Why Inspiration Can Be The Key To Winning The Resistance Game - Part Three - a podcast by Sean DSouza

from 2016-04-16T00:00

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Where do we draw inspiration from?

When we try to beat resistance, we tend to look at what wehaven’t done and what needs doing. Yet sometimes resistance can bepushed over with a simple concept of inspiration.

Where do we draw that inspiration from? And how do we keep theinspiration constant?

In this episode we look at inspiration, but also at the “lousycarpenter” and “trigger” concept.

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It’s said that a bad carpenter blames his tools

But what’s not said is what makes a good carpenter.

A good carpenter isn’t always the one who has the bestequipment. But a good carpenter makes sure he learns how to usethat equipment fluently. And there’s a reason why you need to spendtime learning how to use the equipment.

It’s called tiredness.

Let’s take my early battles with InDesign, for instance

InDesign is a layout program with which I do all my e-books andreports. I learned InDesign, but not quite well enough. So if I hadto do a simple task like updating the Contents Page, I had tomanually update it every time. If I added more pages to mydocument, I’d have to go back, and re-assign all the pagenumbers.

And even if you haven’t got a clue what I’m talking about, youget this feeling of stupidity coming through. Stupidity and hardwork. And all because I refused to learn how to maximise theprogram’s capability.

But forget maximisation, let’s just talk about fixing theimmediate problem

No matter what you do right now, there’s a better way to do it.And there’s someone out there on the Internet who can help you finda better way. For all you know there are probably ten thousandtutorials and fifty videos on solving your exact problem.

But guess what? You’re doing the same old stuff in the same oldway. And resistance loves you for it.

It loves that you have great tools and lousy habits

Because if you did what I did with InDesign, it would take youthrice as much time to do the same job. Maybe even ten times asmuch. Well, guess what? If it takes you five minutes to do a jobvs. fifty minutes, which job is going to tire you out? No prizesfor guessing, but you’ve just opened the door for exhaustion tocome rushing through.

And it’s not just exhaustion but frustration as well. If you didtwo jobs side by side, and finished a ton of stuff vs. finishingjust one measly contents page, there’s no doubt which one bringsmore satisfaction.

The more dissatisfied and tired you are, the better resistancefeels

It doesn’t have to do any work at all. You’ve been a completenincompoop and done all the work yourself. You are the badcarpenter. You blame your tools when you should be working veryhard to maximise the power of the equipment you have.

And let’s face it, you need better tools as well

If you’re running outdated tools, it doesn’t help. But we’reoften just glitzy-eyed for the best tools without ever puttingaside time to learn them well. But the question does arise: Mosttools are so complex.

How do you get the time to learn them well?

The answer lies in doing continuous sweeps, kinda like aradar

If you try and learn something the first time, you only pick upso much. So you come back again for the second sweep, then thethird, then the fourth and so on. I spent a lot of time (about aweek) first trying to work out how to use InDesign.

Now I know it well, but I still spend a good hour or two everymonth to learn tiny bits of stuff. And it helps me improve myproductivity. Of course, InDesign keeps getting better, so now notonly am I faster, but I’m equipped with superior equipment.

And resistance doesn’t like that one tiny bit

It would prefer to see me swearing.
It would love to see me frustrated with just doing a simplecontents page.
But nope, I won’t let it win. And neither should you.

If you’re a good carpenter you’ll learn how to maximise yourtools

Then you’ll earn more, because you’ll be in demand. And thatwill help you get the fanciest, most sophisticated tools that willput you head and shoulders above everyone else. And mostimportantly it keeps resistance away from your door.

Next: How John Forde (and Sean D’Souza) Got Me To WriteArticles

(http://www.psychotactics.com/john-forde-write-articles/)

P.S. Do you sometimes wonder if planning books are written just forthe ‘organised’ people?

So year after year you sit down and create a list of thingsyou want to achieve. Then suddenly it’s April, and you’venot really moved ahead as you’d expected.And hey, thisphenomenon isn’t new. It’s not like you’re not trying toachieve stuff, but something always seems to derail yourgoals. How do you stop it from happening yet again?
Find out if Chaos Planning is for you.

(http://www.psychotactics.com/products/chaos-planning-forget-business-planning-and-goal-setting-start-with-chaos-planning/(

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