Do the Things

What My Mom Taught Me about Being Multipassionate

What My Mom Taught Me about Being Multipassionate

We grow up in all kinds of environments. You might have heard people talk about not knowing what a healthy marriage looks like since their parents didn’t have one. That goes for our dreams as well! If we don’t have a model for what’s possible, our dreams might be tiny. (Not that there’s anything wrong with tiny dreams! They can be really achievable and satisfying.)

Here are three types of models we might have for careers and dreams.

The Perfection Dragon Will Hoard Your Dreams (and Three Reasons Why)

The Perfection Dragon Will Hoard Your Dreams (and Three Reasons Why)

Dragons hoard, right? There are so many images of them curled up on a pile of gold and gems….which can’t be all that comfortable! So many lumps and hard surfaces and pointy things.

In my own life, as well as with my clients, I find it helps to personify things. In this case, let’s call perfectionism the Perfection Dragon. It hoards, it’s dramatic, and it symbolizes something mythical.

Your Mind Will Tell You These Three Lies (and Here Are the Antidotes!)

Your Mind Will Tell You These Three Lies (and Here Are the Antidotes!)

It’s harder than it sounds sometimes to just do stuff…we can have hobbies and business ideas that we adore, that light us up and make us bounce a little in our seat.

And then we don’t do them.

We think about it. We talk about it. We might even make a list of steps or materials that we need.

And we stay on the couch or in the bed or work late at our day job. Because, you know…one day.

Why do we do this to ourselves? Why do we deprive ourselves of what we want and need most? Minds are so tricky! Here are three lies they like to tell us that keep us from doing what we love—and the antidotes.

Being Multipassionate: Three Steps to Make the Most of Your Many (Creative) Loves

Being Multipassionate: Three Steps to Make the Most of Your Many (Creative) Loves

Ever been told that you were flaky for being this way? Or that you needed to pick one thing to do for the rest of your life? That stuff comes from an outdated industrial-age way of thinking that saw people as needing to be really specific and specialized. That specialization is great if you’re a worker on an assembly line turning one bolt over and over, but it’s not as relevant to the way that work and careers are changing, or the way that they will be in the future. We have computers and robots and AI to do that bolt-turning now, and what we’ll need more and more are the human soft skills (like empathy), creativity and synthesis of ideas that aren’t easily replicated by AI.

The good news? That’s where multipassionate people like us shine.

That’s not to say that we don’t need help or that we can’t do this better. Here are three ways you can make the most of your magnificent multipassionate spirit.

Spoonie Holiday Survival Guide Part 6: Three Ways to Do the New Year Differently

Spoonie Holiday Survival Guide Part 6: Three Ways to Do the New Year Differently

It happens every year. The calendar flips a page, and we are bombarded with messages about how to make ourselves better, faster, stronger, thinner, smarter, more organized, more attractive, richer, happier….how to make ourselves anything but what we already are. Whenever we get these messages, the underlying implication is that we aren’t enough just as we are. What is sold as self-improvement is actually thinly veiled criticism.

How to build immunity to these messages of inadequacy? Self-compassion and kindness. And here’s three steps towards getting more of that while focusing less on not measuring up to some impossible standard.

Spoon Saver: How to Ask for Things and Say No to Things

Spoon Saver: How to Ask for Things and Say No to Things

As a spoonie, there’s a lot to ask for and a lot to say no to. It took me years to get really comfortable advocating for myself, especially at work and in medical settings. Thought I’d save you some time and share a structure that has been helpful for me.