Your Local Lead
05/29/2026
Ok FREE business website to the first person who shares, likes, responds below, and messages me in Messenger. Some resonable restriction do apply
02/06/2026
Most local businesses think one website is enough.
But here’s the truth 👇
Many of your competitors are already using additional websites to get more calls—and you may not even realize it.
These are called lead generation websites.
They’re not replacements for your main site.
They’re focused websites built around:
âś” One service
âś” One city
âś” One clear call to action
Because they’re so specific, they often rank faster and convert better than a general “do-everything” website.
If you’ve ever searched for a service and noticed multiple companies that look different but feel oddly similar… chances are you were looking at lead gen sites.
This isn’t about spam or tricks.
When done correctly, it’s a legitimate strategy that matches how people actually search—and Google rewards relevance.
In competitive local markets, relying on just one website can quietly limit your growth.
I wrote a short article breaking down:
• What lead generation websites are
• Why competitors are already using them
• How they help capture customers you’d otherwise miss
If you’re curious how this works (or whether it makes sense for your business), it’s worth a read.
—
Kurt Schliching
Your Local Lead | SEO Naperville
11/21/2025
He made the whole world laugh…
but he didn’t start with a stage.
He started with loneliness.
Robin Williams was a quiet kid in Chicago.
Shy.
Soft-spoken.
Often alone.
His father worked long hours.
His mother traveled.
And Robin spent most of his childhood in a big house…
talking to himself, creating voices, inventing characters
just to fill the silence.
What everyone saw later — the genius, the lightning-fast improv, the unstoppable humor —
it was born in those empty rooms.
But here’s what most people never understood:
Robin didn’t perform because he wanted attention.
He performed because he wanted a connection.
He found it in high school drama class.
Suddenly, the quiet kid came alive.
Characters poured out of him like electricity.
Teachers couldn’t keep up.
Students couldn’t believe what they were seeing.
He wasn’t trying to be funny —
he was trying to make people feel something.
He dropped out of political science.
Spent 16-hour days rehearsing.
Lived broke.
Ate cheap food.
Held nothing back.
Everyone said the same things:
“Comedy isn’t a real job.”
“You’ll never make a living like this.”
“Why not choose something stable?”
He didn’t listen.
Robin knew something most people don’t:
Safe careers pay the bills.
Dangerous ones touch the world.
Then came the breakthrough.
He walked onto a comedy club stage in San Francisco…
and unleashed chaos.
Voices. Characters. Improv so fast people couldn’t breathe between laughs.
He didn’t just tell jokes —
he erupted.
Hollywood called.
Mork & Mindy.
A global hit.
A superstar born by accident.
Then came the roles that proved he wasn’t just funny —
he was once-in-a-generation:
Dead Poets Society.
Good Morning, Vietnam.
Aladdin.
Mrs. Doubtfire.
Good Will Hunting.
He won an Oscar for making the world cry…
and then laugh again a minute later.
But behind the characters, the voices, the brilliance —
there were struggles.
Depression.
Self-doubt.
The pressure to always be “on.”
He battled darkness bravely.
He gave more joy than he ever kept for himself.
And through it all, he kept showing up for people.
For fans.
For friends.
For strangers.
Robin didn’t heal his pain by hiding it.
He healed it by loving others harder.
That was his superpower.
His legacy wasn’t fame.
It wasn’t movies.
It wasn’t jokes.
It was humanity.
It was the reminder that kindness hits deeper than comedy.
That vulnerability is a strength.
That making one person smile can change everything.
Robin Williams didn’t build an empire.
He built a connection to millions of hearts — one laugh at a time.
So ask yourself:
Are you hiding the things that make you unique?
Or using them to light up the people around you?
Are you playing a character others expect…
or showing the world who you really are?
Robin took the loneliness of his childhood
and turned it into laughter for the entire planet.
All because he understood something simple:
Your deepest pain can become someone else’s greatest comfort
— if you have the courage to share
11/09/2025
EARLY BLACK FRIDAY SAVINGS! As an Angel Guild member, you can vote on upcoming shows, receive free tickets to every theatrical release, gain early access to shows, receive merchandise discounts, and continue to amplify light.
11/09/2025
He grew up watching cities burn — and turned that pain into magic.
Hayao Miyazaki was born in Tokyo in 1941.
A child of war.
His father built airplane parts. His mother was bedridden for years.
The world outside was chaos.
And yet, inside that chaos, he dreamed of flight.
He wasn’t the loudest kid.
He wasn’t the best student.
He was quiet. Sickly. Always drawing.
While the world fought to destroy itself, he imagined worlds worth saving.
After college, he didn’t become an artist right away.
He studied economics.
Got a “normal” job at an animation studio doing in-between frames — the lowest-level work in animation.
But he didn’t see it as small.
He saw it as a doorway.
Every night, he stayed late sketching new ideas.
Stories of forests, spirits, flying machines, and strong girls who faced impossible worlds.
He wanted to show people that life — even in a broken world — could still be beautiful.
They said his ideas were too strange.
Too slow. Too thoughtful.
“People don’t want that,” they said.
“They want simple cartoons.”
He didn’t listen.
In 1985, he started his own studio — Studio Ghibli.
Named after a desert wind.
He wanted to blow new air into animation.
And he did.
He made My Neighbor Totoro.
A movie with no villain. No big twist.
Just two sisters, a forest, and a spirit who smiled.
Everyone said it would fail.
It became a national treasure.
Then came Spirited Away.
A story about a scared little girl who learns courage by walking through a world of gods and monsters.
That film won an Oscar — and captured hearts everywhere.
He created Princess Mononoke, Howl’s Moving Castle, Kiki’s Delivery Service, Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind...
Each one bursting with heart, humanity, and wonder.
And here’s what Miyazaki understood that others didn’t:
People don’t fall in love with perfect stories.
They fall in love with truth wrapped in imagination.
They fall in love with feeling.
Miyazaki wasn’t trying to sell a product.
He was trying to heal a world that had forgotten how to feel.
He took pain, war, loneliness — and turned them into art that made people believe again.
He proved that animation isn’t for children.
It’s for the part of every adult that refuses to give up on wonder.
Today, his films have touched hundreds of millions of people.
But it all started with a shy boy who loved to draw while bombs fell outside.
He didn’t chase money.
He chased meaning.
He didn’t follow trends.
He followed truth.
Miyazaki showed the world something timeless:
You can grow up in destruction and still create beauty.
You can live in doubt and still dream.
You can be quiet — and still change the world.
Because vision doesn’t come from noise.
It comes from depth.
So the next time you think your story doesn’t matter because it’s “too small,” remember this:
A quiet boy in wartime Japan once picked up a pencil — and built entire worlds from hope.
Don’t chase success.
Build meaning.
Because when you create something honest, the world listens.
Think deep. Dream wild.
Be like Miyazaki.
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