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Nostalgic, introverted and procrastinating were words that would have best described me as a teenager on the cusp of adulthood.
Today I couldn't be more different (introversion aside), however flickers of that self still find their way in more often than I would like.
Nobody could have known the things I wanted to do, because people just don't ask. Not here, not in this day and age. Your parents, partner(s), teachers, tutors and friends all have expectations of what you should do, they don't care what you want.
I always did things my way regardless, and people would complement you for the end-result and not the being an individual with faith, patience etc. More importantly though I wasn't 100% sure on what I wanted to do... I had a rough idea and that was enough to get going.
Now I'm being true to myself I face the same crap from others that I did before I got to being self-employed.
Do I care? Should anyone care what others think?
So yeah you guessed it, recently I decided to step back entirely from doing things the same way I've done them for the best part of the last three years and start again from the ground up...
It's not an easy decision to make, but at 25 you've got to make some hard choices... It wasn't about financial, it wasn't about anything more than wanting a change, because I had changed.
Change happens though - good and bad, at some point you must learn to accept it. Once you do that you grow more comfortable with it, if you can own it and decide to direct it - then you learn it's not truly such a bad thing after all.
Setting forth with a new mode of operation, new goals and a 'fresh start' is difficult though. You can lie to yourself and say you have it all figured out, but really you don't. You can pretend that you won't still be flawed in the same damning ways that you always have been but you are.
The reality is that you just have to acknowledge it, because once you do it doesn't control you so much as you control it. Or at least as much as you can.
You see without at least being conscious of these things then you're not going to change for the better. Growth is a positive of change, but it never comes easily.
For many years I suffered with some minor monomania.
I could never do anything unless I let it become my entire life. Balance was never achievable, success was never even a possibility unless I let everything else fall away.
Other strange idiosyncrasies I've had in the past include holding an obsessive grudge against a neighborhood cat because he Bert stared at me and wouldn't break eye contact no matter what I did to try and scare him off.
For the longest time I always had the belief that this 'monomania' was a gift. Perhaps it is in some respects. Still, I've never been able to find true balance in my life, even now, and I think this is why happiness will continue to elude me until I do... Don't get me wrong things are a lot better in regard to balance, but I think that sometimes the best thing I can hope to be is another type of shark.
I have tried very hard over the last 3 years to make time and find the balance, but usually it slips because I struggle to do things unless it's all I'm doing. I've never really got my own projects off the ground until very recently because I used to focus so much on clients.
Stopping client work entirely recently has been a decision I made because I got so frustrated with people who wouldn't let me put in that level of concentration and passion. I'm not suited to the client work and I totally accept it's me at fault and not them. Nonetheless you still get frustrated.
I had to figure out a new business model that would let me give it my all... It needed to be my main reason for getting up every day and something I could build the rest of my life around and find the balance I so desperately want and need.
I started by figuring out that my absolute passion in life is marketing and building online businesses.
"But that's not really a business model in itself" I thought. "I don't want to be another fucking marketing blogger."
Then I remembered @Tavin and how he flips sites and focuses on brand building.
Something I can put my all into? Something that combines my passions of design, marketing and building successful online businesses? Yep.
So that's my business model going forward for now...
So here I am taking a step back from immediate financial gain, building a life where I'm being true to myself as I know from experience that I can't and wont be happy any other way.
You can see my journey thread here - haven't updated it in a while as I've been busy transitioning out of client work, but I will be getting back to it!
I suppose my point is that it's never too late to change, and that we all have our own true nature...
Being true to yourself I think is so important. Isn't it why most of us work doing what we do? We don't want the 9-5 office job until we retire. We don't want to be told what to do by 'the boss'.
We want to live life on our own terms...
So why are so many of us not doing it with our business models online? This is a pretty big chunk of our daily lives we're talking about.
I'm not saying you need to know what you want to do 100% with your life because guess what?
I don't think anyone can ever know that completely and anyone else telling you otherwise is full of it.
However you do need to be true to yourself and stop creating rationalizations for why you're not.
You need to accept yourself fully because like I learned with my monomania-like tendencies I can't change that fundamental part of my personality, no matter that I've tried damn hard for 3 years solid.
Until you accept yourself you can't be true to yourself because your decision making process just isn't the same.
So how are you going to be true to yourself? How have you not been?
Today I couldn't be more different (introversion aside), however flickers of that self still find their way in more often than I would like.
Nobody could have known the things I wanted to do, because people just don't ask. Not here, not in this day and age. Your parents, partner(s), teachers, tutors and friends all have expectations of what you should do, they don't care what you want.
I always did things my way regardless, and people would complement you for the end-result and not the being an individual with faith, patience etc. More importantly though I wasn't 100% sure on what I wanted to do... I had a rough idea and that was enough to get going.
Now I'm being true to myself I face the same crap from others that I did before I got to being self-employed.
Do I care? Should anyone care what others think?
So yeah you guessed it, recently I decided to step back entirely from doing things the same way I've done them for the best part of the last three years and start again from the ground up...
It's not an easy decision to make, but at 25 you've got to make some hard choices... It wasn't about financial, it wasn't about anything more than wanting a change, because I had changed.
Change happens though - good and bad, at some point you must learn to accept it. Once you do that you grow more comfortable with it, if you can own it and decide to direct it - then you learn it's not truly such a bad thing after all.
Setting forth with a new mode of operation, new goals and a 'fresh start' is difficult though. You can lie to yourself and say you have it all figured out, but really you don't. You can pretend that you won't still be flawed in the same damning ways that you always have been but you are.
The reality is that you just have to acknowledge it, because once you do it doesn't control you so much as you control it. Or at least as much as you can.
You see without at least being conscious of these things then you're not going to change for the better. Growth is a positive of change, but it never comes easily.
For many years I suffered with some minor monomania.
In 19th-century psychiatry, monomania (from Greek monos, one, and mania, meaning "madness" or "frenzy") was a form of partial insanity conceived as single pathological preoccupation in an otherwise sound mind.
I could never do anything unless I let it become my entire life. Balance was never achievable, success was never even a possibility unless I let everything else fall away.
Other strange idiosyncrasies I've had in the past include holding an obsessive grudge against a neighborhood cat because he Bert stared at me and wouldn't break eye contact no matter what I did to try and scare him off.
For the longest time I always had the belief that this 'monomania' was a gift. Perhaps it is in some respects. Still, I've never been able to find true balance in my life, even now, and I think this is why happiness will continue to elude me until I do... Don't get me wrong things are a lot better in regard to balance, but I think that sometimes the best thing I can hope to be is another type of shark.
I have tried very hard over the last 3 years to make time and find the balance, but usually it slips because I struggle to do things unless it's all I'm doing. I've never really got my own projects off the ground until very recently because I used to focus so much on clients.
Stopping client work entirely recently has been a decision I made because I got so frustrated with people who wouldn't let me put in that level of concentration and passion. I'm not suited to the client work and I totally accept it's me at fault and not them. Nonetheless you still get frustrated.
I had to figure out a new business model that would let me give it my all... It needed to be my main reason for getting up every day and something I could build the rest of my life around and find the balance I so desperately want and need.
I started by figuring out that my absolute passion in life is marketing and building online businesses.
"But that's not really a business model in itself" I thought. "I don't want to be another fucking marketing blogger."
Then I remembered @Tavin and how he flips sites and focuses on brand building.
Something I can put my all into? Something that combines my passions of design, marketing and building successful online businesses? Yep.
So that's my business model going forward for now...
So here I am taking a step back from immediate financial gain, building a life where I'm being true to myself as I know from experience that I can't and wont be happy any other way.
You can see my journey thread here - haven't updated it in a while as I've been busy transitioning out of client work, but I will be getting back to it!
I suppose my point is that it's never too late to change, and that we all have our own true nature...
- Our true nature is something we can't change, but we can change the 'type of shark' that we are.
- You will do nothing but riddle yourself with anxiety if you worry about all the stuff you can't change.
- Stop fighting against the current, go with it... Be flexible, acknowledge your own strengths and weaknesses.
- Learn to accept that you are who you are and that it's okay.
- Do what you know deep down is right for you, no matter if the path is different to what you expected or think you should do.
- If you already know what the right business model and lifestyle is right for you, don't put it off to be safe because you'll never be safe enough when you're miserable doing what you are doing. You have got to take risks at some point.
Being true to yourself I think is so important. Isn't it why most of us work doing what we do? We don't want the 9-5 office job until we retire. We don't want to be told what to do by 'the boss'.
We want to live life on our own terms...
So why are so many of us not doing it with our business models online? This is a pretty big chunk of our daily lives we're talking about.
I'm not saying you need to know what you want to do 100% with your life because guess what?
I don't think anyone can ever know that completely and anyone else telling you otherwise is full of it.
However you do need to be true to yourself and stop creating rationalizations for why you're not.
You need to accept yourself fully because like I learned with my monomania-like tendencies I can't change that fundamental part of my personality, no matter that I've tried damn hard for 3 years solid.
Until you accept yourself you can't be true to yourself because your decision making process just isn't the same.
So how are you going to be true to yourself? How have you not been?