What Hemingway Can Teach Creatives About "The Content Trap"

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Welcome back to The Creative Life Podcast
If you're caught between feeding the algorithm and making something meaningful — or struggling to commit to long-term work — this episode offers a different way forward.
I was reading Hemingway's A Moveable Feast when it hit me:
In 1921, he walked away from a successful journalism career because his work was "dead by the time it was printed the following morning."
A perishability trap.
That's exactly what we're living through now — posting work that disappears into algorithmic decay while the projects that could actually matter sit waiting.
In this episode, I break down the creative principles Hemingway forged in Paris and what they can teach us about building a legacy in a content-driven world.

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A SHORT NOTE ON THIS WEEK'S AUDIO!
Guys - I had two broken mics, tech glitches and a crashing computer for this episode. My apologies that the audio is not as strong as usual - I wrestled with it for hours to get it as best I could. Issues will be ironed out for next time! Thanks for bearing with me! Jim
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What we'll explore: 
  • 🎯 How to escape the perishability trap and make the choice between content and legacy
  • 🌌 Why commanding the vacuum — protecting your inner space — is essential for any lasting work
  • 🧊 What the Iceberg Theory reveals about AI, storytelling, and why your lived experience matters now more than ever
  • ⏳ The five-year threshold: why anything significant takes longer than we want to admit
  • 🔥 How to leave the paradigm of your old self and commit to work that endures
Let's dive in,
Jim Kroft

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What Hemingway Can Teach Creatives About "The Content Trap"
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