I have been avoiding my homework.
And yeah, that’s not something you generally want to hear from a procrastination expert.
I have a sort-of excuse. Two sort-of excuses. For one thing, I didn’t realize it was “homework”, and for another, I didn’t realize I was avoiding it. Hear me out.
What’s happening is that tomorrow is this cool Biznik event.
And for the record, if you don’t Biznik, you should. It combines online networking (bonus tagline: “business networking that doesn’t suck”) with offline (i.e. real live human beings!) events.
And it’s pretty much the only online networking thing where you aren’t going to get lost among a bunch of suits. God, I just used the N-word three times. I’ll do it again. Networking.
Anyway, this particular event tomorrow is full of awesomeness. Seriously. It is very exclamation point worthy:
It’s in a park! Park! There will be crayons! Crayons! My twitter-pals @sparkyfirepants and @cheekyboots are going to be there! Friends!
And it’s Portland, so even though it’s a “networking event”, I can still be barefoot and stuff.
So I’m going. Plus, my duck loves outings.
Here’s where it gets all weird and annoying.
Thing is, this event is a follow-up to another event that happened while I was teaching in Germany. Hence, the homework to bring me up to speed.
The exercise is as follows: you ask yourself, “What do I need to make my business explode in the next half of the year?”
Then you break out the crayons and come up with some kind of interpretive drawing which shows what that might look like.
I haven’t felt like doing this, and just this weekend figured out that a. it’s more than just “not being in the mood” or “busy busy busy as usual” and b. I know why this is happening.
This exercise is bringing up lots of stuff for me.
My weird issue #1
I have pretty strong feelings about the power of words. You’ll recall my issue with Michael Port’s Book Yourself Solid system (hint: I don’t want to be booked solid — I want to have freedom and spaciousness in my business).
When I think about my business exploding … well, it’s not attractive. Not appealing.
This might, admittedly, be the Israeli thing.
After all, back when I worked as a bartender in Tel Aviv, the business across the street did explode one Saturday night.
And my memories of that pretty much all involve bodies and glass and worrying about my boyfriend who had been driving down the street looking for parking. He was fine, thank you.
Also, is explode really, truly the right verb? I get how sales can explode or the number of subscribers can explode, but my business, well … should I want it to?
My weird issue #2
Even when I get over the taking-things-way-too-literally thing … I still don’t like it.
The reason I can’t do the stupid drawing is because the subject matter depresses me. The images that are coming up are awful.
Phone ringing off the hook. All my time sucked away. Having to hire a big pile of new assistants. Blech.
What I really need to be able to do is think about ways that my business could be reaching and helping more of the right people, while bringing in big piles of the monies, so that I can spend more happy afternoons in the park, recharging my batteries and playing with crayons.
I’m pretty sure that’s what they actually mean, too, so I’m trying to focus on that.
And yes, I’m cool with being even more successful in my incredibly great helper-mouse job — it’s just that I don’t want to be more busy than I already am, and now it’s time to focus on separating those two things.
You know: allowing huge success while moving away from the (warning: coach-ey word coming up) limiting belief that all that business = busy-ness.
What I did to get the heck over it.
Once I realized why I was resisting the whole thing … well, it was a huge relief. Sometimes it takes a minute for: “Hey wait a second! I’m totally procrastinating on this thing!” to sink in.
Right away I broke out some of my Dissolve Procrastination techniques from the Procrastination Dissolve-o-matic.
Which is the whole damn point of having techniques. You get calm and focused and you know what to do next.
Here’s what I knew I had to do. Wait, let me just let the voice in my head do the talking:
Enter Havi’s inner voice, stage left. Inner voice coughs politely.
Yeah, so I thought: okay, it’s clear now what I want. What I want is time. Time and a feeling of spaciousness.
The homework exercise is also intended to help me figure out what I want, but it’s stressing me out. I need to separate the “allowing myself to want” from the stress of imagining things going the way I think I’m supposed to want them.
What if … instead of asking how my business can explode, how about if I ask how my business can give me more time and spaciousness?
And then I can explore options that will help my business grow exponentially (see, that sounds way better than explode) in ways that give me more of that yummy goodness.
So I did some visualizing, and some thinking and some writing and came up with some pretty good stuff.
This is my image
My image is a big bed waiting for me to take a nap in it.
That’s what exploded business looks like to me.
More naptime, baby. More yoga. More acupuncture. More long walks. Taking that spaciousness and breathing it in, so that I can bring it into my work with clients and they get to soak it up too.
I also brainstormed some ideas about the how part of this — in fact just did some more thinking around ideas I was already working on. Dusted off some old ones too. Played with my marketing plan biggification plan.
It was surprisingly fun. I’ll tell you more about it as things unfold, but the main points that I’m taking from this whole thing are:
1. When something scares you and/or gets on your nerves, pay attention to it, because there’s useful information in there.
2. If a certain word is pressing all your buttons, change the word. Change the energy. Call it something else.
3. Homework sucks. Crayons are fun.
That’s it for now. I gotta go find some shoes.
p.s. wanna see my drawing?
The thing with the flowers is supposed to be a lamp.
Oh totally. When I first heard that was what we were going to talk about I was like “Eeh, but I don’t want my business to explode!”. I am a firm believer in laziness-with-self-approval. My purpose in going into business was to create a way to NOT have to work. Growth for the sake of growth is like, dumb.
But then I realized that I could frame it any way I wanted as “What do I want my business to look like in 6 months” and then I was fine with it. You can always rewrite things in your head. My drawing had nothing to do with that kind of exploding, but it did ironically turn out to look like a heart expanding with waves of colored light and stuff, kinda like an explosion. A gentle, woo-woo explosion.
I actually did the drawing without thinking at all about what it meant. I like to draw first and interpret later, I think I learn more that way. When I was done I realized it was about integrating the “businessy” and “creative/woo-woo” parts of myself into a big radiant whole with my heart at the center. Yay!
I love your drawing, it’s so cute!! See you soon!
Emma
aka cheekyboots
Emma McCrearys last blog post..Do You Need to be Aggressive to Get Sales?
So, I just cancelled my RSVP because I’m not going to hit my deadlines if I go tomorrow.
So, that sucks because I won’t be supporting an event/idea that I actually started. It also sucks because I had no idea you would be there.
Then, after reading this post I kind of feel like one of the cheesy marketing types I try to avoid. I came up with the “explode” thing and after reading it here it sounds like just about the lamest thing that’s ever come out of my keyboard.
I hate second-guessing my writing or thinking or doing or being, but I also hate knowing that people would look at something I created and feel like I might be one of those cheesy marketing types.
It was really about the park and the crayons and being loose, so I’m glad that part was accepted.
Enjoy the day, support Christian Messier in his hosting! Your drawing is cute, I really, really like the space.
Davids last blog post..Creating in a Vacuum… sucks
@David – Ohmygod, no I didn’t think you were a cheesy marketing type at all! Actually, if anything I was way too deep in my own stuff to even think about who actually came up with the formulation and why.
Definitely don’t think it has a cheesy marketing vibe. It’s not like “take it to the next level” or anything. And I totally get the intention of “fun in the park!” — just my stuff.
Sad you won’t be there. We’ll have to crayon it up together some other time…
@Emma – yes, yes and more yes.
Love the way you described it. So perfect. Also: “Growth for the sake of growth is like, dumb” could be a pretty awesome tagline. Yay!
Ah shucks David, everybody is cheesy sometimes. =)
The important thing is that the event was awesome! I wish you could make it!
Emma McCrearys last blog post..Do You Need to be Aggressive to Get Sales?
@Havi – Yeah! I’m about “easification” and “enjoyification”. And planning that into the biggification! And part of that is a mental thing–not just buying into the idea that “success = stress”.
Emma
Emma McCrearys last blog post..Do You Need to be Aggressive to Get Sales?
Love that we share the technique (both for our clients and ourselves) of using the wonderful gift of words to work FOR us, as we please, on command and at our leisure. I always gravitate toward “expand” for the biggification-type stuff because it seems inclusive, out-reaching, and dare I say, expansive. And your set of techniques (notice, revise, shift focus) is expressed so well in this tale — thanks for the detail.
(On your “success = extra naps” idea, I was raised with “you gotta spend the ones to make room for the hundreds” version of “if you make room for it, it will come.” Man, does it ever.) Here’s to your having an expansive time at the park. Looking forward to your reporting back on it!
Havi,
Hi! I found your blog from Triiibes and I’ve been really enjoying your writing since then.
This post really moves me. I’ve been struggling with the exact same thing — when I envision “wild success”, I envision being booked solid and having lots of stress. Thanks for sharing your story and your drawing. It’s really helping me.
@Havi – Thanks for that. It’s funny how you can read something and get a take on it, then read it later and see something different. It’s obvious that my frame of mind at the first time was all. about. me. 🙂
What I see and like about it now is the idea of changing your perspective. It’s a very childlike idea, to change the world into the one that works for you.
Those children might just have something there.
Davids last blog post..Creating in a Vacuum… sucks