I am a sponge. I believe everything and everyone is presented for me to learn something.
Yesterday’s Super Bowl reminded me that there is no such thing as a good or bad decision, just whether it was the right decision for the moment. Sean Payton’s decisions to go for it on 4th and goal and do an on-side kick made a statement – he was behind his players. They were the right decisions for the moment. On the other hand, Tracy Porter’s interception in the fourth quarter, to paraphrase Malcolm Gladwell, is a testament that the willingness to take the greatest risk (and reap the greatest reward) is, at heart, instinctive.
The analogy for your creative business: there are times when your decisions set the tone for how you want yourself, your art an your business to be represented. And then there are times when you have to risk everything and live with the consequences.
Then there is Seth Godin’s new book, The Linchpin. His unyielding desire for all of us to make ourselves indispensible is reason enough to stop everything you are doing and read the book.
Wrap Seth and the Super Bowl with the new series, Undercover Boss, and it comes to me: the joy is doing the work, not the result; being an artist as much as creating art. If a Waste Management customer can come out and hug her garbage woman, a port-a-potty cleaner can radiate happiness and a woman can work four jobs in devotion to her family, then the purpose is not what it is that you are doing, but your intention behind the effort.
The humanity (i.e., the art) behind any endeavor is what will carry you and your creative business forward. Everyone is scared of something and the more you run from it, the more it becomes ingrained in you, your art and your creative business. However, if you do what you do from a place of conviction, you will give your employees and your clients the chance to embrace (and be irrationally loyal to) the art you create with and for them. Circumstance presents opportunities for decisions, it does not dictate them.
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