Effort Is Not Always Strategy. Sometimes It's Just Fear In Disguise.
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When is the last time you did nothing and let it be okay?
Not rest you scheduled. Not a Sunday blocked off so you could recover enough to work again Monday. Actually stopped, left space open, and didn't fill it.
If you're anything like me, the answer is that sounds like a trap.
The entrepreneurship space is always telling us to add more. Post more. Build the funnel. Launch the offer. Grow the list. The advice is always additive. There is always one more thing that is supposed to be the thing that finally makes it all click into place.
But nobody is talking about the cost of running 15 strategies at half capacity. Nobody's asking whether the reason it isn't converting is because you need to add something, or because everything you've already built needs more of your actual energy than you have left after spreading yourself across everything else.
That's the trap. And it's subtle because the trap looks exactly like discipline.
In this episode:
- Why effort has a quality to it and why two people can produce the same output and get completely different results
- Why busyness is sometimes avoidance and what it's actually protecting you from having to face
- The overeffort trap in its most personal form and what writing my own chapter taught me about standing in front of real things and asking if they're enough
- The effort audit, two questions to ask about everything currently active in your business
- Why the gap between expectation and reality is not evidence you're failing
Things are working. They may not look exactly the way you thought they would. What you've built needs more space, not more input.
Next week: the conditioning underneath this compulsion. The Gen X piece, the message absorbed watching parents grind, and how it's living in your business decisions right now without you realizing it.