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🗓️ 19 September 2025
⏱️ 41 minutes
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Ok, I know you all have been dying to hear about my field trip to Greenfield Village. I tried to start the podcast three times before this final take because I want to tell you guys everything! But how in 45 minutes? Let me just say, I will be going back!
Greenfield Village
Most of us have seen a living historical farm of some sort. It’s usually a field trip where you get to see what it was like to live in the past. You get to see the equipment and lack of current day machines that help with everyday household tasks and business. That’s Greenfield Village but magnified. Henry Ford’s goal was “I only want to have ordinary people who had extraordinary vision.” He brought homes from Thomas Edison(while he was still living), the guy who created the Dewey Decimal system, the bus Rosa Parks rode, the guy who wrote the McGruff readers, the Wright Brothers bike shop, and other buildings of significance. The first 6 years it was a school. There was a lottery system for admittance. Students would start their day in church. A church that my grandma used to attend. Henry Ford and Thomas Edison were basically teaching the next generation of entrepreneurs in Thomas Edison’s innovation laboratory. Thomas accumulated all kinds of supplies, textiles, and tools to create. All new things start with education and innovation.
You are standing where the greats have stood
I couldn’t help but to think to myself often “You are standing where the greats have stood.” Especially when I was in Thomas Edison’s lab. I was able to connect some aspect of my life to each house. Thomas Edison was the first person to assemble a team and let them dive into their uniqueness. He hired people to come work in his lab and then innovate.
And because he was paying his technicians, they had money to pay to stay at the Women’s Boarding house. I loved being at the boarding house where I played the role of observer. These women were baking, cleaning, chatting, and even sat by the fireplace to knit or catch up on the day’s events. I can’t stress the importance of relationships. Today’s society is becoming too isolated. We should be filling up our time with others, not our devices. The tour guide would have you believe the women had to do these daunting tasks because the men were out doing whatever. But I challenge that thought. These women were volunteers playing a role, reeling us into the past, and enjoying themselves. I kept picturing myself in those lifestyles. You didn’t have a car to go shopping, a phone to scroll on, or the conveniences of today’s lifestyle. If I were them, in that day, I’d love to grind the wheat and make the soup. So I’m not sure I’m buying that they didn’t like their responsibilities.
So all because one man decided to gather a team to explore their zone of genius, the town boomed. That led to other businesses from people exploring their zones of genius and doing what they were uniquely gifted and created to do, thus all of the village’s talents were represented.
Curiosity • Resourcefulness • Practice over time
It’s not the size of your house, your intellect, or resources that make you great. It’s curiosity like me needing to figure out how to settle an estate. And resourcefulness like me figuring out how to create and manufacture the Financial Binder. I have a teaching degree, not a masters in business. I also had to be very resourceful because my budget was small. I was an ordinary person with a vision. I didn’t come from money. I’m not well connected. And over time I keep learning and honing the thing that I am gifted and uniquely created to do. I keep refining The Productive Home Solution. I thoroughly enjoyed my field trip to Greenfield Village and was able to make so many connections to my life today. America - an entrepreneurial country!
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| 0:00.0 | Today's mailbag comes to us from Jackie. This weekend I had a massive Sunday basket planning |
| 0:05.6 | proactively win. I had a weekend with my college friends and our dogs and babies at a tiny house |
| 0:10.9 | resort. I brought two pre-cooked dishes that could be eaten cold because I had it in my Sunday |
| 0:15.7 | basket to do that based on the last time we got together. I am child free and love their kiddos, but they're one and two years old, so time with them can be really chaotic, and suddenly we all realize that we're starving. |
| 0:27.5 | Rather than spend the weekend frantically cooking or eating random snacks, we all had some delicious, healthy, and prepped food to eat, along with one night of grilling, which was chaotic but fun. |
| 0:38.4 | It let us catch up more, which was the whole point. |
| 0:42.7 | Do you have an Organized 365 success story? |
| 0:46.4 | If so, we would love to hear about it. |
| 0:49.0 | Please send us an email at Customer Service at Organized 365 and tell us how you have taken back your home, |
| 0:56.4 | your paper, and your life with Organized 365. |
| 1:04.9 | Welcome to the Organized 365 podcast. |
| 1:08.8 | I'm your host, professional organizer, productivity expert, and motivational speaker, |
| 1:14.3 | Lisa Woodruff. This podcast will help you embrace progress over perfection and create |
| 1:20.5 | lasting functional organizing in your home. I have so much to share with you, so let's get |
| 1:26.8 | started. |
| 1:35.7 | Last week, I talked to you about the presidential homes I went to in Virginia, and I have gone through presidential homes since I was a little girl. Being in Ohio, there are many presidential |
| 1:40.6 | homes, and so my mother would take us to a couple of them. As I got older, that was something it wasn't very expensive to go see a presidential homes. And so my mother would take us to a couple of them. As I got older, |
| 1:44.6 | that was something it wasn't very expensive to go see a presidential home. Ohio's not a really |
| 1:49.5 | big state. And so over time, I went to presidential homes either on like field trips with school |
| 1:55.2 | or self-imposed field trips in the state of Ohio. As I've gotten older, I've been able to see |
| 2:00.6 | more presidential homes see more presidential |
| 2:01.3 | homes, more presidential libraries. You know how I love all of that stuff. Well, one of you told me |
... |
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