Hi
Good morning! At the bottom of this morning's email, I have some thoughts about the social creator journey many of you want to go on...and some advice about scroll stopping content.
Below, I have a new Survival PLR for you but first let me share some info about my new exclusive bonus I created for the Productivity Kickstart PLR that launched just now. I'll let you see what's in their PLR on their sales page, but my exclusive bonus includes:
Five reports that total 21 pages and 9,674 words: (1) Plan Your Week Like a Pro: A Simple System for Busy People - 5+
pages, 2,542 words, (2) Peak Hours, Peak Results: How to Work With Your Natural Energy - 4+ pages, 1,778 words (3) Stop Putting It Off: A Friendly Guide to Beating Procrastination - 4 pages, 1,631 words (4) Beyond Goals: Building a Personal Time Management System - 4+ pages, 1,917 words (5) Less Stress, More Time: Using Time Management to Feel Better - 4+ pages, 1,806 words.
It'll be inside Warrior Plus when you buy the Productivity Kickstart PLR here: https://warriorplus.com/o2/a/mgphjgj/0
52 Hacks for Life Without Power - AI PLR - Just $10 (under $0.07 per page)
This is a pack called 52 Hacks for Life Without Power – AI PLR. I researched the topics, collaborated with AI to develop the structure, and carefully directed the creation process to make sure every section delivers real value. You can preview an excerpt right on the
sales page.
This is something that I can price much cheaper, under $0.07 per page rather than $2 per page for the limited PLR. This PLR will not be limited in quantity, and you can do the same things with it - edit it, put your name on it, etc.
The 52 Hacks for Life Without Power – AI PLR is a bundle of a year's worth of weekly articles that teach your
readers how to prepare for, survive, and even thrive during extended grid-down scenarios—from the first hours of a blackout through months of infrastructure collapse. Each article delivers practical, actionable strategies covering everything from water storage and food preservation to generator OPSEC, neighborhood security, off-grid communication, and maintaining mental health when the lights go out. Whether your audience lives in urban high-rises or rural homesteads, this comprehensive series
transforms overwhelming "what if" fears into organized, achievable preparation plans they can implement immediately.
Exclusive $5 Add-On Option: I have an add-on offer (the place where you go to the checkout page and there's an option to add something on by checking a box) that is exclusively offered to buyers who get the main product. In other words, this PLR will never be available publicly. It's only available as an
add-on option. This is limited only to those who buy the 52 Hacks for Life Without Power - AI PLR. You won't be able to get it later - only at the time of checkout. It's called The Dark Grid A Practical Blueprint for Life When Infrastructure Fails and it's a 33+ page, 14,811-word full AI PLR eBook that teaches your readers how to understand, anticipate, and calmly navigate each stage of a grid and infrastructure breakdown like a real-world scenario
instead of a vague disaster movie. It walks them through practical decisions, mindset shifts, and everyday systems that make their homes, routines, and communities far more resilient long before the next blackout hits. Details are on the sales page.
This 156-page, 57,106-word PLR includes:
#1 - The First 60 Minutes: Confirming It’s a Grid Attack, Not Just a
Power Outage - 3+ pages, 1,161 words
#2 - Living Inside a Breaker Test: Practicing Full Blackouts Without Warning - 3+ pages, 1,245 words
#3 - Designing a Stealth Power Profile: Looking Just as Dark as Your Neighbors - 3+ pages, 1,181 words
#4 - EMP‑Smart Homestead: What Really Survives, What Really Dies - 3+ pages, 1,156 words
#5 - Faraday Cages That Actually Get Used, Not Forgotten - 3 pages, 1,074 words
#6 - The Off‑Grid Stack: Building Redundant Power in Layers, Not Gadgets -
3+ pages, 1,119 words
#7 - Solar Reality Check: How Much Power Your Life Actually Needs - 3+ pages, 1,113 words
#8 - High‑Impact Micro‑Loads: Tiny Electrical Wins That Transform Grid‑Down Life - 3+ pages, 1,076 words
#9 - Fuel as a System: Storing, Rotating, and Guarding Your Liquid Energy - 3+ pages, 1,134 words
#10 - The Silent House: Cooking, Heating, and Charging Without Drawing a Crowd - 3+ pages, 1,153 words
#11 - Grid‑Down Water Math: How Fast Your Taps Die and What To Do
First - 3 pages, 1,069 words
#12 - Bootstrapping Water Without Electricity: Gravity, Hand Pumps, and Makeshift Towers - 3+ pages, 1,094 words
#13 - Off‑Grid Hygiene: Staying Clean When Hot Water Is a Luxury - 3 pages, 1,116 words
#14 - Keeping Food Cold When the Fridge Is Just a Box - 3+ pages, 1,106 words
#15 - Non‑Electric Cooking Calendars: Matching Meals to Your Fuel Curve - 3+ pages, 1,073 words
#16 - Rewiring the Night: Sleep, Security, and Task Cycles Without Artificial
Light - 3+ pages, 1,073 words
#17 - Neighborhood Optics: Looking Poor While Being Prepared - 3+ pages, 996 words
#18 - Low‑Tech Intel: Reading the Sky, Streets, and People in a Blackout - 3+ pages, 1,070 words
#19 - Analog Communication Trees: Getting Messages Through Without the Grid - 3+ pages, 1,136 words
#20 - Radio Lifelines: Building an Off‑Grid Comms Kit That Survives EMP - 3+ pages, 1,114 words
#21 - EMP‑Hardened Vehicle Strategy: From Everyday Car to Last‑Resort Lifeline
- 3+ pages, 1,058 words
#22 - Micro‑Grids for Real People: Sharing Power Without Losing Control - 3+ pages, 1,064 words
#23 - EMP‑Proof Heating and Cooling: Staying Alive in Temperature Extremes - 3+ pages, 1,139 words
#24 - The Laundry Problem: Clothing Management in a Dead Grid World - 3+ pages, 1,084 words
#25 - Grid‑Down Medicine: Powering Critical Health Needs Without a Plug - 3+ pages, 1,083 words
#26 - Protecting Your Solar From People, Weather, and EMP - 3+ pages, 1,040
words
#27 - The Generator OPSEC Handbook: Sound, Smell, and Schedule Discipline - 3+ pages, 1,073 words
#28 - Redesigning Chores for a Low‑Energy Household - 3+ pages, 1,048 words
#29 - From Apps to Index Cards: Replacing Digital Convenience With Paper Systems - 3+ pages, 1,048 words
#30 - Grid‑Down Schooling: Keeping Kids Learning When Screens Go Black - 3+ pages, 1,025 words
#31 - Mental Health in the Dark: Coping With Long‑Term Blackout Stress - 3+ pages, 1,052 words
#32 -
Security by Routine: Avoiding Predictable Patterns During Infrastructure Chaos - 3+ pages, 1,046 words
#33 - Hardening the Home: Doors, Windows, and Approaches When Help Won’t Come - 3+ pages, 1,089 words
#34 - Cooking Without Smell: Low‑Signature Food Prep in Hungry Neighborhoods - 3+ pages, 1,075 words
#35 - Blackout Lighting Design: Building a Room‑by‑Room Plan for LEDs and Candles - 3+ pages, 1,065 words
#36 - Battery Banks on a Budget: Scaling Storage Without Buying Junk - 3+
pages, 1,067 words
#37 - Grid‑Down Money: When Cash, Barter, and IOUs Replace Apps - 3+ pages, 1,077 words
#38 - Community Rules for Shared Infrastructure: Wells, Generators, and Radios - 3+ pages, 985 words
#39 - Diagnosing Partial Failures: When the Grid Is “Up” but Unstable - 3+ pages, 1,116 words
#40 - Urban High‑Rise Blackouts: Vertical Survival When Elevators Stop - 3+ pages, 1,201 words
#41 - Rural Isolation Blackouts: When You’re On Your Own for Months - 3+ pages, 1,197
words
#42 - Critical Spares: The Tiny Parts That Keep Your Power Systems Alive - 3+ pages, 1,134 words
#43 - Grid‑Down Waste Management: Trash, Human Waste, and Disease Control - 3+ pages, 1,146 words
#44 - Gardens Without Pumps: Designing Food Systems for Dead Infrastructure - 3+ pages, 1,124 words
#45 - Training Days: Turning Blackouts Into Skill‑Building Events - 3+ pages, 1,089 words
#46 - Protecting Data and Memories When the Cloud Disappears - 3+ pages, 1,111 words
#47 -
From Smart Home to Dumb but Tough: De‑Teching Your House Intentionally - 3+ pages, 1,102 words
#48 - OPSEC for the Internet Age: Scrubbing Your Grid‑Down Capabilities From View - 3+ pages, 1,065 words
#49 - After the Lights Return: Safely Reconnecting to a Damaged Grid - 3+ pages, 1,055 words
#50 - Civil Unrest in the Dark: Balancing Defense, Deterrence, and De‑Escalation - 3+ pages, 1,117 words
#51 - Infrastructure Cascades: When Power Failure Takes Everything Else With It - 3+
pages, 1,139 words
#52 - Designing a “Low‑Tech Luxury” Grid‑Down Lifestyle - 3+ pages, 1,133 words
* This PLR comes in both Word and TXT formats
Download this PLR for just $10 (under $0.07/page) here:
https://www.plrlaunch.com/52-hacks-for-life-without-power-ai-plr
On the Social Creator Project & an Effective Scroll Stopper
I think I mentioned my daughter is launching a faceless brand. I won't be disclosing it. But I WILL be involved in helping her learn the ropes, so I'll share whatever I discover
that's relevant with you. I have some thoughts on that below, but I first want to note, I heard from several people saying I was wise to not focus on FB. They've had their own accounts get shut down for nothing - can't figure out a reason. Weren't told one, either.
Some people always say, "Well there HAD to be a reason." No, there really doesn't. Years and years ago my YouTube account with 400+ videos got shut down
instantly.
I had recieved a notice from YT saying, "Oh hey your video is doing really great - want to monetize it?" It was just a free tip video not selling anything and was teaching people how to monetize Squidoo. So I said, "Sure!" BAM - instant shut down.
I was able to actually get a support person on the PHONE (unheard of) and they admitted I did nothing wrong but
said they wouldn't be able to restore it. So ever since then, I focus on MY assets, not something someone else can make vanish in an instant.
My daughter won't be making this her income. It's a side hobby (not hustle - hobby) but it'll come in handy with her online writing career, too.
Now for some things I've been noticing...
Many struggling creators focus ONLY on a few things, like using trending sounds or trends like types of videos they publish.
However, I notice that when someone uses a pattern interrupt method, I always stop to watch more. Even though I KNOW what they're doing, so imagine how this grabs the attention of those who aren't even aware of what they're seeing.
The first thing I want you to do is try pattern interrupts with your content. It can be done with video OR text.
I got AI to whip up some examples for you:
Video pattern interrupt examples:
- Start with the “after” instead of the “before.”
Example: Open on a clean, organized desk and
say, “This was absolute chaos 10 minutes ago… watch what I changed.” Then cut back to the messy “before” and show the process. - Hard visual jump cut.
Example: You’re mid-sentence in your office and suddenly the next frame you’re in a completely different spot (car, kitchen, outdoors) finishing the same sentence with the same tone. - Sudden zoom and sound effect.
Example: You’re talking normally, then when you say, “Here’s the mistake,” do a quick punch-in zoom to your face
with a soft “whoosh” sound, then continue the tip at normal framing. - Background or angle switch.
Example: Start as a talking head, then 3–5 seconds in, cut to an over-the-shoulder view of your screen, whiteboard, or notebook while you keep talking, then pop back to your face. - Pattern break with silence.
Example: You’re talking over background music, then suddenly cut the music, pause for one beat, lean in and say, “This is the part no one tells you,” and then resume the
regular style.
Text pattern interrupt examples:
- Use an unexpected first line.
Example: “Pause for a second. Your shoulders just tensed when you read that, didn’t they?” - Break the rhythm with shorty lines.
Example: “You’re not ‘too emotional.’ You’re just exhausted from holding everything together for everyone else.” - Ask a jarring, specific question.
Example: “When was the last time you relaxed without feeling
guilty about it?” - Flip a common belief.
Example: “Everyone tells you to ‘just breathe.’ Nobody explains what to do when your brain won’t shut up long enough to let you.” - Use a “record scratch” sentence in the middle of a paragraph.
Example: “You’re not lazy. Your nervous system is burnt out from running in survival mode 24/7.”
Unusual Pattern Interrupts Using Weight Loss as a Niche Example:
- The Guilty Mirror opener - Example: “Pause for a second. If diets actually worked, you wouldn’t need a new one every January.” Lesson: This interrupt gently calls out a familiar pattern (constantly restarting) so the reader feels seen and becomes curious about a different approach.
- The Blame Swap switch - Example: “Before you blame your willpower, go look at your fork, your phone, and your 2 a.m. brain. One of those three is the real problem, and it’s not your
fork.” Lesson: This reframes the “it’s all my fault” story and shifts blame from the person to their environment and habits, which opens them up to practical changes.
- The Scale Therapy joke - Example: “What if the scale isn’t ‘stuck’—it’s just tired of you only talking to it when you hate yourself?” Lesson: This uses humor and personification to break tension around the scale, so you can segue into healthier metrics like energy, strength, or consistency.
- The Hidden Need
reveal - Example: “You’re not addicted to food. You’re addicted to the 5 seconds of peace you get right before you swallow.” Lesson: This exposes the emotional need under the habit and sets you up to talk about emotional regulation, stress relief, or self-soothing alternatives.
- The Monday Rent collector - Example: “Imagine if your ‘I’ll start Monday’ voice had to pay rent every time it said that. You’d be a millionaire… and still not on a walk.” Lesson: This calls out procrastination
in a playful way and naturally leads into tiny-today actions instead of big “someday” overhauls.
- The Emotional Snack spotlight - Example: “Your problem isn’t late-night snacking. Your problem is that 9 p.m. is the only time you let yourself feel anything.” Lesson: This reveals that the real issue is emotional avoidance, not the food itself, and sets up coaching around evening routines and emotional awareness.
- The Scarcity Flip line - Example: “You don’t need to eat less. You
need to stop eating like every meal is your last chance before the diet police show up.” Lesson: This flips the restriction mindset and helps readers understand how scarcity thinking drives overeating, opening space to talk about food freedom.
If you aren't sure how to use pattern interrupts in your niche, ask AI - tell it your niche, audience, and goal for the content. And don't ALWAYS use pattern interrupts. Use them here and there sprinkled among other
content.
Tiff ;)