Thursday, 29 February 2024

Seth's Blog : The leap

In action movies, there's a lot of leaping. Brave shifts in which the hero gets from here to there, all at once. It's easy to imagine that sudden leaps are how we make our impact. This is blog post #9000 (give or take). When did the leap happen? It ...
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The leap

In action movies, there’s a lot of leaping. Brave shifts in which the hero gets from here to there, all at once.

It’s easy to imagine that sudden leaps are how we make our impact.

This is blog post #9000 (give or take).

When did the leap happen?

It wasn’t an external leap. The first hundred blog posts were read by fewer than a dozen people.

It was an internal one. The decision to be a blogger. And then redeciding, each day, not to stop.

Every four years, we have a worldwide holiday to celebrate this sort of leap. The leap of choice. Not to suddenly get from here to there, but to choose to go on the journey.

It’s only once every 1,460 days, you can do it.

Leap today.

Perhaps we begin by visualizing it. In the most concrete terms you can find, write it down. If you took a leap today, what would it look like? Who would benefit?

And then, share it with just one other person.

Often, the act of physically writing it down is the most difficult part.

    


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Wednesday, 28 February 2024

Seth's Blog : By association

We're busy, we're confused and we're always seeking a shortcut. If a company is hiring, the person who worked at Google or Apple or Disney gets more of the benefit of the doubt. Even if all they did was bring coffee to someone. But, if that person was ...
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By association

We’re busy, we’re confused and we’re always seeking a shortcut.

If a company is hiring, the person who worked at Google or Apple or Disney gets more of the benefit of the doubt. Even if all they did was bring coffee to someone.

But, if that person was one of the hundreds laid off yesterday as a result of Apple shuttering their car project, not so much.

If you get pitched by someone who worked at Bird or Theranos or General Magic, what pile do they go in?

What about someone who was the assistant to an actor who just got nominated for an Academy Award vs. someone who worked for a has-been?

It’s not hard to extend this to people who went to a school with a successful football team, or who is part of a group that traditionally is given an advantage due to an accident of birth.

These are false proxies. But it’s such a natural instinct that we have to work to intentionally overcome it.

Luck isn’t contagious.

    


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