It’s More About Intentionality

If I was being authentic right now, I wouldn’t be writing a blog post. I’d be on the couch, enjoying an N/A beverage and watching Big Bang Theory. That’s authentic and real.

But that doesn’t help you. It doesn’t live up to the expectation you have of me (or I have of me). It doesn’t make change happen or serve the purpose of leaving a legacy.

Consistency does that. Consistency of showing up and being intentional about the change I seek to make in you and the world.

Authenticity is great when it aligns with our intentions, but it’s more about us being intentional in our actions than authentic.

You’ll see far greater results from intention than from authenticity.

Stay Positive & Show Up, Even When You’re Not Feeling Like It

Photo credit

2 or 2000

Some performers won’t show up unless the venue is sold out. It’s 2,000 or nothing. These artists want a full house. They don’t bother with anything less than max fan or spectator base. (Personally, I’ve found myself more comfortable speaking in front of 10,000 people than 10.)

Then there are some who show up only if the venue has a couple of people in it. It’s low-key and personal. Informal and layered with emotional connections. A packed house is not their jam.

You might feel strongly that one scenario is better than the other. Maybe more fans is a sign that you can create more value to more people and that makes you feel fulfilled? Or maybe fewer fans means that you can create a deeper connection with them – something you couldn’t do with a thousand at once?

Neither preference is wrong. The only wrong is to think that one is more valuable than the other and to turn away from the one we’re less attracted to.

Why?

Because, as an artist, our goal is to make meaningful change. Period.

Quantity doesn’t matter. Making a difference does.

Stay Positive & And For That, We Thank You

Photo credit

More Guts

Does it take more guts to give advice or accept advice?

Does it take more guts to do the work or to ship and share the work?

Does it take more guts to make a leap or to learn from the leap (so you can leap again)?

I’m not sure which takes more guts. But does that matter?

Stay Positive & Might As Well Do Both

Photo credit

Five Minutes

Five minutes can be a game changer.

Five minutes to have a tough conversation.

Five minutes to walk around the block and get some air.

Five minutes to work before self-doubt starts trying to show up.

Five minutes to breath and let frustration fade away.

Five minutes to realize you’ve been working on your project for an hour already.

Start with five minutes. It’s amazing where you’ll end up.

Stay Positive & Take Five

Photo credit

Inspiration, Pain And Flow

The famous Chuck Close had said that inspiration is for amateurs. Professional show up and get to work. All evidence around inspiration zeroes in on the fact that inspiration follows the work we do. It shows up after we do, not before.

Work that’s meaningful is always painful. It’s a natural phenomenon of yin and yang. This makes discomfort you feel a sign that you’re going in the right direction; that you’re pushing on status quo; that you’re getting close to the edge.

Believe it or not, flow isn’t about momentum or that moment inspiration cares to join you in your efforts. Flow is when you’re in the moment, letting worries and distractions float on by you. (Not that you don’t acknowledge them, but that you do and let them go versus pull you away from your work.) You can also call flow mindfulness.

Every professional and artist dances with these three elements. If you haven’t danced with them lately, it might be high time.

Stay Positive & Thank You For The Work That Matters

Photo credit

One Leap

Leaping certainly gets you from here to there. It comes with a lot of emotions and a lot of reward.

But it’s not one leap and then done. It’s not one leap and then continued success.

It’s one leap. And then getting ready for another. And then another.

The scary part? It’s not the same leap. Leaping will require you to feel the risk again, but in a new way. It’ll require new commitments, new help, a new mindset.

Though there is all of that, I don’t really see any reason not to leap again anyway. Do you?

Stay Positive & Keep Leapin’

Photo credit

Like Asking For Directions

You’re trying to conserve your phone battery. You’re at a gas station filling up. You know you’re close to your destination. So you ask the clerk for directions.

There’s no guilt or embarrassment. There’s no second or third guessing it. You know it will result in nothing (not setting you back at all) or it will result in something (getting you to where you want to go).

The same could be said for the project your working on, the mission you’re working for, the legacy you’re working toward. You can find people who might be able to help you, tell them where you want to go and hear them out on how to get there.

But instead, we often worry what they will think. We’ll feel embarrassed for not being able to get there ourselves. We think it’ll set us back or down the wrong road.

These are lies we tell ourselves, of course. It’s a form of hiding and we ought to work to ignore the little voice inside our head.

It’s okay to ask for directions whether you’re behind the wheel of an actual vehicle or behind the wheel of your life.

You might not always get to the destination more quickly, but you will no doubt have a more enjoyable journey.

Say Positive & Go Ahead And Ask Away

Photo credit