Monday, May 18, 2020
How to get more done when you feel stuck
How to get more done when you feel stuck This post is about productivity. I have to tell you that because this is a career blog and career blogs need topics that fall into the career space. You cant have a blog that doesnt have a topic. Even Mark Cuban, who seems to not have a topic because he writes about basketball and colleges and eating at the iHop still has a clear topic: How to make a ton of money. 1. Life is easier if you embrace hardship instead of trying to avoid it. My blog topic is not how to make a ton of money. It used to be. When I was in my twenties, and early 30s, my focus was money. But somewhere I realized that I wanted an interesting life more than money. I think it was when I was at Ingram Micro, a Fortune 50 company, and I was blown away at how boring and risk averse everyone was. The Fortune 50 is a study is seeking safety in product lines, in workplace practices, and in a stable life. I am not the safety-seeking type. So I stopped trying to make a lot of money and started trying to do interesting things, and thats when my career really took off. Investors love interestingness. 2. Focus on being interesting and then hurdles are predictable. I found that if I focused on making my life interesting, money came. But if I focused on money, I got stuck. So I have spent the last ten years understanding the difference between going after money, going after happiness and going after interestingness. I have found that I am most productive when I follow my instinct for what will be interesting because people are more focused and more engaged when they do what interests them. A lot of you will say you want to do what you love, but your vision of doing what you love is really limited. Like, you think you want to be a yoga teacher, but the yoga business is mostly about marketing yet you have this idea in your head that teaching yoga is interesting. But teaching yoga for someone else is being a worker bee and its working for free. Teaching yoga in your own studio is mostly a marketing job. (Even Mark Cuban says this, actually: follow your action not your passion.) So let me be clear that choosing interesting work is difficult. Its the hard path. It is not interesting to do something easy because if its easy, you already know the path and the outcome. How could that truly be interesting? You are lying to yourself. 3. If you admit youre a cliche, you can use tried and true methods to help yourself. When I launched Brazen Careerist, it was a blog network. I had already found my fifty favorite Gen Y bloggers and I had my editor, who is still my editor, edit those bloggers. For the most part, he hated editing the bloggers.This was before he got medication so he was also surly and biting, and one of his biggest complaints was about posts that began by explaining why the person has not written in so long. Because of this I am very careful not to open a post with that topic. Instead, I am slipping it in here, in the middle. I have written about my life for my whole life. It just happens that its my job now, but Id do it anyway. This is probably not goodfor one thing, it pegs me as very likely to kill myself. For another thing, when I am uncertain about my life I shut down. In my webinar about how to write about your life, I realized, while I was teaching it, that writing about your life means facing your life. I am having a hard time facing my life now. 4. Be clear on what you hate about yourself. You have to see it to move past it. Its a pattern. Here are the times I had a hard time writing about my life: When I had a baby. (I started republishing old posts and I got fired for breaking my contract.) When I launched a company. (I wanted to write about entrepreneurship but I got scared that people only wanted to read about climbing a corporate ladder.) When I moved to the farm. (I wanted to write about the farm but I thought people only liked me because I was from LA/NY and other big cities where Ive landed.) Now. When Im scaling back my career to homeschool my kids. I cant even write that without feeling a little sick. I dont want to face that. So I dont want to write anything because I dont want to see it. I coach so many people who want to have kids and are feeling sick about the idea of scaling back their career. They feel sick about the idea of being grouped with stay-at-home moms instead of high-achieving men. I get it. I feel that way too. The first thing I noticed, in fact, when I started homsechooling, was that I miss being surrounded by men. Because thats what happens when you have a big career and you are a woman. Most women drop out, and its the men that are left. You get used to being surrounded by men. 5. You are not special. You are like other people. So find people who are like you. But luckily, people send me tons of links about scaling back careers, and I am getting confident in my choices. Here are some of my favorite links: The Harvard Business Review says that its not the women who need to lean in, its the men. The author, James Allworth, points out that all the studies about what makes a fulfilling life show that its relationships and not work. So to tell people to forgo relationships in order to work more is absurd. Sheryl Sandbergs book assumes that women are not in high-powered positions because women make the wrong choices. But people who choose to have a smaller career and pay attention to family relationships are making better choices, and men need to lean in to their relationships. Another link that makes me happy is that the best educated moms are the ones most likely to opt out. When I saw the headline it made immediate sense to me. Those are the moms most likely to feel that they have a choicebecause their husband earns enough money and they themselves are capable of generating income from home. The research also makes sense because the best educated moms are the ones most likely to be able to process the data that explains why its not a given that everyone should try to have the biggest possible career. Its new data and its difficult to process after twenty years of feminist diatribes about the glass ceiling. But the smartest women are the first to go against the grainwhich is what opting out is, since the media does not encourage it. Heres what Ive learned from not writing about my life because I was scared you wouldnt like it: Ive learned that you dont care what I do in my life as long as Im interesting. If I am doing something thats scary, and I tell you, then you can identify with me when you do something scary. What this community is, really, is people who want to do something scary. Because life is very, very boring if we dont scare ourselves.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.