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The Big Shift is a podcast, a community, and a movement. It is our aim to help those who want to make a difference, have success in carrying out their mission. The goal of our podcast is to inspire heart-centered entrepreneurs to create their dream business, do what they love, and make the world a better place in the process.

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Creativity Blockers

I believe that we all have an innate ability to be creative in our own individual way. It is our ability to turn off our intellect and flow in our intuitive state that gets us in our creativity zone into our Zone of Genius.

Seth’s post has inspired to come with my own list of creativity blockers:

  • The fear of the unknown
  • Resisting Change
  • Fear of being rejected or even hated
  • Ignoring your intuition
  • Being judgmental of yourself and others
  • The need of approval from others
  • The habit of being attached to things as the way they are right now
  • The habit of creating doubt in your own mind

The absence of creativity blockers get you into this state:

  • I completely trust and act on my intuition
  • I enjoy the wonder of uncertainty
  • I am fully self-expressed even if my colleagues/employees/bosses/industry don’t like it
  • I get the sense of who I am from the essential nature of my being rather then from my actions, accomplishments or others
  • I am continuously open to new ways of seeing something, while retaining my unique way of seeing things
  • I sense the perfection in everything around me

What inspires you to be creative?

The Good Kind of Gossip

Russian Gossip

Are people talking about what you do or what you have created?

  • Are your customers telling their friends, “Oh my God!! You’ve gotta hire this … He is amazing!”
  • Are bloggers writing glowing posts about your products?
  • Are strangers to your business saying things like “Have you seen…?”

If not, the problem is not your marketing — it’s your products or services.

Why are you so expensive?

Check out the answer to the question to the question of why are you so expensive from the Chris Barrow blog.

“I actually don’t believe that we are expensive – I believe that our prices are accurate and reflect the level of experience and excellence that we deliver.”

I also believe that once we create our own unique markets for what we provide and sell, the questions on price come up less and less.

Quest for the Perfect Client

Is this your perfect client?

  1. The perfect client never challenges and questions you
  2. The perfect client never asks the uncomfortable questions
  3. The perfect client always does what you ask of him/her
  4. The perfect client always shows up when they said they would
  5. The perfect client has exactly the same worldview as you
  6. The perfect client is always happy with your service
  7. The perfect client never asks for a discount

I have had perfect clients like this. I have also had them simply disappear on me completely. The first time it happened, it made absolutely no sense to me. They were happy with my service. They were getting results. They never gave me any suggestion as to how I can serve them better.

They weren’t telling me the whole truth about their experience with me.

Now this is my perfect client:

  1. The perfect client always tells me what he/she wants even if that’s not how I am currently doing it
  2. The perfect client ask the uncomfortable questions
  3. The perfect client tells me that he/she doesn’t want to do something so that we can co-create a better way
  4. The perfect client sometimes reschedules because they lead a full and fulfilling life
  5. The perfect client challenges my worldview
  6. The perfect client gives me feedback as to how I can better serve him/her
  7. The perfect client questions my prices and then happily pays my fees because he/she truly sees the value of what I am doing

Who is your perfect client now?

Book Sharing


Kathy Sierra from Creating Passionate Users encouraged her readers to post comments on the book they most want others to read. I am taking the call and sharing my two entries.

Fiction

Bee Season

Bee Season by Myla Goldberg
I want you to read it because it will awaken parts of you that will help to expand the bounds of what’s possible in your life.

Non-Fiction

Biology of Belief

Biology of Belief by Bruce Lipton
I want you to read this book because it will completely change your understanding of life, science and consciousness.

What are yours (one fiction and one non-fiction please)?

Constraint Driven Creativity

I usually give myself an hour to read blogs and write my own posts Monday through Thursday.

I have two different types of days of blogging:

1. I feel no pressure. I settle into the hour, read and allow whatever comes out of the time to naturally evolve. I enjoy my time. I am often happy with the result.

2. I begin the hour already worried that 1 hour is simply not enough time to read my favorite blogs and create a post worthy of my own inner critic. I feel rushed and often produce very little that I can even contemplate posting to my blog.

I am now in minute 21 of my hour. I am still feeling the pressure. My limiting belief is that I can’t get out of this pressure in this sitting. My desire is to simply write what is and allow myself to snap out of this mode.

Yes, our relationship with our constraints is the secret doorway to unlimited creativity. As that relationship grows, matures and becomes effortless, so enters our creativity.

Kathy Sierra has a take on it:

“What if you needed to build a powerful web app, but you had only ten hours a week for programming? What if you wanted to write a novel, but you had to do it in 30 days? What if you wanted to create a computer game, but you had only 48 hours? What if you had to write, shoot, and edit a short film in 24 hours? Constraints can be your enemy, but when it comes to creative breakthroughs, they can be your best friend.

Constraint-driven creativity is not just about inspiring (or forcing) creativity, it’s also about getting something done. How many of us keep planning to get around to writing that book… once we’ve got some free time? How many projects stay on the back burner forever because we just can’t seem to make it happen?”

We can look at our constraints as the walls of our prison cells or we can look at our constraints as simply borders of our canvas. So let’s pick up our brushes and let’s freely paint within the borders of constraints.

Yes, you can write that book in 45 days.
Yes, you can create this website for $5000.
Yes, you can build this widget with lighter materials.
Yes, you can run a successful business while working 30 hours per week.

What project do you have that you want to try this with?
What constraints do you have in this project?
What will help you feel the freedom in the constraints not despite them?

This is what Jack White of White Stripes has to say about it (from Tom Guariello’s book — Work Different: Design For The Rest of Us)

“A lot about the White Stripes is about constriction and keeping us boxed in. Being extremely stripped down to the most minimal components, mostly revolving around the number 3. You see that [we use] three colors: red, white and black. But also vocal, guitar and drums, or vocal, piano and drums; and, keeping ourselves limited. I think there’s more creativity where there’s less opportunity. Instead of trying to bring more musicians into the band or more tracks when we record or more time spent in the studio, it’s best to explore the creativity with limited means. You get more out of it; something more interesting happens.”

(40 minutes to complete this post from start to finish)