A List of Reasons Not To Do Something: Welcome to 2016

I thought a lot about whether or not to post this. But 2015 was a year of change for me, and as I’ve said before, finding time to write about my experiences helps me bridge that gap to conclusion. Last year I started a new job. I moved across the country to Los Angeles. I moved in with a person that I love. And now that I’m on the other side of 2015, I can look back and see that I was slow on my feet for those last few months of the year. 

Change is hard. Looking at some of my biggest changes, I see two tools that help bring familiarity in periods of change. The first is patience (I’m the first to say that I don’t have enough of this). The second is putting in active effort. So I am posting this now as an effort to declare (mostly to myself) that I am actively working to make a new home. 

I am going to start with one new change right here. 

In 2016, I am going to start regularly posting my blog on social media, contrary to what I’ve been doing the previous five years. That sounds dumber that it is. In fact, it’s still pretty dumb, unimportant, irrelevant for 99.9999999% of the world. But the decision is symbolic for me. 

When I started this blog five years ago, my goal was to use writing and the blog as a way to continue my efforts to synthesize content and information instead of merely consuming it. I felt deluged by posts on Facebook and the millions of articles sent to me through email. And I wanted to continue deriving my own conclusions and opinions, similar to how a college student defends hypotheses in a course essay. 

I still plan on using this space in the same manner. But I’m going to be more public about it. 

But like many I have a list of reasons why I don’t think I should be writing publicly. I very much think writing (even blogging) is a creative endeavor. And anytime someone undergoes a creative endeavor what they are doing is undergoing risk. There are always reasons not to do something. Have you ever found yourself holding back on a project or getting cold feet about a decision? I do. There is power in simply naming those fears, putting them down on paper, exposing them so that they can be taken down. 

Elizabeth Gilbert’s Big Magic espouses a very similar practice. In Gilbert’s book she reads her own list of fears. The list is built of reasons why one might reject big magic and inspiration even when it chooses to present itself. I was inspired enough to create my own list. And now I am going to share my list of reasons why not to do something, even if that something is as simple as posting regularly on a blog. 

  1. I’m afraid of what others will think of me and what I have to say.
  2. I’m afraid of other people thinking I have no credibility. 
  3. I’m afraid I don’t have enough credibility. 
  4. I’m afraid I have no talent. Or better put, I’m afraid that the gap between my taste and my talent is too wide. I can recognize good work or good art. But that doesn’t mean I can create something equally good myself. 
  5. I’m afraid I won’t be able to continue my day job and create or write on the side. 
  6. I’m afraid of leaving the very safe confines of my day job. 
  7. I’m afraid that I’ve neglected my blog for far too long that everything I put out will feel rusty and less than my best. 

Numbers 1 through 3 comprise probably 80% of the total weight of my fears. They will probably always be there. But this year, I will consciously act in the face of them. It will be a change for me. And change is hard.

But I’ve already thought about that.  

I'm Scared to Death. But Supremely Confident.

"When I come out I have supreme confidence. But I'm scared to death. I'm afraid. I'm afraid of everything. I'm afraid of losing. I'm afraid of being humiliated. But I'm confident. The closer I get to the ring the more confident I get. The closer, the more confident. All during training I've been afraid of this man. I think this man might be capable of beating me. I've dreamed of him beating me. For that I've always stayed afraid of him. The closer I get to the ring the more confident I get. Once I'm in the ring I'm a god. No one could beat me. I walk around the ring but I never take my eyes off my opponent….During the fight I'm supremely confident. I'm making him miss and I'm countering. I'm hitting him to the body; I'm punching him real hard. And I'm punching him, and I'm punching him, and I know he's gonna take my punches. He goes down, he's out. I'm victorious. Mike Tyson, greatest fighter that ever lived." — Mike Tyson

I can't say that I've ever wanted to quote Mike Tyson. But the quote above and Ben Casnocha's full entry on the productive tension between fear and confidence is too fascinating for me to not want to repost. I've included Ben's blog post in entirety right here: 

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I love this dual attitude: terrified of failure but also supremely confident of success.

It's too easy (and trendy) to just say "fear is the mind killer" or speak in glowing terms about how instructive failure is. If you aren't terrified of failing you probably don't care enough.

If an investor asks an entrepreneur, "Are you scared of your business failing?" and the answer is, "Not really," I'd be concerned. The best answer would be, "I'm fucking terrified that this will totally flop, and I'm doing whatever it takes to make sure that doesn't happen, and I'm confident it will not happen."

Too much fear can be crippling and preclude action. I think the optimal amount of fear is one notch before the "crippling" point.

I got nervous before high school and AAU basketball games.

I got nervous before big sales presentations in the early days of business career. So nervous, in fact, that I had a hard time getting business cards out of my suit jacket because my hands were shaking.

I get nervous before public speeches, difficult phone calls, or high-stakes emotional encounters.

I'm scared of failing, scared of letting people down, scared of embarrassing myself, scared of not one-upping what came before.

But the fear tends to be like cotton candy, it melts upon contact when the moment of truth comes — the tip-off of the basketball game, the start of the big sales meeting, or the first words of the crucial one-on-one conversation I'd prepared for. In the clutch moment, confidence must take over. When you come to the plate and crouch into your stance, you must believe that you are capable of hitting a home run.

As Tyson has also said, "Fear is your best friend or your worst enemy. It's like fire. If you can control it, it can cook for you; it can heat your house. If you can't control it, it will burn everything around you and destroy you. If you can control your fear, it makes you more alert, like a deer coming across the lawn."

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If there's no confidence, then you might be stretching yourself too much. If there's no fear, then you aren't stretching nearly enough.