this, you must plant quiet indicators, not clues.

Indicators are moments that:

  • Feel emotionally true in the moment
  • Appear insignificant or secondary
  • Gain meaning only in hindsight

These moments are not explained.
They are allowed.

Rule of thumb:
If a moment feels like it’s “about the theme,” it’s probably too on-the-nose.

If it feels like life is interrupting the plot, you’re closer.

The Pivot Point: Where Direction Changes but Logic Does Not

The unseen turn does not occur at the end.
It occurs when the audience’s interpretation breaks.

This is often:

  • A quiet decision
  • A refusal instead of an action
  • A realization instead of a revelation

Importantly, the pivot point does not announce itself.

Nothing explodes.
No music swells.
No monologue explains the shift.

The audience only realizes later that everything changed there.

Diagnostic question:
If you removed your most significant dramatic moment, would the story still work?

If the answer is no, your story may rely on spectacle rather than transformation.

Twist vs. Revelation (Applied, Not Theoretical)

A twist changes information.
A revelation changes meaning.

Here’s how to test which one you’re writing:

  • If the audience says, “I didn’t see that coming,” you wrote a twist.
  • If they say, “Oh… of course,” you wrote a revelation.

Revelations depend on internal causality—not coincidence, not withheld facts.

To engineer this:

  • The audience must have all the necessary information
  • But not the correct emotional framing

Your job is not to hide facts.
Your job is to delay understanding.

Controlling Pace Without Losing Momentum

One fear storytellers have is that depth will slow the story down.

The opposite is true.

Depth replaces velocity with inevitability.

Instead of asking, “What happens next?”
The audience asks, “What does this mean?”

To maintain momentum:

  • Reduce exposition
  • Increase implication
  • Let silence do the work; dialogue would weaken

Practical tool:
For every scene, ask:

What changes internally here, even if nothing changes externally?

If the answer is “nothing,” the scene is likely decorative.

Letting the Story Argue With You

The most dangerous thing a storyteller can do is decide the meaning of the story too early.

Stories are not sermons.
They are inquiries.

If your story never contradicts your worldview, it is likely propaganda—even if well-made.

The unseen turn often emerges when the story resists your original intent.

Pay attention when:

  • A character refuses to behave “correctly.”
  • An ending feels emotionally dishonest even if it’s neat
  • The story keeps circling an unresolved tension

That resistance is not a flaw.
It’s a signal.

The Ending: Closure Without Comfort

A powerful ending does not explain.
It clarifies.

The audience should leave understanding why things happened, not necessarily how they feel about it.

Avoid:

  • Over-resolution
  • Moralizing dialogue
  • Telling the audience what to take away

Instead:

  • Echo an early moment
  • Recontextualize a choice
  • Allow ambiguity that feels earned

Test for effectiveness:
Does the ending make the beginning more meaningful?

If yes, you’ve likely succeeded.

Why “Wow” Is the Wrong Goal—but the Right Result

You cannot aim for “wow.”

You aim for:

  • Honesty
  • Precision
  • Restraint
  • Respect for the audience’s intelligence

“Wow” happens when recognition lands.

When the audience realizes the story wasn’t about what they thought—
But about something closer.
Something quieter.
Something true.

That is not manipulation.
That is craftsmanship.

How to Use This Immediately

If you are working on a story right now, do this:

  1. Identify the expected direction
  2. Identify the necessary direction
  3. Find the quiet pivot between them
  4. Remove anything that explains the turn
  5. Trust the audience to arrive on their own

When they do, they won’t feel surprised.

They’ll feel changed.

And that is the difference between telling a story.
And leading someone through one.

A 30-Day Immersion Program

Learning to Write Stories That Appear to Go One Way—and Quietly Take the Reader Somewhere Else

This program assumes one core belief:

Storytelling is not about directing attention forward.
It is about reshaping understanding backward.

The goal is not a surprise.
The goal is recognition delayed.


PHASE I — PERCEPTUAL REWIRING (Days 1–7)

You cannot write this way until you learn to see this way.

This phase dismantles the instinct to chase plot and replaces it with sensitivity to meaning drift.


Day 1 — Events Are Not the Story

Core Skill: Separating occurrence from consequence

Deep Rationale:
Most weak stories confuse activity with movement. Movement is internal. Activity is cosmetic.

Primary Exercise:
Take any story you admire and write:

  • A timeline of events (purely factual)
  • A timeline of internal shifts (beliefs, realizations, emotional realignments)

Compare lengths. If the second list is shorter, that’s intentional.

Secondary Exercise:
Ask:

If I removed half the events, would the meaning change?

If not, the events are padding.


Day 2 — The Contract You’re Making with the Reader

Core Skill: Recognizing narrative promises

Deep Rationale:
Every story implicitly tells the reader:
“This is what you should care about.”

Breaking that promise carelessly feels like betrayal. Reframing it carefully feels like depth.

Primary Exercise:
Write the false contract of three stories:

“This story promises to be about ___.”

Then write the actual contract:

“This story ultimately asks ___.”

Key Insight:
The turn works only if the false contract is honored long enough to feel sincere.


Day 3 — Discomfort as Directional Signal

Core Skill: Using unease as a compass

Deep Rationale:
Stories drift toward truth when they create mild discomfort—not tension, not shock, but friction.

Primary Exercise:
Identify moments in stories where:

  • The plot pauses
  • Something feels emotionally unresolved
  • No clear explanation is offered

These moments are not flaws. They are pressure points.

Writer’s Rule:
If a moment makes you uneasy, don’t fix it—study it.


Day 4 — Twist Thinking vs. Meaning Thinking

Core Skill: Training for Revelation

Deep Rationale:
Twists reward cleverness. Revelations reward patience.

Exercise:
Rewrite a known twist ending as a revelation:

  • Same outcome
  • Same facts
  • Different emotional framing

Remove deception. Add inevitability.


Day 5 — Indicator Moments (Advanced)

Core Skill: Subtle foreshadowing without signaling

Deep Rationale:
Indicator moments do not predict outcomes.
They predict interpretive collapse.

Exercise:
Identify moments that:

  • Felt irrelevant initially
  • Gained emotional weight later
  • Were never explained

Now write one original scene containing such a moment—but do not design its payoff yet.


Day 6 — Endings That Rewire Beginnings

Core Skill: Retroactive depth

Deep Rationale:
The ending is not the destination. It’s the lens.

Exercise:
Write a paragraph explaining how a substantial ending changes:

  • A character’s first appearance
  • An early line of dialogue
  • A seemingly minor choice

If the beginning doesn’t deepen, the ending is ornamental.


Day 7 — Integration Reflection

Prompt:

What have I been mistaking for a story that is actually decoration?

This answer becomes important later.


PHASE II — STRUCTURAL DESIGN (Days 8–14)

Learning to build stories with two vectors at once.


Day 8 — Writing the Honest Surface Story

Core Skill: Discipline without depth

Rationale:
You cannot subvert something you haven’t built cleanly.

Exercise:
Write a straightforward story with:

  • A clear want
  • A visible obstacle
  • A resolved outcome

No symbolism. No metaphor. No commentary.


Day 9 — Excavating the Hidden Question

Core Skill: Identifying narrative gravity

Exercise:
Ask:

What question does this story keep avoiding?

That question—not the plot—is the real engine.


Day 10 — Designing the Double Track

Core Skill: Parallel narrative motion

Exercise:
Rewrite the story so:

  • The plot advances forward
  • The meaning moves sideways

Nothing “turns” yet. You are creating pressure.


Day 11 — Writing Against Explanation

Core Skill: Reader trust

Rationale:
Explanation feels like clarity but produces shallowness.

Exercise:
Replace explanations with:

  • Contradictions
  • Behavioral inconsistencies
  • Silence

Day 12 — The Pivot Without Emphasis

Core Skill: Invisible turning points

Exercise:
Identify the moment where:

  • The story’s center shifts
  • But nothing dramatic happens

This is your pivot. Make it quieter.


Day 13 — Removing Authorial Voice

Core Skill: Ego discipline

Exercise:
Remove:

  • Lines that sound “smart.”
  • Passages you’d quote in interviews
  • Anything that explains why the story matters

Day 14 — Structural Reflection

Prompt:

Where did I trust the reader—and where did I panic?


PHASE III — DEPTH UNDER PRESSURE (Days 15–21)

Stress-testing meaning.


Day 15 — Writing Without Resolution

Core Skill: Emotional honesty

Exercise:
Write a story that resolves events but not interpretation.


Day 16 — Internal Causality

Core Skill: Avoiding coincidence

Exercise:
Ensure every significant shift results from:

  • A belief changing
  • A value colliding
  • A realization forming

Not luck. Not revelation dumps.


Day 17 — Character Resistance

Core Skill: Letting characters stay human

Exercise:
Allow a character to resist growth.
See what the story demands instead.


Day 18 — Negative Space

Core Skill: Meaning through omission

Exercise:
Cut one crucial explanation.
Does the story improve?


Day 19 — Ending Without Moral Relief

Core Skill: Respecting complexity

Exercise:
Write an ending that answers:
“What now?”
But not:
“What should I think?”


Day 20 — Reader Interpretation Test

Core Skill: Measuring resonance

Ask readers:

  • What changed for you?
  • What stayed unresolved?

Day 21 — Diagnostic Reflection

Prompt:

Did the story argue with me—and did I listen?


PHASE IV — INTEGRATION & INSTINCT (Days 22–30)

Making the style unconscious.


Day 22 — Rewriting for Directional Honesty

Rewrite an old piece focusing only on:

  • Direction
  • Pivot
  • Reframing

Day 23 — Compression Test

Write a one-page story that contains:

  • A surface narrative
  • A hidden shift
  • A silent pivot

Day 24 — Killing the Clever Line

Remove the line you love most.
Replace it with restraint.


Day 25 — Theme Without Language

Write a piece where the theme cannot be named but is unmistakable.


Day 26 — Reverse Mapping

Outline after writing:

  • What the reader thinks the story is
  • What the story actually is

Day 27 — Ruthless Reduction

Cut anything that doesn’t serve the unseen turn.


Day 28 — Oral Test

Read aloud.
Truth survives sound. Cleverness does not.


Day 29 — Final Reader Question

Ask:

“What do you think this was really about?”

Do not explain.


Day 30 — Personal Storytelling Ethic

Write one page:

“What am I now responsible for not simplifying?”

This becomes your compass going forward.


What This Program Actually Builds

  • Structural patience
  • Emotional inevitability
  • Resistance to gimmicks
  • Respect for reader intelligence
  • The ability to lead without declaring

You won’t just write stories that surprise.

You’ll write stories that reveal something the reader didn’t know they were already carrying.

And that’s why they’ll finish them and say:

“Wow.”

Not because you turned suddenly—
But because they did.

Robert Bruton is a multifaceted creative visionary whose work spans literature, photography, and filmmaking. As an author, Robert’s captivating storytelling delves into the mysteries of human nature, life’s challenges, and the pursuit of purpose. His written works resonate with readers, offering profound insights and inspiration from his journey of perseverance and creativity.

https://www.amazon.com/author/robertbruton

How Much Can You Actually Fix in Post?

Why That Botched Shot May Still Have an Afterlife (If You Know What You’re Doing)

Mistakes happen. Light changes. Talent moves. Gear fails—your brain stalls.

In modern image-making, the question isn’t Can you fix it in post?
But rather: should you—and how far can you push it before it breaks?

Post-production today is a potent alchemy that can rescue or reinvent footage that would have been landfill a decade ago. Yet there are limits, and if you don’t understand them, you’ll waste time polishing instead of building.

This article goes beyond theory. It gives you the practical, step-by-step tactics pros use to salvage footage and still photography—and when to stop rescuing and start replacing.


1. Exposure Recovery: What Works, How to Do It, and When It Fails

What You Can Fix

  • Dark images can be brightened
  • Contrast curves can be rebuilt
  • Highlights can sometimes be pulled back
  • Shadow detail can be selectively lifted

But exposure recovery isn’t magic.
It’s math.

If the data isn’t recorded, no software can invent it.

How to Fix Underexposed Shots (Video & Photo)

  1. Lift exposure globally first (brightness, exposure slider)
  2. Add contrast gently to restore shape
  3. Use noise reduction BEFORE sharpening
  4. Use selective tools (power windows/masks) to isolate the subject
  5. Add subtle grain to hide texture damage

Software Tools That Actually Work

  • DaVinci Resolve: noise reduction, curves, luminance masks
  • Lightroom/ACR: shadow recovery, texture, luminance noise reduction
  • Topaz Video/Photo AI: noise reduction, detail reconstruction

Non-Negotiable Limits

  • If highlights are clipped to pure white → dead forever
  • If shadow noise is chroma-dominated → very hard to fix
  • If footage is 8-bit, highly compressed → minimal latitude

Pro Hack You Can Use Today

If you must “underexpose to save highlights,” shoot RAW or log.
Never underexpose JPEG, H.264, or 8-bit log—it dies instantly.


2. Color Correction & Grading: What’s Possible, What Tools to Use, and How to Do It Fast

Color has massive recoverability if shot with bit depth and compression in mind.

What You Can Fix

  • Wrong white balance
  • Green/magenta cast
  • Flat log footage
  • Shot-to-shot mismatches

Quick, Practical Workflow (Video)

  1. Balance exposure
  2. Set white balance using skin or neutrals
  3. Correct hue shifts with vectorscope
  4. Build contrast curve
  5. Normalize saturation
  6. Apply creative LUT/look last

This order prevents chasing your tail.

Quick, Practical Workflow (Photo)

  1. Set white balance
  2. Reduce global contrast
  3. Use curves to rebuild tone
  4. Adjust color calibration
  5. Add local adjustments to define the subject

Tools That Deliver Results Fast

  • Resolve (video)
  • Lightroom (photo)
  • Nobe Color Remap + Color Finale (video plugin)
  • Dehancer Film for believable celluloid looks

What You Can’t Fix Easily

  • Neon-green skin from cheap LED lights
  • Mixed color temperatures with no reference
  • Baked-in LUTs or picture profiles

When a Shot Is Beyond Repair

Make it:

  • Black and white
  • Stylized monochrome
  • Neon color wash
  • High contrast “music video” look

It goes from “broken” to “intentional.”


3. Focus Problems: How to Salvage, Cheat, Fake, or Repurpose

Focus issues are the least fixable problem in digital imaging.

Slightly Soft Images Are Fixable With:

  • Edge-based sharpening
  • Deconvolution sharpening
  • AI reconstruction

Tools That Actually Work

  • Resolve’s sharpening + midtone detail
  • Lightroom texture + sharpening
  • Topaz Sharpen AI

What You Can’t Fix

  • Motion blur from the wrong shutter speed
  • Severe front/back focus misses
  • Low-resolution mush

Real-World Salvage Workflow

  1. Downscale (4K → 1080)
  2. Add light sharpening
  3. Add film grain
  4. Use fast cuts or montage editing

Pro Trick: Turn Soft Footage Into a Feature

  • Slow motion
  • Dream sequence
  • Flashback
  • Subjective POV

Soft suddenly becomes a style.


4. Composition Issues: How to Repair, Reframe, and Repurpose Shot Design

Modern resolution lets you “reshoot in post.”

Fixable Issues

  • Bad headroom
  • Too much lead room
  • Crooked horizon
  • Unwanted background elements
  • Camera shake

How to Do It Well

  • Shoot at resolutions higher than your master
  • Stabilize BEFORE color
  • Crop to maintain composition rules
  • Add subtle digital “push-in.”

Real Tools for Real Fixes

  • Resolve stabilizer
  • Crop + Transform
  • Lockdown (for motion retouch)

Pro Hack

Turn ruined shots into insert shots, transitions, or cutaways.

You’re not fixing—they’re now serving a new purpose.


5. Audio: The Most Important and Least Forgiving Element

Audio can make or break a shot FAR faster than visuals.

Fixable

  • Constant noise
  • Hum
  • Mild reverb
  • Clicks
  • Level mismatch

Not Fixable

  • Severe clipping
  • Wind noise
  • Muffling
  • Unintelligible dialogue

How to Fix Fast

  1. Noise reduction (RX, Resolve, Fairlight)
  2. EQ to restore intelligibility
  3. Compression for consistency
  4. Dialogue isolation tools
  5. Add ambient beds to hide jumps

Professional Decision Rule

If it’s hard to understand, ADR is cheaper than fixing.


6. Fixing Photography vs Video: Different Realities

Photography Has More Latitude

One frame, more data, better compression

You can:

  • Retouch skin
  • Rebuild light
  • Remove objects
  • Change color dramatically

Video Is Less Forgiving

Every change must hold up across time.

General Rule:

If you need more than light correction, shoot RAW or oversampled.


7. Creative Afterlife: Turning Mistakes Into Cinema

Sometimes a shot is too broken to match…
But perfect as an element.

Repurpose it as:

  • Textured overlays
  • Layered backgrounds
  • Glitch transitions
  • B-roll abstracts
  • Title sequences
  • Emotional flashbacks
  • Photo animation sequences

Hollywood does this constantly.


8. When NOT to Fix: A Professional Decision Framework

If the fix:

  • Ruins quality
  • Takes hours
  • Still looks bad

Reshoot.

Rule of Thumb

If the problem happened because production rushed, don’t make the post pay the bill.


9. Professional Workflow to Prevent Post-Production Nightmares

For Shooters

  • Protect highlights (ETTR smartly)
  • Shoot in log or RAW when possible
  • Overexpose slightly for skin retention
  • Stabilize in-camera first

For Audio

  • Always dual record
  • Get room tone
  • Monitor with headphones

For Editors/Colorists

  • Work non-destructively
  • Noise reduction before sharpening
  • Grade exposure before look
  • Backup before rendering

10. DIY Fix-It Recipes You Can Apply Today

A) Fix a Grainy Low-Light Shot (Video)

  1. Denoise lightly
  2. Reduce chroma noise
  3. Add film grain
  4. Boost contrast
  5. Lower saturation slightly

Result: “Cinema” not “ISO disaster.”


B) Fix Mixed Lighting Color Cast

  1. White balance a known object
  2. Correct hue shift for skin only
  3. Selectively desaturate problem colors

C) Fix Shaky Footage

  1. Stabilize with low strength, high smoothness
  2. Slight crop
  3. Digital push-in to hide warping

D) Fix Soft Portrait Photo

  1. Texture + clarity on subject
  2. Softening on skin
  3. Mask background blur
  4. Add a vignette

11. Mindset Shift: Post Isn’t “Fixing”—It’s Rebuilding Reality

The pros who save footage don’t think in terms of:

  • Repair

They think in terms of:

  • Reconstruction
  • Reinvention
  • Repurposing

Sometimes the “broken” shot becomes the most emotional shot in the film.


12. Checklist: Should You Save or Reshoot?

Save if:

  • Slightly soft
  • Recoverable shadows
  • Clean audio
  • Enough resolution

Reshoot if:

  • Lost data
  • Lost focus
  • Broken framing and low-res
  • Audio unusable

The Real Takeaway

Post-production today lets you:

  • Recover data
  • Rebuild style
  • Rewrite narrative
  • Resurrect accidents
  • Make art from chaos

But its magic depends less on software.
And more on the choices made on set.

The best shooters don’t rely on the post as a safety net.
They use it as a playground.

If you understand how to push it—and when to stop—
Your “botched shots” will stop being trash.
And start becoming story fuel.

Robert Bruton is a multifaceted creative visionary whose work spans literature, photography, and filmmaking. As an author, Robert’s captivating storytelling delves into the mysteries of human nature, life’s challenges, and the pursuit of purpose. His written works resonate with readers, offering profound insights and inspiration from his journey of perseverance and creativity.

https://www.amazon.com/author/robertbruton

Can You Sell, Sales?

This article is for folks that don’t think they can sell. In fact, you detest the ground a salesman walks on. You can’t stand anything about the selling process.

Well here I come in my plaid pants, white shoes and belt to teach you something about sales. Okay if you’re still reading, I’m joking. However, I am not kidding about helping you learn some powers of persuasion that you can use to sell anyone on an idea, a product, or just yourself. All in a good, healthy, and fun way. Nothing crazy here!sales,selling,business

We all at some point in time need to be able to get others to like what we have. The what we have does not matter remember that. It’s getting our point across in a fun and engaging way. So whatever it is you want to swing your way. Buckle your belt and let’s get rolling.

Selling is incredibly simple. You need to convince the person or persons you’re trying to pitch that what you have will change the lives of those who use it. If someone believes that they can’t live without what you have, you don’t have to sell. You just have to push the pen in front of them, sign here.

This process takes a passion for what you’re offering. Understanding the product, service better than what the average Joe does. If you know how to show someone how what you have is life-changing, it’s not sales. Getting someone to understand that a tire will change their life, that takes real skill. Selling a tire is just selling a tire. If you can demonstrate how this set of tires will improve your driving experience, create value around that. You have to understand every single aspect of a tire, from the raw materials, manufacturing process, testing, life, safety, and quality.

Then you need to formulate a story that does not put customers to sleep. Storytelling (NO not lying) authentic storytelling. You need to be the person that National News organizations would call for a professional opinion. If you can tell the story that would rival a James Patterson Novel, then you will be well on your way to benefiting your customers in a whole new way.

Compelling customers, NOT SELLING CUSTOMERS. The big difference with a better, long-lasting result. We have to get passed, turn them, and burn them attitude towards sales. Why do you think advertisers use ways to make you feel special if you use this product or that? The persuasion is better than “hey, this is crazy Bob’s widget sales right here in downtown USA we’re dealing, slashing prices, we won’t be undersold.” ARRRGGGG gross no way it’s junk!

Telling a story that touches my soul. Figure out how what you do changes lives. I hear everyone saying, “okay Mr. Big Time, how do I convince someone that my tomatoes are going to change my life, their tomato’s for goodness sake.” My answer is to stop whining and let’s figure it out! Together!

Yes, this will take some real thought and research. You need to dive in and learn everything from why the tomato seed you use is far better than your competition, that the dirt where your tomatoes are grown makes a difference. That the packaging, the shipping of your vegetables is done in ways that genuinely preserve the end product. Do you see my point yet?

Think about it for a good while. Understand your process from the cradle to the grave. Learn it like you, your life depended on it. That if you miss one small detail, it could be fatal. The story has to move people to action. It has to run me so that I want to buy it. I will happily pay more for something I see the life-changing value. If you knew in your heart that what your purchasing was going to increase the benefit of your life in some significant way, would you put a price tag on that? NO, you would look for a way to BUY it. I would not need to sell you anything because you want to have it far exceeds any other emotion.

Telling a story about what products or services do to change the lives of those using it. If you can master a story worthy of inspiring the soul. All the sales skills in the world won’t matter. The customer will want to buy, you won’t have to sell a thing.

Rehearse the story until it flows from your lips like a river flows through a meadow. It has to come from your heart. Otherwise, it sounds like a canned presentation, and you lose. Obviously, if you have a product or service you perform the passion is there. So the story will come if you allow it to. Meditate on it if you have to. Take notes, organize your thoughts. Read your story aloud, when you do so, then you will hear how it sounds. Great way to edit!

When you can master the art of storytelling, you won’t need a bunch of fancy sales mumbo-jumbo. You have to ask for the sale, but you won’t have to what I call sales to beg someone to buy from you. They will already see the value from your story, the rest is just signing here folks.

Please send me your questions and comments:

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