Hi ,
Another Monday, another Full Moon, but this time, spring is in the air finally. Despite my daughter being home sick today and my dog recovering from paw surgery, I'm feeling optimistic and excited for the weeks to come. It's amazing what a little sunshine can do, right?
There won't be a new article next week because of Easter break (and maybe not the week after either because school is closed due to the eclipse), but if all goes according to plan I will be opening the doors to the community next week! EEEK!
You'll get all the info first, but here's the name reveal...
It's called The Happy Squirrel Collective.
An
ADHD-Friendly community for business owners who want to get shit done their own way.
I'm so proud of how it's coming together, and I just have a few things left to do before we begin in April. More coming soon!
I'm also happy with how today's article came together. I think it breaks down something (no pun intended) that lots of you struggle with and have been asking for help with.
Enjoy!
Using a Courage-Based Plan to Break Projects Down into Smaller Steps
"I can't do it!!" she wailed.
“What part feels too hard?” I asked.
"All of it!!"
No, this wasn’t a client call. This was the conversation I had with my almost-5-year-old on Saturday morning over pancakes. In our house we make “owl pancakes”...normal pancakes with decorations to make them look like owls. This week the
wings were strawberries, the beak and feet were slivered almond, we added peanut butter chip eyes, a pretzel perch, and yogurt snow...
She was insistent that she couldn’t cut it herself.
Now, I've seen her cut pancakes
before. She can do it. But she was worried about not being able to cut through the owl extras.
Of course, we all know that if you fight for your limitations, you get to keep them. I’d be darned if I was going to let her do that.
“You know how to pick up a fork, right?” I asked.
“Yes!” she giggled.
“And you know how to pick up a knife, right?”
“Yeessss of course!” she laughed.
“And you can put your fork in the pancake, right?”
Sure enough, she skipped ahead, putting her knife down, and cutting a perfect
triangle, popping it into her mouth happily.
Not one to let a teaching moment go by, I tell her "You know how you were feeling overwhelmed when you looked at it all at once? Well, breaking it up into smaller steps made it easier, right? That's something good to remember when it happens again."
Then my partner, the observant that he is, chimed in..."You know that's what mom does for work, right? She helps people break things down into smaller steps and helps them do hard things."
Well, that one left me speechless. Of course that's what I do with people. Why have I never
explained it like that before?!
The Overwhelm of Big Projects
You’ve experienced this too, right? Something that feels completely daunting when you look at the whole thing as one task? Climbing a mountain.
Moving house. Starting a business. Getting your first client. Taking a class. I wrote a whole article about the overwhelm of painting a room in my house. I’m feeling it right now as I plan to launch a new
community.
Then what happens?
Sometimes, procrastination hits hard. Other times, paralysis. Despair. Feeling like a failure before we’ve even started. Likely your self-doubt will show up, probably as over working, over thinking, over giving, or overwhelm. But none of those things get you much closer to completing the project you really want to do.
None of them help you cut the pancake. My daughter was ready to give up and forgo eating the pancake all together. She worked herself into a tizzy and couldn’t think straight. This is definitely not a place of feeling resourced and confident.
Taking the Easiest, Most Doable Step First
Then what? How do you get out of the feeling of overwhelm and into action?
You do the absolute easiest, most doable thing first. In the case of the pancake (and a
4-year-old), that step was just picking up the fork. This immediately calmed her down, gave her confidence, and helped her realize it wasn’t in fact “all of it” that was hard.
In preparing my community, I spent nearly a month just brainstorming. That was the easy part for me. I booked some market research interviews and talked to my supervisor. I did the things
that didn’t scare me. I was still terrified, but those steps didn’t seem so bad. I could delay the scary parts.
Doing the Easy Things First Makes the Hard Parts Less Hard
By the time my daughter got to cutting
the strawberry, she was on a roll. She just picked it up and ate it whole. The thing she was worried about became a non-issue. She had momentum and the hard part was a piece of cake by the time she got there. She had built up her confidence and was ready to tackle it head-on.
I’ve been working on my community one step at a time, and still I haven’t hit a truly
hard part. Each step builds on the last. Looking ahead I still get scared, but when I look at the next most immediate task, I breeze through it.
I’m by no means saying you will never hit hard or insurmountable tasks if you try it this way. You still may need help. You still might get overwhelmed. You still might want to give up. But isolating it task by
task helps you understand yourself (and the project) better. You can see which obstacles real and which ones are just worry. You can ask for the right kind of help (and probably spend less time and money getting help!). You can build your self-trust along the way.
Courage-Based Planning
When I’m facing down overwhelm or a project with a long list of steps, I create a Courage-Based Plan.
Sas Petherick is the genius coach who taught me this tool, and I have found it incredibly helpful to use with my clients.
It looks like this: