The Difference Between Pushing and Forcing
July 1st, 2010Entrepreneurs push. We don’t just do what’s easy. We push to finish, to deliver, to take the next step. We push to find new ways or new stuff or new ideas.
It’s easy to push ourselves too hard; to start forcing it.
You need sleep. Caffeine is not a substitute for sleep.
You need time to relax. Doesn’t mean expensive recreation or long vacations. It just means you need five minutes away from the computer, right now. It means spending the evening with someone or something you love instead of finishing that project early.
You need to eat. Yes, pizza is a food group, and if you have it delivered, you can waste less time cooking and spend more time getting things done. You also need to go stand in the kitchen sometimes and stir stuff in a pot, fry things in a pan, bake something in the oven. Nutrition, the kind vital to the entrepreneurial brain and body, does’t come in a box or a pill.
I’ve started forcing it lately. I’ve been juggling too many things and I’m starting to drop some.
My Best Beloved and I have begun an experiment to see if our ability to work remotely will allow us, in fact, to live without a home, perhaps even without a car. We’ve started blogging about this grand adventure at Canfield Of Dreams. It’s something we’re both giant excited about, and the work just flows.
I just might be around here less often; might be spending less time actively promoting this particular aspect of my business heresy. I love the video and the writing and all that. I’ll still be doing it. Might get back to a radio show, but that has largely fallen by the wayside.
Like everyone else, I have exactly 24 hours to use, each day. Rolf Potts reminds us that if we think of wealth in terms of time spent doing what we want, instead of in dollars and cents, we can all choose to be rich.
It’s time to rebalance the boat, to shuffle some stuff around below decks and above, and keep on an even keel.
