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Respecting the Past, Shaping the Future - March at My Mind Rocks Respecting the Past, Shaping the Future - March at My Mind Rocks

Respecting the Past, Shaping the Future - March at My Mind Rocks

There’s something quieter about March.

Not quieter in terms of activity, but in tone. A different kind of depth. The kind you don’t always notice immediately, but if you’ve spent time in this space, you feel it.

March at My Mind Rocks centred around readings. On paper, that’s the theme. But what actually unfolded was something more meaningful - a month that naturally bridged generations, recognising where our work comes from while also exploring where it’s going.

We were joined by Richard Webster, whose contribution to readings and mentalism spans decades. His session, alongside his work on Psychometry A-Z, grounded everything in experience, clarity, and a kind of calm authority that only comes from years of doing the work. There’s a simplicity to his thinking that cuts through noise. No excess. No over complication. Just what works, and why.

Alongside that, we welcomed Aazan Makdhoomi, representing a newer voice in the space. And in many ways, that contrast defined the month.

Aazan spoke openly about his journey into mentalism and the shift many recognise - moving away from collecting methods and towards developing presentations that actually connect. That thinking became the foundation of his first book, Mentalism Presentations, and it’s clearly an area he cares deeply about. His session offered thoughtful insights into how presentation shapes everything we do, and why the way something is delivered will always matter more than the method behind it.

Taken together, the month felt like a natural bookend. Respect for the foundations, and space for new thinking to develop.

Away from the guest sessions, something else has been steadily building.

The Sunday Billet Sessions have now evolved into Sunday Sessions, opening things up beyond a single topic and giving members a space to explore areas they genuinely want to develop. It’s a small shift on paper, but an important one. It gives the community more influence over the direction of learning, and that’s where things start to become truly valuable.

The Tuesday Jam Sessions continue to be one of the strongest parts of MMR. Not because of what’s taught, but because of what’s happening within them. Members are taking ideas out into the real world, testing them in performance, and bringing that experience back into the group. From there, things are refined, adjusted, and strengthened.

You can actually see the progression happening in real time. Performances becoming tighter. Decisions becoming clearer. Confidence building in a way that only comes from doing the work.

That, more than anything, is what My Mind Rocks is about.

Not just content. Not just guest lectures.

Progress.

If you’ve been following these posts over the past few months, you’ll have seen the direction things are moving. January explored connection and shared thinking. February became hands-on and practical, focused on real skill development. March slowed things down and looked at meaning, presentation, and where our work sits in the wider picture.

Each month builds. Each month adds something different.

And if you’re not inside it, you’re only seeing part of it.

If you’ve been on the outside, watching and waiting, it’s easy to tell yourself you’ll join at some point.

Most people do.

And most people don’t.

The difference isn’t talent or experience. It’s proximity. The people improving the fastest are the ones in the room, testing ideas, getting feedback, and refining their work week by week.

That’s what My Mind Rocks gives you.

Not just content, but access. Not just ideas, but application. Not just inspiration, but progress.

If that sounds like you, come and see it for yourself.

Join My Mind Rocks.

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