ENTREPRENEUR

The Secret Is Choosing

Nearly everybody who started the summer Implementation Lab for Entrepreneurs yesterday had at least two significant projects they wanted to tackle over the next six weeks.

And these were no small projects--writing and recording videos for a new course AND establishing a robust affiliate program for a fall offer; building and launching a new business site AND redesigning a garage to serve as an art and meditation space…

No slackers, these business owners. Plus they all agreed that on top of their projects they absolutely needed to use the summer to rejuvenate, regenerate, play with family and friends...

Of course they do! AND it's a lot to take on.

So how do you do it successfully?

Just Leave Enough Time for the Tantrum

A wonderful lesson in time management, via several wildly stressful several days with my teenager.

To help my oldest kiddo navigate some of the things that come with being a fourteen-year-old at this particular moment in time, we have been encouraged to apply the sweat-it-out approach. This means, essentially, 20-30 minutes of strenuous activity a day to help move energy and make him sweat.

Turns out, what worked for him works for my business too.

Ten Words for You

So I've started doing reiki with people and some pretty wild stuff has been happening.

Years ago I took a reiki training because my hands had started getting all tingly and I thought I should learn how to do something with that energy. The training involved classes, a workbook and lots of hand positions that there was no way I was going to remember without practicing a lot--and there was no way I was going to practice that much--so I gave up.

And then few months ago I met someone…

It's Easier the Second Time

[You may not be able to tell from the next few sentences, but I promise—this article really IS for entrepreneurs!]

The kids were on break last week and we took a 300 piece puzzle out of the library (because that's what you can do in my mother-in-law's awesome suburban library!).

My ten year old daughter and I labored together for hours to bring to life a picture of a general store and assorted old-timey bric a brac. We wasted only a minimal amount of time arguing about the best way to tackle a puzzle (finding all the edge pieces and organizing everything by color/pattern—yes; trying to put together random pieces you think might fit and then leaving them semi-attached even when they clearly do not go together—not so much).

What cooking rage has to do with your business

Let's talk about cooking rage.

Cooking rage is a real thing. There's a good chance you'll recognize it when I describe it.

I want to talk about it because when I experienced it earlier this week I discovered a striking parallel between what happened to me as I attempted to cook a healthy meal for my family and what happens to me and to so many of my clients and friends who own businesses when we try to do something we believe will help our businesses grow.

Sometimes the wins aren't pretty

I realized something this week. It turns out that all this time I’ve thought that the “wins” in life, the things worth acknowledging and celebrating, are supposed to be pretty.

I was SO WRONG!!!!

It turns out that some of our biggest wins are hidden in big, messy arguments, somewhere underneath the yelling and the tears. Others are buried in moments of terror, self-doubt and pain. And still more of them are surrounded by everyday frustrations, overwhelm and mess-ups, which is why they’re hard to see, and why it’s hard for so many of us to believe we’ve collected more than a handful of wins throughout our entire lives.