Saturday, May 23, 2020
How I decide where to focus my energy
How I decide where to focus my energy Melissas in China, which means I have to wake up at four in the morning to talk, which means we have no phone calls, and her emails are unsatisfyingly delayed. I miss her. She is with Steven, who I think is buying her a ring. Going to China with Steven was a good idea because men love being in a foreign country with a woman who can speak the language. Itâs similar to how men enjoy when a girl wears a wig or even a new necklace to have sexthey can pretend they are with someone new. (I read this in Cosmo, which is great for women with Aspergerâs because itâs a rule book for dealing with men.) So Melissa is going to get a ring soon, which is good because its a lot of work to find a guy to marry. When shes not in China, I talk to Melissa on the phone five times a day, which is good for helping her find the right guy, because if you have a really good friend then you put less pressure on the other parts of your life to be completely fulfilling like a mate or a job. In fact, I think this is the problem with most peoplesâ jobs. Do you know what post I link to more than any other post? The post about how your job cannot make a fulfilling life. This one. I know I am the last person in America to see Season One of Weeds, but thatâs what Iâm watching right now. And actually maybe this post will be really useful to everyone because I tried to Google reviews of Season One that do not spoil the rest of the seasons, and it was pretty hard. Wait. Sidetrack for a moment. I am going to say this because so often someone writes in the comments section that the post is not organized. But I want you to know that this post is like a messy deskit looks messy to you, but I know exactly where everything is when I need it. And Iâm telling you Iâm not disorganized but you are not believing me, probably, which is the true problem with a messy desk. You have to believe it when research tells you how other people perceive you. This goes for women wearing makeup to work, too. Just do it. Men take you more seriously if you wear makeup. The research doesnât lie. So back to the Google searching. Melissa is always telling me that I donât need to have another startup idea. She is always telling me that Iâm sitting on a startup and Iâm not focusing on it. My blog. My blog is a publishing startup. I could be publishing books. I could be publishing other peoplesâ books. In fact itâs insane that this paragraph is not full of a million links to stuff Im selling you. I should write a book about Weeds, since I am now going to rank high in search results for season one reviews of Weeds. When it turned out that my goat cheese business idea had terrible profit margins and a questionable ability to reach hockey-stick growth, I got upset. I have been researching and scheming about goat cheese, and then online food, and then online shopping models, for three years. But the idea isnât going to work. Not for me. It might work for you, maybe. (Email me if you want help doing that business. You can have the idea.) So I was moping and I was sending Melissa insane emails, like when I told her that I am infatuated with relational art and I need someone to talk to about it. I told her that I feel like Kurt Perschkes red ball. And I told her that I want to put myself in the weird places and disrupt peoplesâ thinking the way art can. I told her maybe I need to buy a new, great camera. Did you know her camera is as big as her head? I mean, sheâs small. But still. Maybe my blog would be better if I had a camera as big as my head. But Melissa said no to the camera. She said I have to think of my blog as a startup and I already have great photos with my iPhone and I should not distract myself with thinking I need better photos. Thatâs what people do when they have a startup idea. Ben Casnochas book My Startup Life has a chapter about how if youre not working on stuff that really makes a difference, then you are not doing anything. Most people with a new startup do stuff like decide they need a new camera for the business, then distract themselves saving for the camera and researching it, then learning how to use it, and they avoid getting the startup done. Ben, by the way, doesnât want me to write about his old book. He wants me to write about his new book. The Start-up of You, which I like as well, (and not just because his publishing career documents the AP Style Guides treatment of the word startup). The book shows that entrepreneurship is really about taking control of your life, and you donât need a big startup to be an entrepreneur you need personal responsibility and intellectual exploration. Itâs a great book to take the pressure off everyone who thinks they should do a startup but never will. Itâs hard for me to admit that Iâm taking advice from a twenty-five-year-old who talks to me mostly about sex. (Bens latest question to me was âWhat do you think of monogamy?â which I mention only because it relates back to the part of this post about putting on a new necklace, and now you will think Iâm juggling lots of topics in this post with amazing control instead of being buried in lots of topics.) But Benâs advice about starting a company is good: Stay focused on what you have that is going well and execute on that, every single day. Which is why Iâm not buying the new camera. You cannot have a solid career if you canât take advice that you donât want to hear. The advice you hate is probably the most valuable. So I launched a new design for the blog. Thereâs a new homepage that matches the new sections: the blog, homeschooling, coaching, and mailbag. I hope you find new stuff to read that you havenât read before. I hope you enjoy it so much that itâs like I got into bed wearing a new necklace. And Iâm taking pictures with just my iPhone. I think Iâll put one right here. To reaffirm that the photos are fine and you will like them. But still, take a look at the photos at the top, from Melissas billion-dollar camera. There is definitely a difference. Now back to Weeds. See, I didnât forget. Just moving the piles around in the desk that is my brain. The main character in Weeds is a mom whose husband died unexpectedly and left no money to support their upper-middle-class lifestyle, so she starts selling pot. And then she gets really good. She is actually, by the end of season one, building a really good business. And, of course, itâs so much easier for her to focus on that than on the problems of raising two teenage boys who just lost their dad. I love this woman. When she opens a bakery to launder her drug money, I get excited for her that she has another business, and I find myself thinking that I should open a bakery. It would be great in the little town near our farm because people here still think its fine to gorge on carbs. My point is that itâs so much easier for me to think of business ideas and distract myself with what could be next than to deal with what I have right here. If I would just focus, I could be writing on this blog three times a week. Iâve done it before, if you can believe it. So I miss Melissa. Because I want to talk to her about how I am going to focus. I think sheâs right that my business should be my blog. I think sheâs right that I shouldnât buy a new camera. When you have a friend who is right that often, you want her around to hear everything you think. You dont need a huge grand startup to make your life fun and interesting. You just need to have a challenging goal that you are trying to reach, each day. You need to be able to make money doing it: that is what a good job is. A good life is something else. Its the stuff that isnt your job. Like, me helping Melissa to make sure she gets a ring before she goes on any more trips that look too much like a honeymoon. Or the woman in Weeds turning off her cell phone and dealing with her kids before her life crashes, no matter how good her business is. Your job doesnt love you. Your friends do.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.