It’s easy to never start the company you’ve dreamed about, write that book you’ve talked about, start that movement you wish you could be apart of. The problem is those dreams and visions don’t go away; they fester just below the surface. For me, one of the biggest challenges to doing great work and risking to believe in a better version of tomorrow is fear. The voice in my head whispers this sentence, “What if no one likes what you create?”
In today’s podcast, I offer the antidote to this paralyzing voice of disqualification. You’ll have to listen to the podcast to hear how you can start offering your best in your Work Life Play.
Click to listen What if No One Likes What You Create
Highlights from Podcast #33:
What if No One Likes What You Create
- How to stop listening to the voices of disqualification.
- Understand why it is important to move forward with your ideas without consideration for the outcome.
- Learn how being concerned about what other people might think actually contributes to us doing a poor job.
- Offering our best is the best rebuttal to every excuse.
Original Post, September 2012
The Creative Process is full of reasons to quit
When I sit down to work on new creative projects, I often hear this question before I even start. How much time do you spend thinking about why you shouldn’t start creating something new instead of just doing it?
How many statements of disqualification do you listen to every day?
Do you ever hear questions in your head like these?
The truth is I hear this list a lot.
Sometimes I even yield to its taunting voice. I want to share with you the struggle that I face to make it make it to the finish line. I’m writing this post for myself as much as for you. I need the help in silencing my lizard brain that wants me to stop risking and play it safe.
The “What If’s” that try to stop me from doing great work
- What if my next projects, my next presentation, my new curriculum, my new software app stinks?
- What if no one uses it?
- What if no one likes it?
- What if no one leaves a comment on my next blog post?
- What if I don’t finish the Marathon I am training for?
- What if my manifesto doesn’t get read?
- What if no one buys my new product idea?
- What if your book manuscript doesn’t get published?
- What if no one listens to my new podcast?
I waste time listening instead of doing
How much time do we spend churning through these questions instead of just doing the work?
I am going to wager a guess.
Some days, I spend almost 75% of my time entertaining these whispers of doubt instead of courageously doing the work regardless of outcomes.
How many incomplete projects or ideas do you have in your cue?
Steven Pressfield describes these enemies of the creative process in his book The War of Art. He names the tension, calls out the culprits, exposes our fears, and throws a lifeline to the reader to stop listening and start doing great work.
I have a series of projects that I have been loosing the war to what Steven calls “The Resistance”. Watch his video here on how to overcome Resistance.
Take an Inventory
- Would you be willing to take an inventory of the number of projects, ideas, initiatives
that you have started in the last six months but not completed? - Now take a similar inventory of the number of projects that you have completed.
- How many of the completed projects, ideas, products, inventions, books, stories, and speeches stood up against the above list of fears?
Do the Work Anyway
Once you answer the questions above with the answer I am going to do it anyway, then you are free to do the work you love regardless of people’s responses. Jeff Goins published a great ebook that speaks to this kind of thinking, You Are a Writer (So Start Acting Like One).
Instead of doubting, I want to act like the person I want to become.
- You are a writer.
- You are a designer.
- You are an author.
- You fill in the blank. “I am a _____.”
What will you do today that yesterday you dismissed because you thought
no one will like what you create?
You might also enjoy the podcast interview with Jeff Goins. Listen here.