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Owned by Ray

Pioneers

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Community of Action Takers Pursuing Their North Star - Hop on board and join the Crew! ⛵️

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11 contributions to Pioneers
Showing Up
I have taken a moment this week to reflect on my channel and progress so far. I do not care so much about the metrics, as much as to make sure I resonate with people in the right direction. I have dozens of watch-time hours and thousands of views in less than a month, across my single YouTube channel with zero marketing efforts, just organic search on YouTube. I am grateful for this, though I do not feel like I have been creating exactly what is needed and what feels best for me. I feel like in just those few videos I have grown a lot personally and with the direction I would like to take the Pioneers. I want to share the systems specifically for taking action and showing up for yourself, while continue to strive to create a community that supports each others growth. To extend myself further, become more authentic, and vulnerable will be a leap of faith. I want to improve the way I film and present myself, and start to network beyond just pressing upload. I will do this by joining other communities, other existing networks, and providing value where I can. Sharing what I have learned and what has worked. I will show up with courage and start sharing more raw aspects of my Journey. I hope this new approach will resonate with people, and we can create this community together - What we need most, to be there for each other, including the real moments and the hard parts of "showing up". This will be another recalibration, pointing me closer in the correct direction. Sail onward! ⛵️
Showing Up
0 likes • Oct 7
I am back from Holiday weekend and working on some edits from the rest of recordings from last week. Posting this week! I look forward to getting back in the rhythm and pushing everything to the next level!
Captain Rays Log Day 7: Takes three weeks of steady wind to become a natural course
The ocean doesn't reshape its floor in a single tide. Remember this as you adjust your inner compass toward new horizons. Maritime wisdom teaches that it takes roughly three weeks of consistent sailing for a crew to fully adapt to a new vessel's rhythms and quirks. This isn't to say you won't feel the shift in your sails before then. You will, particularly when you trim them daily toward your chosen star. Begin with one constellation, one true bearing. Each sunset, visualize your ship anchored in that distant harbor you've marked on your chart. Many navigators find it simpler to watch other vessels and imagine how those captains might benefit from these navigation principles. Resist this drift. Chart your own waters first. Set sail on this voyage without doubting whether the winds will find you. Let the journey unfold naturally, like the tide that needs no permission to rise. A new chart in your mind's eye is like dropping anchor in unexplored waters. Mark the spot, study the currents, then trust the ocean's ancient rhythms to guide you. You'll discover that the same forces that carry every vessel across the seas will carry you toward your chosen port. Your steady breath may carry you truer than any tempest.
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Captain Rays Log Day 7: Takes three weeks of steady wind to become a natural course
Captain Rays Log Day 6: Set Sail & Stop Drifting!
A ship cannot maintain its vitality if it perpetually delays departure, waiting for perfect conditions that may never come. Most captains who postpone setting sail lose precious momentum and fuel. Yet there exists a different kind of pause - dropping anchor to study the charts while your navigation systems recalibrate. This isn't truly delaying your voyage; you're engaging the deeper currents of maritime wisdom. When you understand these hidden tides, you won't condemn yourself for reading the weather, knowing that optimal routes often reveal themselves during these strategic harboring periods. Studying the stars, mending the rigging, testing the depths, and catching favorable winds - these might appear as idle harbor activities to landlubbers. But seasoned mariners recognize a different truth. They see you're honoring the ancient rhythms of seafaring, allowing your internal compass to align with true north. Purposeless anchoring depletes your provisions and morale, while strategic harboring replenishes your capacity to navigate challenging waters ahead. I've been discovering something in these long months at sea that's shifting how I understand this work. Those times when I step away from the charts and navigation - I used to carry such weight about it, as though I was abandoning my duties or running from the helm. But I'm beginning to see it differently now. Sometimes when I'm just sanding the old teak rails, feeling the grain beneath my fingers, or watching the horizon while mending a worn line - that's when the way forward reveals itself. It's as if some deeper current within needed that stillness to find its bearing. I can't claim to fully grasp this mystery, but I'm learning to trust it. Perhaps those moments aren't taking energy away from my soul, but rather conjuring it up from depths I didn't know existed. The sea has her own wisdom about when to push forward and when to drift. I write this for myself, and for any captain who might one day read these pages and wonder if their need for stillness makes them less worthy of command. It doesn't. Maybe it makes us more so.
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Captain Rays Log Day 6: Set Sail & Stop Drifting!
Captain Rays Log Day 5: Navigating Your Own Waters
"Chart your course by your own compass." The mystery of how releasing others' charts frees our own compass remains foggy, yet I feel its pull. There's an ancient maritime principle that seasoned navigators understand: you cannot sail another vessel's voyage. Each ship cuts through different waters, faces unique storms, and carries cargo known only to its crew. When we fix our spyglass on distant sails rather than our own horizon, we lose sight of the very stars that guide our journey. The ocean teaches us that watching another ship's wake tells us nothing of their ballast, their provisions, or the storms they've weathered below deck. To measure our voyage by their position is to navigate by mirages on the water. "The shallow waters and the deep seas are but different depths of the same ocean. The wisdom lies in knowing that depth itself is an illusion. The truth of your voyage is this: You sail neither in the shallows nor the depths—you simply sail." —From the Weathered Charts of an Old Mariner The Navigator's Truth: The compass bearing from these waters is clear: your only true competition is with the captain you were at yesterday's dawn. You are a singular vessel, crafted by the Master Shipwright with a hull unlike any other. Rather than scanning the horizon for other ships' positions, set your sextant on a destination that calls to your soul's true north. Be the captain who competes only with yesterday's navigation. Sail beyond your previous best bearing. Each sunrise offers new waters to explore, not to prove your worth against other vessels, but to discover what lies beyond your own last charted territory. Your ship's log should record not how you compared to the fleet, but how far you've sailed from your own last port. The only wake that matters is the one you're creating now, surpassing the course you plotted yesterday. Today's Navigation Practice: Before the sun reaches its zenith, take a moment at the helm. Close your eyes and feel your ship beneath you—not as it compares to others in the harbor, but as the unique vessel it is. Set one coordinate that moves you beyond yesterday's position. Chart it not by another's compass, but by the magnetic pull of your own inner lodestone.
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Captain Rays Log Day 5: Navigating Your Own Waters
Captain Rays Log Day 4: Casting Off the Anchors of False Charts
"The sailor who navigates by outdated charts will forever miss favorable harbors." Years spent following charts inherited from old salts who warned against uncharted passages. Their cautions became my gospel, their limitations my prison. Yet watching starlight reflect off calm waters tonight, I recognized how these borrowed bearings have kept me circling the same treacherous shoals. The teaching speaks of recalibrating our inner compass. While splicing new ratlines this afternoon, choosing each knot with deliberate care rather than rushed habit, I felt something shift in my navigation. Perhaps these mental charts we carry aren't carved in stone but sketched in sand, awaiting the tide of our choosing. The mystery of how new coordinates manifest safer passages eludes me still, yet I sense its truth in steadier hands. Every mariner carries invisible cargo—beliefs about the seas we sail, the vessels we command, and most critically, our own capabilities at the helm. These mental charts were drawn long before we learned to read the stars, sketched by those who sailed before us during storms we barely remember. As young deckhands, we absorbed the warnings and wisdom of seasoned crews, accepting their navigational rules as absolute truth. Yet here lies the danger: some of these charts lead to treacherous waters. When the compass of our inner beliefs points us toward rocks instead of open seas, we must have the courage to recalibrate. The mind's navigation system responds faithfully to whatever coordinates we program—steering us either toward prosperous ports or into endless doldrums. Charting New Waters As this voyage into fresh waters begins, examine the old maps you've been following. Select one belief about your seamanship that feels like a weight dragging beneath your hull. Challenge these weathered assumptions: "Who drew this chart? Were their instruments true? What if I simply plotted a new course and trusted my own compass?" Begin with a simple morning ritual—perhaps adjusting your sails with deliberate joy rather than routine obligation. Though the task seems small as a barnacle, envision yourself performing it with the enthusiasm of spotting land after months at sea. Notice how the winds shift in your favor when you navigate from this new bearing.
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Captain Rays Log Day 4: Casting Off the Anchors of False Charts
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Ray LaChance
1
5points to level up
@josiah-lachance-2985
Captain of The Pioneers

Active 7h ago
Joined Aug 13, 2025
Tampa, FL