Blog Archives

Faith Is the Foundation

David L Shabazz Author Interview

Discover Your Gold Mind offers readers a reflective guide focused on a disciplined inner life shaped by self-awareness, faith, and purpose. Why was this an important book for you to write?

This book came from a combination of personal interviews and research I conducted back when I was a newspaper reporter. Reporters have the privileged opportunity to meet some of the wealthiest and most successful people from all walks of life. Just as a reporter wants to provide valuable information to their readers and subscribers, I felt that what I had learned should go beyond just the immediate weekly audience who read my newspaper articles. I felt this information should be shared with the public at large. So, I started conducting more research, which eventually became the book.

Media is known as the 4th Estate. Our purpose is to inform the public. As a journalist, it is my purpose to gather and distribute as much useful information to people as possible. That’s what I hope this book does.

Who did you have in mind as your primary reader while writing this book?

The book grew out of my speeches given at colleges and universities. The bulk of the book is the text – almost verbatim – from my speeches. So, I would have to say the book was geared towards college students. However, I believe the principles can be practiced by anyone. And that’s my desire. Only a select community read my newspaper articles. Only the audience in attendance heard my speeches. I wanted to preserve a version of my speeches and spread the information to as many people as possible.

What role does faith play in developing a “gold mind”?

Faith is the foundation. The bible describes faith as the evidence of things unseen. That means our vision for ourselves comes from having faith. Others have no idea why we do what might seem impossible or ridiculous to them. But every physical reality that we enjoy from nice homes, cars, cell phones, and even artificial intelligence came from a vision that originated in someone’s mind. Having faith is what allows us to persevere patiently in the midst of naysayers as well as endure through trials and hardships. Becoming the best version of yourself is not going to be easy. Making a change is not easy. Change is uncomfortable. There’s always some resistance and pain involved in making a change. But we have a choice: We can accept the pain of discipline or the pain of regret.

What daily habits most effectively help someone build a stronger mindset?

The way you start your day is the most important part of the process. Do not start your day with any form of media – radio, television, or social media. Begin each day with prayer and/or meditation in complete solitude for at least 5 minutes. I wouldn’t go longer because the body needs to be active. Start a 15–20-minute exercise regimen. Exercise will kickstart your endorphins. Skip breakfast and drink only water. Make sure you get sunlight early in the morning and throughout the day. Vitamin D does wonders within the body.

I know it might seem cliché, but reading, writing, and arithmetic are best for direct mental stimulation. The mind is a muscle, and it has to be exercised to grow stronger. Read and write every day. Do one or two mathematical word problems each day. Word problems combine reading, writing, and critical thinking to help solve real-world problems.

The second most important component is to end your day with reflection. This allows us to assess the effectiveness of our plan to reach the goal. Daily exercise, word problems, and meditation will develop a stronger mindset in as little as three weeks if it’s done consistently.

Author Links: GoodReads | X (Twitter) | Website | Amazon

Discover Your Gold Mind by David L. Shabazz is a motivational self-help book that challenges readers to rethink the way they approach life, success, and personal fulfillment. It encourages individuals to uncover the hidden “gold” within their own minds – the unique talents, insights, and potential that too often go untapped – and offers a fresh outlook on how to harness that inner resource to build a more meaningful, successful life. With practical guidance aimed at helping readers break through self-limiting habits and beliefs, Shabazz’s work inspires a deeper understanding of one’s purpose, fosters greater self-confidence, and champions the transformative power of self-discovery and positive action. Originally published in paperback in 2001, this book blends motivational insight with spiritual and practical reflections to guide anyone seeking personal growth and a more empowered mindset.


Discover Your Gold Mind

Discover Your Gold Mind by David L. Shabazz is a motivational and reflective guide about cultivating what the author calls a “gold mind,” a disciplined inner life shaped by self-awareness, faith, purposeful action, goal-setting, persistence, and care for the body as well as the spirit. Shabazz moves from self-concept and perception to dreams, confidence, perseverance, character, health, income, and legacy, drawing on examples such as Maya Angelou, Joe Dudley, Tom Dempsey, Satchel Paige, Walt Disney, and Maurice Ashley to argue that success begins long before the visible achievement. The book insists that poverty and abundance are not only material conditions, but habits of thought, and that a person’s future is deeply affected by the way they speak to themselves, imagine possibility, and act under pressure.

I found the book most affecting when Shabazz turns from broad exhortation to concrete human moments. The Volkswagen Jetta story, where he realizes he has neglected the value of what he already possesses, quietly becomes one of the book’s best metaphors: we often treat our minds like inherited property instead of sacred equipment. That idea stayed with me. So did the discussion of the Johari Window, especially the “unknown” quadrant, because it gives the self-help material a welcome tenderness. It suggests that we are not merely broken things to be fixed, but undiscovered countries. The book’s recurring emphasis on self-concept, inner speech, and disciplined imagination has real emotional force, particularly when paired with stories of people who had every reason to surrender to humiliation, injury, poverty, or delay.

The writing is warm, direct, and sermon-like, with the rhythm of a speaker who wants to reach the person at the back of the room. I admired that accessibility. Shabazz writes with conviction, and his best passages have the cadence of lived counsel rather than abstract theory. The phrases about goals, thought, discipline, faith, and self-mastery begin to accumulate like a drumbeat. By the time the book reaches practical habits such as planning the day, exercising the body and mind, and building a spiritual foundation, its message feels less like a slogan and more like a daily ethic.

I respected Discover Your Gold Mind for its heart, its moral seriousness, and its refusal to let readers hide behind talent, circumstance, or delay. I’d recommend it to readers who appreciate faith-inflected personal development, students or young professionals looking for a practical push, and anyone drawn to motivational writing that blends self-reflection, discipline, and purpose with a strong sense of spiritual accountability. Its best audience is someone ready not just to be encouraged, but to be confronted with the responsibility of becoming.

Pages: 149 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GS7LK64L

Buy Now From Amazon