The 12 Secrets of Highly Successful Women. Gail McMeekin. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Gail McMeekin
Издательство: Ingram
Серия:
Жанр произведения: Поиск работы, карьера
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781609253738
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female lawyer, Liza Durbin, who was inhabited by the composer Franz Shubert's spirit. Her life became a creative journey extraordinaire. All of a sudden, she was playing concerts, listening to all kinds of music, co-composing music, and launching into a career as a performer. While there were many anxious moments and lots of controversy, Liza had the opportunity to dance and converse with a musical genius, and she became immersed in her own creative gifts and explorations. It is an engaging tale of passion, love, and creative risk-taking. While it is a fictional story, there are many lessons woven into the story for those of us with creative souls. These lessons include:

       Read about the lives of creative people you admire in your field, visit their houses, look at their original works, and study their contemporaries in diverse fields.

       Take a day or a week to pretend you are one of your muses and dress like them, visit their city, or adopt their creative schedules or habits. Get as much insight as possible into their lives and talents.

       Make a collage about your muse and study it. Then, at the right time, choose his or her best success strategies and incorporate them into your own creative practice.

       When you are ready to grow again, move on to a new mentor and begin the process anew. It will be life-changing!

      An interesting note: this was Bonnie's first novel, and film rights for the book were recently purchased by Paramount Pictures. Bonnie is a long-time artist, and her own adventure with a muse has brought her great success.

      WHEN I MET MY MUSE

      “I glanced at her and took my glasses off—they were still singing. They buzzed like a locust on the coffee table and then ceased. her voice belled forth, and the sunlight bent. I felt the ceiling arch, and knew that the nails up there took a new grip on whatever they touched. ‘I am your own way of looking at things,’ she said. ‘When you allow me to live with you, every glance at the world around you will be a sort of salvation. And I took her hand.’”

       —Wilma Stafford

      Now is the perfect time to connect more deeply with your inner muse and invite new mentors and colleagues to support your creative growth. Consider the following questions:

      1 What actions can I take to spend more time with my inner creative guide?

      2 What inner messages do I need to honor to make my creativity a priority right now?

      3 What kind of creative skill development do I need to tackle? What will take me to a higher level of expertise?

      4 Who am I attracted to who could potentially be a new mentor or colleagues, and how do I access these people?

      Enjoy your adventures!

      Now that you have your muse to be CEO of your ideas, you need to review the ideas that are lurking in your life. Go through all of your files and piles of paper at home and at work and pull out all of your scraps of paper with genius written on them. Go into all of your closets and collect the unfinished paintings, quilts, sweaters, flower arrangements, photos to be organized, proposals never completed, new business ideas, joint ventures that never manifested, and all other creative initiatives. Then look around your home and office and take note of rooms that are only half decorated and either photograph them or make a sketch of them. Dig up catalogs of courses not taken, workshops not attended, novels and poems unfinished, e-books begun, things not built, and so on. Collect everything in one room if you can. If you can't, find representations of the “ideas” that are revolving around in your head, write them down on note cards, and add them to the pile.

      Carve out a day when you will not be interrupted to begin dealing with these ideas. Use your intuition as your guide for now. Sort the ideas into three categories:

      1 Ideas that I love that I want as part of my legacy

      2 Ideas that I used to be excited about but now I'm not sure about

      3 Ideas or projects that I feel repelled by, bored by, embarrassed by, or that elicit some negative emotion

      Start with pile number three. Throw out, donate, or give away—no kidding—any unfinished project that you really don't want to complete. Clear them out and get rid of them. Many dumps have “gift houses” where people would love to pick up your pattern for a sweater or your collection of poetry books or your art easel. Recycle everything you can. Give things or project ideas or books to others who have that interest. The old projects that you are not committed to are taking up valuable real estate in your mind. They are negative stressors that I call Serenity Stealers—let them go. This process may be hard. You may cry, or start a rap of negative self-talk about how you should finish them now or you would have finished them if only you weren't so lazy. Turn off the tape—we all try things and do creative experiments that don't click with us. Throw out all of your old work proposals, marketing materials, and planning notes that you know in your heart are never going to happen. Releasing all these old ideas and projects is absolutely necessary to making your work a creative success. So close your eyes and move on.

      If you can't bear to part with something and you must save it, put it in a box or a file marked “review in three months” and put it out of sight.

      Look at pile number two—“ideas that you used to be excited about but now you are not sure about.” Go through this pile and remove anything that doesn't make your heart sing. If you are really ambivalent, you can put it in the “review in three months” box.

      Now, it is time to explore pile number one—“ideas that I love and are part of my legacy.” This will be a treat! Put these ideas and projects in order, beginning with the premier idea that you are most excited about. The last one on the list should be a project that you know you want to complete but that is the least appealing right now. Now look at this group.

      We all try creative experiments that don't click with us. Throw out your old work proposals, marketing materials, and planning notes you know in your heart are never going to happen. Releasing these old ideas is absolutely necessary to making your work a creative success.

      1 Are there any projects here that are close to completion? Estimate how much time it would take to complete them. This includes services or products that are done but that need to be sold or marketed.

      2 Of any of these ideas or projects that are close to completion, would it benefit you to pick one or two of these and get them done and out into the world right now?

      3 Identify the top three projects that you love. Which one(s) most reflect what you are known for or want to be known for? For example, I have an idea for a book called “Watercolor Woman” that I would love to write, but it's not a top priority for my business like this book is—plus there is a novel by that title already, so I have to come up with a new name.

      If you are unsure about your top three ideas/projects, do some research on Google and Amazon on those topics. What's already out there? How is your idea different? Does it look like there is a market for this service? Talk to your clients and colleagues and ask them if they would be interested in a product like yours, being careful not to tell them too much about it unless you know and trust them.

      Do your research in depth. My first product was an audiotape workshop with three meditations and a mini-workbook, all on a cassette tape called Positive Choices: From Stress to Serenity. While I spoke with several bookstores about packaging, etcetera, I didn't get enough good information. With the limited knowledge I had at the time, I created one tape and tucked the nine workshop exercises into the cover case. I loved that it was all so compact. What I learned later, however, was that I probably should have done a four- to six-tape box series to get the big catalog companies and bookstores really interested. Fortunately, people loved the single tape, and several companies sold them at tradeshows and in stores. I only have a handful left, but they keep selling, and I plan on reissuing it as an updated CD soon.

      Part of what you have to decide about your top three ideas is which one you love the most and which one is the most relevant to your work or least expensive. Ideally, we want