Good Life Project - Jenny Blake | How to Create More Free Time
Episode Date: March 17, 2022What would you give to have more free time, less stress & more ability to do the things you love, while knowing everything else is handled? That is the promise of a powerful new body of work from ...today’s guest, Jenny Blake. Jenny is an author, host of two podcasts, Free Time for Heart-Based Business Owners, and Pivot with Jenny Blake, and keynote speaker who loves helping people move from friction to flow through smarter systems. Her new book, Free Time: Lose The Busywork, Love Your Business, is, quite literally, life-changing. I actually featured Jenny in my last book, SPARKED, because she’s what I call an Essentialist, meaning she lives and breathes to create order from chaos, in the name of clarity and ease. Her mind works in ways that mine doesn’t. Jenny is world-class at creating systems that give you back your life. And, the stunning volume of ideas, tools, processes, and resources she’s developed and curated in Free Time, along with the dashboard she’s launched alongside it, made me realize how much harder I’ve been making things in all parts of work and life, and how much more automation and ease I could access, and, as a result, how much more time I could create to do the things that truly light me up. So, I was excited to invite Jenny to dive deeper into her ideas, methodology and specific tools and resources to create more free time and joy in work, life and beyond. You can find Jenny at: Website | Free Time Podcast | Buy One, Get One, Give One Preorder Bonus.If you LOVED this episode you’ll also love the conversations we had with Brené Brown.Check out our offerings & partners: My New Book SparkedMy New Podcast SPARKED.Visit Our Sponsor Page For Great Resources & Discount Codes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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I'm constantly feeling behind in what I call these Sisyphean systems of never-ending inboxes.
So part of the free time obsession is my passion for systems and sort of geeking out about
organization and structure is that I think we all need help.
Like we need strategies to deal with the crush of the inbound.
So what would you give to have more free time, less stress, and more ability to do the things
you love while knowing everything else is just handled? That is the promise of a powerful new
body of work from today's guest and a dear friend of mine and my go-to person whenever it comes to
figuring out how to simplify my life, Jenny Blake. Jenny is an author, host of
two podcasts, Free Time and Pivot, and a keynote speaker who loves helping people move from
friction to flow through smarter systems. Her new book, Free Time, Lose the Busy Work, Love Your
Business, is quite literally life-changing. And that's whether you own your own business or you
work for someone else, by the way. I actually featured Jenny in my last book, Sparked, because she's what I call an essentialist,
meaning she lives and breathes to create order from chaos in the name of clarity and ease.
Her mind works in ways that mine never has and never will.
Jenny is world class at creating systems that give you back your life and the stunning volume of ideas
and tools and processes and resources that she has developed and curated in free time.
Along with the dashboard she's launched alongside it, it made me realize how much harder I've been
making things in all parts of work and life and how much more automation and ease I could access. And as a result, how much more time
I could actually create and do the things that truly light me up. So I was super excited to
invite Jenny to dive deeper into these ideas and methodologies and specific tools and resources
to create more free time and joy in work and life and beyond. So excited to share this conversation with you. And a quick
note before we dive in. So at the end of every episode, I don't know if you've ever heard this,
but we actually recommend a similar episode. So if you love this episode, at the end,
we're going to share another one that we're pretty sure you're going to love too. So be
sure to listen for that. Okay, on to today's conversation. I'm Jonathan Fields, and this is Good Life Project. The Apple Watch Series 10 is here.
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Jenny Blake, so good to be hanging out with you in this virtual container.
You know, we have had many, many, many, many conversations over the years as friends, as
colleagues, as collaborators.
We've had conversations on air, off air.
I have seen you iterate through all sorts of fascinating variations of the way that you move into the world, both professionally and personally.
In the early days on the professional side at Google, jumping out to build your own company, which you've been doing for, I guess, about a decade now.
And becoming an author, sharing a book that changed so many people's lives, Pivot, which is really about saying yes to the fact that life is a state of perpetual beta. Let's do it well. And now as we sit down
to have this conversation, I think it's kind of interesting because you're hanging out in New York.
I happen to be in Palm Springs, California, where I bounced out here with my wife to do a bit of
work and we're staying a little bit longer. And we've both sort of created this
structure in our work, in our lives that give us a certain amount of freedom to work when we want,
to not work when we want, and to be in a lot of different places. Sometimes it works really well.
Sometimes it's a little bit more challenging, but you have devoted so much of your time to free time, which I think is kind of like an interesting
thing to do. And it's almost become an obsession of yours. It's like, how do we do this thing where
we have more space, more of the in between? And I guess part of my curiosity is as you evolve what you want to devote so much energy to, why has the idea of free time bubbled up to the surface for you and taken such a strong lead?
Yeah, well, thank you for this amazing recap.
And I always, always love our conversations and connection. One through line through my time at Google working in coaching and career development,
leaving Google and navigating the choppy waters of solopreneurship. And then we've all gone through a tremendous amount of pivoting and change with this global pandemic. I kept seeing these patterns
in myself and others, what I call the burdensome bees, people getting bored, burnt out, buried by
bureaucracy or bottlenecked. And that goes
for people running their own business or someone working in another business.
And these burdensome bees drive me crazy for the same reason that you wrote Sparked.
We know how painful it is to feel stuck and stuck in place and to be bored or burnt out. And
we all have so much complexity and uncertainty that we're
already navigating, as you've written about so beautifully, too, that my obsession, my essentialist
need to create order from chaos is about freeing us. And I just, I know how painful it can be to
feel stuck and unsure. And so yes, my obsession with free time is how do we really enjoy the time that we have? How
do we be present? But also how do we have free time be this active verb, this muscle that we're
building to continually free more and more of our time so we can do our best work, the work that
sparks us and brings us alive. So here's my question. When you sort of position free time
as this aspiration that we all want more and more
and more of, are we countering that with a notion of anything that is not free time being not good?
I consider free time optionality choice. So in this definition, it's not necessarily,
oh, let's all work less and less and less until we're only working an hour a week.
It's actually about how can we create a little more space and spaciousness in our calendar,
in our week, so that we have choice of what to work on.
So that's kind of how I define free time, that it's your choice and you get to decide.
So it's not necessarily less, but it's less of the stuff that
drains us. And it's just such a compliment to Sparked because Sparked is about doing the work
that brings us alive. And in this sense, I would say that category, probably many of your listeners
and I would say, yeah, I would like to do less and less and less of minutia and admin and the stuff that's
super draining and that feels distracting from the work that I am passionate about.
Yeah. I mean, that makes a lot of sense to me, you know, for the same reason that I'm really
not a fan of the phrase work-life balance, because the underlying assumption with work-life balance
is that there are two polar opposites that need to be balanced against each other. That life is good, work is bad.
And therefore, you have to do this constant balancing against them
rather than, well, what if work could be a beautiful, organic,
intrinsic, and joyful expression of life?
And it's just sort of like this seamless thing.
So the notion of free time, I think being more like an intentional state, like the ability to choose where you want to allocate your energies at any given time. And that may be something that we call work if it is just a joyful expression of something that we do purely for the feeling that it gives us. So I like the more expansive take that you have
on a phrase that I think a lot of people would be like, oh, that's my time to relax.
Right. Yeah. I mean, I'm thinking about when I was at Google, I had a perfect on paper job.
I was working in career development and launching this global drop in coaching program called
Career Guru. And yet 80 80% of my time,
I was in meetings, back-to-back meetings, Monday through Friday. I would walk through the halls
with the laptop in my crook of my elbow, typing while I was in the elevator, eating on the go,
and buried by email, crushed by email so much so that my friend Julie and I used to have
email parties on Sunday afternoon. We would watch Say Yes to the Dress.
We would have chocolate, wine, and pumpkin seeds, really random array.
And we would just try our best to hack away at email because there was no time to do it
during the week.
And working at this fast-paced global company would just pile up.
Now, today, over 10 years later, the number of inboxes that have propagated across LinkedIn,
Twitter, Facebook, email, text messaging, TikTok, whatever platforms everybody is on,
is exponential. And I don't know how anybody can keep up. So part of my passion around all of this
is that just because these new tech companies keep adding tools and inboxes to our lives,
we have not fundamentally changed either how much time we have, how much attention,
and how much energy. The energy here is so important. I don't know about you, but like
the last two years have tired me out. You know, I'm always trying to make the best of it. And yes,
at some point, I got my stuff together enough to work on a book. But that's
my favorite type of work is deep work. And I'm constantly feeling behind in what I call these
Sisyphean systems of never ending inboxes, the same way running a household, there's never ending
laundry, and cleaning and dishes. So part of my the free time obsession, going back to my
essentialist nature that you so generously
featured and sparked, is my passion for systems and sort of geeking out about organization and
structure is that I think we all need help. We need strategies to deal with the crush of
the inbound that I think so many of us are experiencing now amidst so much global turmoil and upheaval
just as the baseline.
Yeah, no, completely agree with that.
Yeah, and it's funny
because the notion of systems and process
and like having a system and a process
for literally everything
from the moment you wake up your eyes
and when you go to bed,
it feels so rigid.
It feels so sort of like,
but I don't want to be,
I don't want to spend my entire day
following rules. And yet the way that you approach it is, well, it's not necessarily about saying
everything that you do is bounded by rules. It's about saying that a certain amount of what you do
is capable of being done in a much more automated and efficient and not thoughtless, but thoughtless
way almost. And to the extent that we can actually like make that happen,
those systems and processes, they free us, they free up so much bandwidth, emotional, cognitive,
and actual physical bandwidth to go and make a choice about like what else we want to do
with that time. So it's a little bit of a contradiction to think that
living in a very heavily rules and process and system-based space could actually create a lot
more freedom to just wander and not be so structured and rigid.
Yes. And I think the best rules happen in the background, that you spend a little bit more
time upfront to design them and create them. And then ideally, they save you time over and over far into the future. It's because I know a lot of
people feel allergic to the word systems and even structure process. Some people have already
practically stopped listening. But actually, the best systems are ones that you can't help but use.
So for example, household items. I mean, this one's a really simple and maybe by now more
and more people do this, but put your toilet paper, paper towels, dish soap, et cetera,
on recurring subscription. Figure out the last few times you've ordered, what was the
time distance between them and put them on automatic subscription. That way nobody has
to remember moving forward when to reorder these basic staple items.
Or I used to text a house cleaner.
I used to just text every time I was ready to have her come.
It was so inefficient because there was so much friction.
I was always wondering, do we need her?
Should we have her come?
Is today a good day?
Oh, does my husband Michael, is that okay with him?
Let me run it by him. It was so much work that it just wasn't happening.
And I was actually developing asthma that I hadn't had since I was a child because we
had so much dust and dog dander.
Finally, I found a service that is on a recurring day and time, weekly, set it and forget it.
It's not on my mind anymore.
So I'm not even just talking about in the work sense.
I think there's a lot of adulting related stuff like this, that if we just create a little bit
of structure, freeze us, because I don't, some of this stuff, I don't think anybody is jumping to
do, you know? Yeah, you know, my sense is that the resistance isn't also that we don't want this.
It's that we don't want to have to be the ones who figure it out and then make it happen. You know, it's the initial burden of
like setting it all up that stops so many of us from saying yes to a lot of the ideas that you
talked about. Let's get granular because, you know, the way that you describe and you write
about this, you know, you get very specific about your work and the hours that you put in
and revenue and all of this stuff. And how Jenny from a decade ago lives a very, very different
working life and life now based on your sort of like fierce commitment to systems and processes.
So let's talk about some of these actual granular metrics in your life,
because they're a little bit jaw dropping. And I think folks might hear them and think,
is that actually possible? You work an average of 20 hours a week. Tell me about this.
I honestly feel, especially for business owners who are juggling a lot. And I'm the primary earner for our household.
So my 20 hours generates our income, period. It's the sole source of income. And I find that 20 to
25 hours a week is what I can handle. I try to make them very focused. So no meetings on Mondays
or Fridays. I only schedule calls and podcast interviews between about 11 and 3. And then I also segment by day.
So on Wednesdays, that's my day that I interview other people for my podcasts. Thursdays are days
where I meet with team members. Tuesdays are for random one-off calls. And this just helps me get
into the energy and the flow of that type of day so that I'm not feeling so frazzled switching from
one thing to the next.
I mean, things were different when I lived alone and I was single, but now having a husband and a dog and a business, I just find that I need more time to take care of myself, to
ramp up and read in the morning, have a really focused four to five hours during the workday,
take my dog out for a walk, spend some quality time with my husband, go to bed early enough to do it all again the next day. So I'm actually just awed by anyone who is working
40, 50, 60 plus hours a week, because I think it's so challenging to stay healthy and rested.
And as you said, not necessarily balancing those other elements, but ensuring that
these different parts of life get
the attention that they need to thrive. Yeah. I mean, I think it's a really interesting
question because certain types of work require like shift work I'm thinking about,
you know, there's sort of like there is an endless number of tasks that need to be done.
They're going to be piled up before you arrive for your shift. They're going to be there long after, and the next person is going to tag in
and do it. And so a lot of people won't have the option of saying, I'm literally going to cut back
on the number of hours that I work. But when you actually look at the work that's being done so
often, the fact that the work week is what it is and has expanded over the
last couple of decades also, it's actually not helping either us as individuals, as human
beings, and it's not helping organizations.
I mean, the latest sort of like data that I'm seeing is that actually, you know, the
same level of actual real high level work can be done in significantly less time and simultaneously respect the humanity
of the people who are doing this work. Yeah. More and more companies are piloting
four-day work weeks now. I'm reading it more and more in the news. And I love these companies that
are willing to just try something. They can't say for sure whether it's going to work. And that was
one of the silver linings of these last few years is that everyone was catapulted into this work from home experiment, but not everybody, those who were
fortunate enough to work from home. But a lot of companies had to think on their feet and move
really quickly toward enabling their teams to work in a remote distributed way. And I think that it
showed everybody, yes, pros and cons, there's a lot to like about the sweatpants life that, you know, I've been living for a while. And there's a lot that's really challenging about it. I mean, as we record this, I'm in an enclosed studio downtown in New York because my home is so chaotic that I was pulling my hair out with trying to record things like podcast interviews with a dog barking, doorbell ringing,
toilet flushing in the background. It just drove me nuts. But I appreciate that we're all getting a little bit more creative about envisioning what's possible and what's required. And going
back to this question, how can we do more of our best work? And I find that with companies,
there's no one person at the top who wants to create a culture of burnout
necessarily. I mean, sometimes, yes, there's truly toxic work environments. But even just going back
to my Google experience where I worked at a startup before that, no one was trying to create
a culture of burnout and a culture of all day, every day wall of meetings or the crush of email,
but it just kind of happens. And this is where I think
it is so interesting. Like you said, how many focused hours do we really need in a day? And
if we're not just counting on butt in seats time, oh, I have to be sitting in front of my computer
precisely from nine to five, Monday through Friday. What I find having had more flexibility
as a business owner is if I just start and don't
stop for five hours, I don't really need breaks in between.
I'm not procrastinating.
I'm not jumping on social media.
I like that five focused hours because then it sets me free in the afternoon.
And as one of my clients said to me in the afternoon, I don't even know my own name.
Like if you want to talk about sparked in a broad sense of work,
but even like sparked within a 24-hour circadian rhythm, like I'm super on in the morning and in
the afternoon, I'm a disaster. I don't think any company, no one should want me working for them
during that window where I'm just a zombie. It's pointless. So I would so much rather
consolidate that focus and do better work in a shorter time
frame. Yeah. I mean, it makes a lot of sense to me. What is it? Was it Pareto's law that says
at every task expands or contracts to accommodate the amount of time? Parkinson's law, to accommodate
the amount of time that you allocate towards it. So like we've kind of figured, well, like if the
traditional work week is 40 to 50 hours, you know, just because that's how long it takes to get the
thing done. Like you have to ask, well, have we actually just expanded, like how long it actually
takes to accommodate the amount of time that society has assigned to it, you know, like
requiring when in fact, you know, if, if, you know, we follow Parkinson's law and said, well, okay,
so we're going to like, here so here's the invitation and the challenge.
We're going to tell you that you now only have 25 hours to do what you used to do in 40 or 45 hours.
The bad news is you have to figure out how to do it. The good news is all the other time,
you get back to yourself and you get paid the exact same amount, how many people would say yes
to that invitation and challenge? I think it's really fascinating. If you're listening to this
now, would you say yes to that or would you say no to that? I would be really curious to know how
many people would actually say, oh yeah, I would be all in on that because I know that of the eight
or nine or 10 hours that I'm sitting in front of a desk, even if it's my desk at home, I'm really only functional for like three to five of those.
And I could completely do this.
And then I literally buy my way into the ability to just do anything I want with the rest of the time. companies as well. And you said, would you rather A or B, would you rather have your team members
work a 40 hour typical work week that we invented during the factory era? Or would you rather have
them work half the time, but be five times more strategic, five times in a greater state of flow,
five times happier, more engaged, more productive, which one would you choose?
And I bet that most of those companies would
choose option B. And I know for myself and my team, I crave that myself and my team members
can work on the most strategic, highest impact tasks and projects for the business and do them
well. I crave this. And it's actually quite frustrating when any one of us gets so buried
by minutiae and detail
that the big things are falling through the cracks.
That's the real concern.
The other part of this I think is so important to talk about is trade-offs.
So when I say I work 20 to 25 hours a week, I could easily work 40 to 50 hours and be
phenomenal at email and be the most responsive person that everybody knows.
But as you know, JF, I'm very slow. I put the snail back into email. I'm very slow with email
and I'm very slow even with text messages. I treat texts like email. I'll respond a week or two later.
And the people that know and love me and are willing to stick around for that just know that's
how I am because it kind of frustrated me that
as texting and things like Slack started to become more ubiquitous, just because our phone pings were
expected to jump. And who said that my turnaround time for a text message was going to be instantaneous?
Why? Just because the medium demands that? I don't agree. I didn't sign on to that. But yet,
that's what we come to do as a collective.
So I like that certain phones have features now saying, oh, Jonathan is in do not disturb mode,
or Jonathan has notifications turned off. That makes me happy when I see that. Or the fact that
you could even write a little autoresponder for your text messages saying, I'm driving or I'm
doing deep work right now. And I just think that we all have the capacity to
a decide what we want to be bad at and what our trade offs are going to be and then be
kind of redesign the rules together. Even one off with friends and just let them know what to expect.
And I always will tell friends, don't worry, it's nothing personal. I'm just a really slow
texter. And that's a trade off I choose choose to make because otherwise I might not even have a book that
we could sit here to be talking about because my attention would be so fractured and distracted.
Yeah.
And I love that you're also, you're broadening this out and you're saying, yes, part of this
is about work, but it's also, these are the rules for life too, these systems and processes
for life.
So the expectations aren't just for your boss or your teammates and stuff like it.
It's for your friends.
It's for your friends. It's for your family. And we've fallen into these expectations without ever making conscious decisions that that was the thing 30 seconds to respond. It's just that became the culture. And we felt like, well, we need to adhere to sort of like the general expectations of the
culture. So this is what we do without ever asking the question, well, but do we really need to,
you know, and you're like, what am I getting from adhering to this culture of instant?
And then what am I giving up?
What humanity am I leaving behind by doing this?
And also what would happen?
I think we're terrified of saying, but what if I basically just let everybody know I set
expectations that says, this actually is not going to happen when you're interacting with
me.
There's no disrespect.
But this is the way that I
need to function in order to be okay in the world and to actually flourish.
And there were times where I genuinely worried. Let's say even when you would text and if it took
me a while to respond, I would worry, maybe Jonathan is not going to want to be my friend
anymore. Maybe he just thinks he's going to think I'm ridiculous. He's not going to want to be my friend. And I went through that.
I still go through that sometimes with people.
But on the whole, it's just what I need to do.
And what I find is that when we can have these conversations and level setting, if you will, that other people get ideas too.
And it can be inspiring to hear the ways that other people are
protecting their time and their attention and their energy. Because one of the questions I'm
always asking is, who is profiting from the pressure you feel? Who profits from having a
never-ending inbox that has your attention all day long? The companies that are serving ads on
the side of those emails, or the people who are emailing you with their agenda, not your strategic big creative projects, who's
profiting from you being on your phone, looking at texts all day, picking up your phone an
average of 150 times a day, if not more.
So I just always check that sense of pressure and micro guilt that I'm feeling.
And I wonder who designed this and why. I don't think that
nobody designed the factory system or these devices or many inboxes to be good for our health.
You know, like I just thought was never put into the conversation is what would help each
individual absolutely flourish and thrive and be physically fit and well connected to their
friends, family and community.
Certainly not being on a device all day or sitting behind the desk all day. So this is our opportunity now, especially with so much change and so much being shaken up. I think we all have
this opportunity to draw some boundaries again. And you even talked about it was so inspiring to
me reading An Uncertainty several books ago for you.
But you were also saying that some of the most creative people are super structured outside of their creative time because it kind of corrals the chaos of life that gives them more attention and energy for those windows that they really do want to work on their craft and their art.
Yeah, for sure. I mean, some of the most innovative, creative people in the world are massively ritualized in everything but the work because it just takes all the bandwidth out of having to allocate anything to it. They don't have to worry about it. And it also
creates a certain amount of certainty where they feel grounded and tethered and like their anxiety
state is, you know, like it's kind of like they know what's coming and they know how it's going
to be handled. So they have a baseline lower level kind of like they know what's coming and they know how it's going to be handled.
So they have a baseline lower level of anxiety because they know when they do the work, their job is to go to a space where there's a high level of uncertainty and the stakes are high and there's a lot of groundlessness and they have to be sustained there for really next level innovation and creativity to happen.
So they figure out ways to get like to be able to
breathe more easily everywhere but that space. The Apple Watch Series 10 is here. It has the
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Flight risk.
So you referenced this moment also.
And I think it's really interesting because there is this massive re-examination of what
we want from work and from life that's happening now.
There's a reckoning and there's a reclamation that we're all in the middle of.
But as we're talking about this, what I'm realizing is I think a lot of people are
re-examining the big picture, like what is the work that I'm doing? What is the organization
I'm doing? What is the job or the role of the title that I'm doing? And then making giant
changes, the quote, great resignation, we're seeing 60, 70 million people bail and go and
do something else. But I wonder if that re-examination is getting down to the more
granular level of no matter what I leave behind and no matter what I then say yes
to and step into, am I also looking at the structures and the system and the process and
the expectation of me being always on in this new context? Like, am I re-examining and re-imagining
that or am I just changing jobs and roles and titles and companies and offices. Because if we don't get to that level
of granularity, we may find ourselves doing something that's moderately more interesting
in a different office. And the novelty is like kind of cool and new. But if so much of the
structural stuff that brought us down before just gets repeated, we're going to end up feeling the
same way. Yeah. And this is, I think, a huge source of burnout is where we're sort of operating against
our own energy needs. And then we just do that for long enough and literally burn out. Our adrenals
get fried. I've done this so many times. And it's like, sometimes I think burnout comes from a
genuine passion. We want to do all the things and we want to do well.
And I'll speak for myself.
Like sometimes I will give everything I have to a certain project and then totally collapse on the other side because I just didn't monitor my energy well.
But it's hard to know in the moment.
And so I think there's something happening now as well around permission.
And I remember, especially during 2020, just looking at what was I secretly relieved that got
taken out of my life and my schedule. And I was actually, I live in New York City, as you
mentioned, I was so relieved that I didn't have to consider all these plans all the time. I didn't realize how tiring that
had become. And you and I can share this, that we're like mega introverts and leaving the house
is a huge effort sometimes. But the other day I got invited to a book launch party and this
is a person I love and I was so excited to celebrate her book. But the thought of putting on actual
clothes and leaving the house, like the level of resistance I was experiencing was just so high.
And part of that is just the inertia the last few years. But the other part is just noticing
we all have such different energy stores. And I think that goes for different, certainly as we age, it goes with different
phases of life. It goes with different situations in our household, caring for young children,
caring for elderly parents. I mean, so many dynamics are happening for all of us.
And when you mentioned the structural factors of the big picture of our work,
it occurs to me that it's such an important time for each of us to take an energy
inventory. And there is no set amount. I find this really interesting. I experience a lot of
compare and despair when I will compare myself to a friend who has seemingly limitless energy.
And I don't. And I have to be really honest with myself. Part of the reason that I wrote free time
and that I say I don't work full time, I work free time, is I just can't anymore. I am noticing I'm
38. That's young in the grand scheme of things. But there's no way I can work the way that I
worked when I was in my mid 20s. I don't want to and I can't do it. I burn out too quickly.
I just in the fall, the way I knew I was doing too much,
I got a massive ear infection that was 10 out of 10 pain unceasing for five days. A month later,
I got bronchitis. So these were these signals where my body was saying, you got to slow down,
you have to pace yourself. And so sometimes that burnout feeling and getting sick or having our body send these messages is a signal that
we need to change and we must adapt.
And we just don't all have the exact same amount of energy reserves consistently like
a machine through our entire life.
And I think acknowledging that is so important, especially during these times.
And I don't know, I guess I would be curious too, Jonathan, your relationship to that.
Because sometimes I find that, you know, there's that saying, don't write a check that your body
can't cash. Sometimes I find that my mind, in a way, my creative energy or my intended capacity
is just so much bigger than my actual capacity. But it's really hard to figure out exactly what
that is because it is changing all the time. Yeah, I'm right there with you. I've learned over the years that actually
my mind is way tougher than my body. I've sort of trained and developed the ability to push myself
psychologically, emotionally, cognitively to a pretty extreme point. And sometimes you just have
to go there because it's the nature of what you're doing. If you're launching something or whatever, maybe there's a short-term window where you're not
going to be sort of like in this quote, you know, like beautifully centered, balanced place, sort of
the nature of the beast, but the pendulum has to swing back. And if it stays out and that, you know,
like hinterland for too long of extremity, then my mind has the ability to stay out there longer than my body. My body
starts to slowly check the boxes of bringing me to my knees until I am completely curled up and
fetal on the floor. And my brain has to listen and say, oh, it's time. And I wish I could say
that in my maturity, I've gotten way better at it. I've gotten a bit better at it,
but I still have those moments where I have to constantly check in with my body and say,
what's it telling me? Because I've learned that my body is actually much more the canary in the coal mine for me. It's much more the true tell of whether I'm pushing too hard, I'm going too fast,
I'm not being smart at what I'm doing. my brain psychologically can take a lot more, but my
body really starts to take a hit. So I'm learning more to treat that as like an important intellectual
data point in understanding how I'm living my life and whether the choices I'm making
are okay. You know, one of the things that pops into my head also when we have this conversation
is like, so let's say you're working in an ecosystem with other people, whether you're in a job or whether
you have your own business and you have a team, whatever it may be.
And you're like, this is my new value set.
This is really important to me.
I need to reimagine the way that I'm doing things and build a lot of systems and processes.
So now I can work 20 hours a week instead of 40 or 50.
I think there's an assumption that pops into a lot of people's
head when they hear that. Well, how nice for you, but now basically what you're really just doing
is you're shifting the burden onto everyone around you because somebody's got to, quote,
pick up the slack. And in fact, when you look at your team, that's the first proof point that
that's not true at all. In fact, you have your team follow all of
these same ideas and principles and they work less also. And somehow all the work is still getting
done. Yes. This is so important to me. And this is something I call heart-based business. I know
you've talked a lot about this over the years too. I can't stand the thought that, oh, the owner gets to optimize their life or the owner,
the manager, the boss, whomever gets to optimize and be so light and free.
Meanwhile, the team is burning out, working around the clock.
The owner is this tyrannical devil wears Prada boss and the team is working on stuff that
they hate.
No, absolutely not.
So I really think that the whole ecosystem
matters. And for me, heart-based business is, it matters just as much how the owner
experiences the work and their time, how each team member, how clients, community members,
everybody counts. I'm always looking for how can we work with joy and ease for the highest good of all involved.
So like you said, my team, I work with three to five people at any given time, and they work about five hours a week, maximum 10 when we're in a big launch.
And I make it very clear that if I ever send a message on nights or weekends, you don't
have to respond until your next work window. Some people like
working on the weekends. I don't care. I don't care when they work, but I'll only mark something
urgent if absolutely necessary. Something is on fire and going to break. And I think it's really
important to be considerate of not creating fire drills for everybody else. You know, there's this
phrase around, I think it relates to
codependency, but like your emergency is not my problem. And I'm really mindful of that,
of the owner. It's so easy for people in positions of power to like create emergencies with the work.
And I think that's poor planning. So it's my job, like with my, I have a podcast, I have two
podcasts as well. And I remember like, if I ever didn't follow our process and get ahead and I was going to record
something at the very last minute, who's going to edit that episode?
Me.
Because I did not want to create a scramble for my team just because I didn't get my stuff
together in time.
So that's me being stubborn about it.
Maybe some people would still press that on their team. But there was an example, we had a launch. And I had a new person working with me who had just come from over a decade working in a really fast paced startup. And the doors were closing on this launch, the doors were closing at midnight. And I went to bed at like 8pm as I do my grandma hours. And someone emailed right that evening. And she wrote
to me and she said, Oh, somebody emailed the doors are going to close. Do we need to jump in
and respond? And I said, No, it's okay. We're just respond in the morning, like it's past our work
hours. And she did. And she wrote back, she said, Sorry, doors, you know, we didn't get back to you.
But here are the answers to your questions. And if you still want to enroll, we're happy to have you. And this person totally appreciated it.
They ended up signing up, but my team member was shocked. She could not believe that I wasn't
staying in front of my computer until midnight. She just, it was so flabbergasted her that way
of working, but it kind of sets the example for everybody, including the people who are signing
up for any potential programs.
Yeah, and it also sort of like it demonstrates
that like if this is, it's not about time,
it is about like how you use that time.
You introduce a new metric also,
which I think kind of like brings,
like is an interesting thing to explore.
Time to revenue ratio, you know, suggesting that you optimize not just for money, which
so many of us do and both personally, like I want to optimize to make like the greatest
income or the greatest living possible, but also for ease and at the same time and sort
of like create this constant balancing.
So tell me more about this metric
because I'm kind of fascinated by it. I just find it so interesting that on the P&L,
profit and loss statement, we have gross earnings, we have operating expenses and then net profit.
And in the business press, you might hear about entrepreneurs who are making millions of dollars
or tens of millions, but nobody talks about, A, the operating
expenses for whatever earnings that they're claiming. Oh, I run an eight-figure business
and we earned $10 million last year. Great, but did it cost you $11 million to generate that $10?
We don't know. You're not telling us. Similarly, are you working around the clock burning out
and with no time for your family and missing your kid's birthday?
You know, what's going on behind the scenes to earn that 10 million?
What is it costing you in terms of time, a.k.a. life force?
It's your life.
And none of us know how much of it we get.
And so I think it's very interesting.
Even Amazon.
Great.
Bezos is a kajillionaire, but he's completely burning out the people in the warehouses who
are working these insane hours at an ungodly pace with very little breaks, trying to keep
up with robots.
It's absolutely crushing.
So great.
Should we be so proud of Jeff Bezos?
Yes, he has tons of innovative ideas, but at what cost to the people who are working
in the warehouses making it all possible?
And so the time to revenue ratio means considering for the revenue, and this could apply if you're
on salary too, doesn't matter.
For the salary or the revenue that you brought in, let's say last year, how much of your
time went into that? How many hours in the year? Like in my case, it's about a thousand hours a year
for let's say my five-year average, 300,000 take home. And so you can calculate time to revenue
ratio for yourself or if you're a business owner for your team. So let's say you're working in a
business instead of just looking at, oh yeah, how much did we earn? You could say, well, how much team
member time did that require? And not just how much did I pay my team, how much time was involved.
So this, I think, is a metric that could help us all design smarter systems and actually consider
time as a factor in terms of earning.
The last thing I'll say on this is I shared what I call the million-dollar bureaucratic client question.
I think it's an interesting thought exercise.
The way I pose it in the book is if someone offered you a million dollars to work around
the clock, absolutely crushing 100-hour weeks for a really bureaucratic nightmare client
for one year, no cancellation
allowed, would you do it? Some people I spoke with said absolutely yes. I worked this way for
far less pay. I'm at a stage in my life where I need the money and yes, I would take it.
But not everybody would. There were people who had gotten through cancer diagnoses, who had gotten through
health scares, who said, no, no amount of money is worth me working that way because I could die
halfway into that year. I don't mean to be morbid, but that's true. So I think it's interesting for
each of us to consider that question. And is there a number on a check? What is that number
that would be worth sacrificing our health and our attention
and time with our family and loved ones? And I think at least just getting clear on what our
numbers are in this regard, this time to revenue ratio can help us just as we talked about with
the physical signals can help us see when we're on track and when we're veering off track and
maybe need to pare back or change directions. Yeah.
And a big part of that is you actually have to know what your time is.
And I think that's where there's a huge miss here.
Because when you're picking up your device 150 times a day and you're like, oh, it's
just like five seconds, answering this five seconds or scanning this, like that 150 just
kind of feels like, oh, it's the occasional glance here, there, there. But at the end of the day,
if you multiply each one of those out by like a minute or so or something like that, it's 150
minutes, like two and a half hours. It's all of a sudden, you know, now we're like, oh, wait,
you know, we're actually talking about hours out of the day. So how do we even try and optimize for these things?
When I sense, and I'm curious what your experience has been,
the bigger, earlier step is that
we just don't have any genuine sense
of how much time we're spending doing different things,
especially when it's fragmented into these microbursts spread out over hundreds of teeny little seemingly inconsequential moments or
snippets throughout the day. But when you look at it cumulatively, it can be kind of brutalizing.
So how do we own what we're truly doing and how much time and energy it's taking from us before we even figure out how to reimagine that time and energy?
I use an app called Rescue Time.
It's always running in the background on my computer.
And I try to stay really disciplined of not doing work on my phone.
I know it's possible.
And every now and then I do.
But that actually helps me keep a separation of work and the rest of my life. So when my computer
is open, I'm only working on it. And in fact, my husband, Michael, when we were early in our
relationship, he would get so perplexed when I absolutely refused to open my laptop for us to
watch a show. I was just like, absolutely not. No,
but this thing is staying closed because I had such an association with work. But that means
that when the laptop is open, rescue time is on and it's tracking in the background.
Some people suggest keeping a time journal. Who will do that? I don't know. I can't even
bring myself to do that. And I'm like obsessed with these topics. Something like rescue time, I looked at
my data for 2020, I spent 200 hours on zoom calls, because it was like the year of zoom, you know,
and then one of my next biggest activities was email. So I think instead of trying to look at
the micro, I'm not trying to optimize in 15 minute increments, nothing like that. I find that when we
are pulled by big, meaningful projects,
we want to work on them. We actually want to block off the distractions. And I use these little
$10 for a packet of foam hangers that I hang on my door that actually tells Michael, the only
other person in my house, what I'm doing and whether it's okay to interrupt or not. I think
that when we have a draw, when we have something big and compelling we're working on, we're less drawn to even want to pick up our phone during that window.
But those windows become more concentrated.
So for me, with my time tradeoffs and as you said, really trying to reckon with how it's actually being spent. If I were to look at my rescue time and see that my number one activity
in a year was email, I would probably be a little sad because it meant that I did not
tackle a giant project. Now, giant projects are what bring me joy. That's my sparkotype.
I don't know if that's for everybody or not. Maybe some people would actually just thrive
being an email because it means they're communicating, making connections, building community. It's awesome. That's cool.
There's like, I have no judgment here. But I would want to see in my data, I wrote my books in Google
Docs primarily and in Notion. That's the operations hub where I run my business. I would want to see
the number one activity is Google Docs. You know, is something on my computer that represents me
doing my best work. And then only in third place should be like, email and then zoom and things
that are more fragmented on the whole. Yeah. And I'm right there with you being a maker.
I'm always trying to optimize for like, the things that allow me to be just generative.
You know, and for me, like you said, for some people that allow me to be just generative, you know?
And for me, like you said, for some people that it might actually be email.
It might be like the conversation is their art, you know?
For me, it's not, you know, for me, I needed to kind of go into my cave.
So I'm always looking for that metric too.
You introduce a framework, sort of like this guiding structure for us, because I think a lot of people listening and not probably nodding along, they like, well, yeah, I want more free time. All of this makes
sense. I spend way too much time in the minutia and all the yada yada. But what now? How do I
actually start to operationalize this in my life, in my work, in my business? You introduced what
you call the free time framework with these three key elements and then some sub elements under that.
Walk me through this framework, because I think it becomes the model for us to all say, yes, this sounds interesting.
And now here's how we actually start to put these ideas to work in our lives.
The main diagnostic is where are you experiencing friction and where are you experiencing flow?
And once we identify a friction area, then we can walk through the free time
framework, align, design, assign to reduce friction and move toward greater flow. Got it.
So I don't know if you're interested, but we could do a little mini coaching around this if you want.
And maybe let's also like, tell me what you mean by friction and flow, because I think
it makes sense to get specific there. Yes. Friction is anywhere in your life or work where
you feel drained, distracted, heavy. You're procrastinating. It's dragging you down. The
friction is that there's just something getting in the way and making this area feel heavy and
burdensome. And then flow is time is flying. You're happy. You don't even notice the clock.
Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi describes it as almost a near ecstatic state of bliss,
where you don't recognize time passing. And so flow is that you are clicked in,
you are working in your zone of genius or on your biggest strengths, and you're doing great work.
And research shows that we are five times more productive when we're in a flow state than, than not. Got it. Okay. That resonates with me. So
then, um, yeah, I'll, I'm going to take you up on your, uh, your invitation to do a little mini
intervention here. Then let's, let's work with your free time framework.
Mayday, mayday. We've been compromised. The pilot's a hitman. I knew you were going to be We'll be right back. X is here. It has the biggest display ever. It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever, making it even
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So what comes to mind for me right now, so I'm a maker. I love to make things. And one of my
really prime channels of expression is writing. And I've wanted to sort of be diving into a large
scale writing project for a while now.
It's just, it's not, it's all friction and no flow. And I've written books, I've written big,
big pieces of work many times over. So like I know the process and right now it's just not
happening. You know, I kind of even know, like I know the next thing that I want to really start
to say yes to. And I'm getting
massively distracted by a lot of other things. And granted, there are other things going on.
I run two companies now, so I can't just stop things. But also, there's not a whole lot of
efficiency in the parts that I'm involved in. I'll say the parts that are essentialist
producers involved in is very efficient. But when I get my hands in it,
everything tends to break. So I would love to actually devote myself to the next big writing
project. And I'm experiencing just sort of like nonstop friction right there. Is that the type of
thing that would be interesting to dive into? Oh, yeah. Okay. Definitely. And I appreciate you sharing and being open to doing this and just sharing with all of
us because I think it's also easy.
I'm a longtime listener of your podcast.
It's easy to think that those who have podcasts or show up as expert guests have it all figured
out.
And I just love that you're open to sharing this.
So it sounds like the writing project.
There's a gap because it's something you really want to sharing this. So it sounds like the writing project, it's something, there's a gap
because it's something you really want to do
and work on and have flow around,
but it's, as you said,
currently totally loaded with friction.
Yeah, no, 100%.
How would you rate your energy on a scale of one to 10?
Let's say one is just total and utter friction
and 10 is flow.
What's your current rating?
I would say somewhere in the middle.
All right. I'm going to say Tim Ferriss says take seven out of your rating scales.
So I'm going to give it a six, which is interesting for me to assign because from
the outside looking in, you're like, there's huge amounts of work being done, huge amounts
of things being produced and created and put
into the world. But at the same time, I'm definitely experienced. I feel a sense of
friction and a certain sense of in and out of burnout or overwhelm, even though I kind of know.
I have enough of a mindset practice to be able to zoom the lens out and get meta and be like,
oh, you're in this state right now. Oh, you're to actually understand, to look down into myself and understand where I am, but I'm still there. So clearly I'm not
doing what I need to do to create change in that state. Well, and as you said, there's so much,
there's so much going on in a bigger picture sense in your business and with what you're juggling.
And yet this writing project is like fruit that's hanging on the tree.
You see it, you want to pluck it, but something's preventing you. So I like how specific it is. And
I like how it's just zoning in on this one thing. And maybe that can inform the rest.
So let's start with the align stage of this. And align is all about, is this aligned with your
values, your energy and your strengths before we even optimize
how you're going to tackle it. So let's look at values. What is important to you about this
writing project? So this is a deeply personal writing project. So I'm not going to share what
it is because I don't know if it will ever be made public, but it is deeply personal,
deeply meaningful. It's different than anything I've
ever written before. And it's to a specific person who I love dearly. And so, yeah, it is something
that I would love to write. I feel compelled to write. And it's a genuine expression of who I am,
what I believe in the world, my deepest held values.
And when I think about me just sitting there writing it, to me, that's an energized state.
But I'm not doing that.
So I'm not feeling the energy of it.
Yeah.
But you did light up when you started to talk about it.
And I had a feeling it was going to be the subject will be top secret.
But your face changed.
You said it's for someone who's really important to you and it's deeply meaningful
and just super connected to who you are and that there's something in you that has this
message or this subject that you are really excited about.
Yeah, it matters.
Like it really matters.
And I think also over the last few years, like we all have the sense of, we don't know what tomorrow is going to bring, you know, and like, I want this out of me, no matter what tomorrow is going to bring. And So I'm hearing values of meaningful self-expression, the maker in you
that loves to take something and create. What other values are at play in this writing project?
I mean, like you said, you have so much else going on in the business. So what other values
of yours does this project hit? I don't know if it's a value, but authentic expression, creativity, honesty.
You know, like writing, this is something where I want to write where this is not.
There's no fluff. It is just raw, pure and honest and real and human and sometimes not
clean or patent in any way, but it's true.
Wow.
See, I already am so excited for this.
And these are your gifts, authentic, raw, unfiltered, truly cut to the core communication.
This is absolutely in your zone of genius.
Yeah, I agree.
And actually, it's sort of like what I want to write is stepping into that on a different level also.
That's so exciting. Okay, so then let's look at energy. When you think about I want to open my eyes and just like, you know, like, and write that.
It feels good.
Like it gives me like, I feel like that that is, it would be really hard to do, but also really energizing and rewarding.
Yes.
Like it's calling you forth.
And it's interesting that your reaction is actually, this is the only thing that truly feels energizing. If I could drop everything entire thing in a month and putting everything else on autopilot, earning my way into it in some way, shape or form.
That's kind of what I'm thinking about right now.
Maybe that's where we're going.
So that I literally can just tap out for a month and just wake up in the morning, you know, take care of my body, my relationships and write this thing.
And it's really interesting that you say that because in a way, you said two really crucial
things here. You just need a month. You didn't say, oh, this is a three-year project, a magnum
opus, a decade long. No, you need a month. That's kind of your energy, your anticipated energy need
in a way. But as you said, earning your way into it, that right now it feels like you haven't earned
your way in yet because you're juggling so much else.
So tell me about where is your energy getting blocked?
There's a reason that you haven't already set aside this month.
And as you said, even though you want to work on this, you just can't seem to start.
So what is dragging your energy down or away from it? I think just the volume of projects. Right now, there's a lot on my plate
where, like I said, I run two companies. Some folks know that, some folks don't. So we produce
a podcast twice a week, which is awesome. We have a new one that is entering the world probably as we have this conversation, which is another very large lift.
And we have a second company that develops and deploys the full body of work around this, Sparketypes.
And that's effectively in startup mode.
So any company in startup mode tends to need a lot more love and is under-resourced, you know, until we sort of like hit a certain tipping point.
So, you know, as I'm saying this, like there are two storylines in my head.
One is like, yes, that's your truth.
And two is, yes, and is it really?
You know, like does every startup have to like function this way?
Like, or have I just not done the work work to reimagine a lot of structure and process to make everything that I'm doing now happen, but in a much more humane way, both to me and those around me?
It almost seems like in your mind, you have to choose.
Whereas what I just heard you say was, actually, I need to step out of the businesses for a month.
It's not forever.
Yes, they are in startup mode,
and they do need you to an extent,
but that if we ask it as a more open-ended question,
how can I free up my energy
for this writing project for a month?
That at least then it's an open-ended question.
They're not just directly playing tug-of-war.
Yeah, and in fact, there's evidence that I can do that because three years ago,
I took the better part of a month off to go out to rural Pennsylvania and work with the
luthier and build a guitar. And in theory, then I was just as quote time compressed as I am now,
but I knew it was coming because I actually committed to it like six months in advance.
I paid the money to do it. And then I made sure that in those six months, we sort of like front
loaded everything and set up everything because I knew it was happening. And I actually even,
I roped a friend in to make the same commitment with me. So I knew I was also beholden to him.
So like, I couldn't break this promise to me or to my friend. And there was money already committed. So it almost like it became this forcing function for me to reverse engineer what needs to happen to buy myself the ability to do this, which I haven't done with this writing project. So it's kind of interesting to me.
And in hindsight, was the guitar project worth it?
Oh, my God, like a thousand times over. Yeah. As your friend, I know this is like one of the highlights.
When I would go to your house and see the guitar there and see you strum on it.
And didn't KC strum on that very guitar for your GLP intro music?
He did.
And yeah, in fact, the GLP theme music is him playing something that he wrote on the
guitar that I built.
And KC, for those who don't know, is a dear friend and sort of like member of our community. So in a way, like not only did it completely
light you up and energize you, but it became creative fuel. So this writing project could
help and serve the business and your other projects in ways you don't yet see, the least
of which being your energy, which is vital to everything else. Yeah, I don't disagree.
Okay, let's talk about strengths.
This is kind of, we could go multiple places with this, and I know we want to keep this to a mini session,
but what do you think your biggest strengths are
as it relates to either tackling this writing project
or even strengths that you have that you could bring to
being able to step aside from the
business for a month in order to do it?
Strengths as a writer is just like whatever craft I've developed over the years to be
able to say what I want to say with language that I feel conveys what's in my head.
Occasionally, I'm able to do that.
So I think there's definitely that
as like a central strength.
I would also, it's weird to say,
but I consider another strength
just that I've developed a different lens
on life and experiences
and a different take,
a different way to see and synthesize
common experiences that I think help with this.
And when I'm writing, I actually,
when I create the space to do it, I'm really efficient. I work very quickly. That's why I said 30 days I could do this if I had to set aside just that. I write very quickly. So strength is
also the speed at which I create because I've been doing it for so long now. In terms of having the
businesses function on the side, it's less about my strengths and more about the people that I have
in place around me and their strengths and their commitment and ability to create systems and
process that allow things to function. And that's been our every day, is that those folks keep
the machine running so that I
don't have to do a lot of that. And it's interesting because at the start you said,
wherever you get involved, the systems fall apart a little bit.
Oh yeah. The rule in both companies is don't let Jonathan touch anything with a system,
a process, a plug or a battery, because I
tend to break everything.
So in fact, stepping aside for a month could enable team members to really double down
on their strengths and strengthen the two businesses while you have your hands out of
the honey jar.
Entirely possible.
Okay.
I also love that you said, yes, you've been writing your whole career and efficiency is a strength. So in a way, you said you got to earn your way into this, but you could be confident that if you were to go into a completely unplugged month, you would come out with something substantial and that would be far better than this constant friction and tug and pressure you're feeling now while trying to do it at the same time as doing everything else. Yeah. No, I definitely feel that way.
Okay. So let's move on to the second stage, design.
So just to put a cap on it then, that was about the align, like stage one align. We talked about
values, we talked about energy, and we talked about strengths.
Yes. Is this aligned? Maybe we would have come to the realization it's not the time for you to work on this at all. But your energy and your values, it's completely aligned with what lights
you up, what you're great at. Oh my goodness. I wish we all could spend a month and come out
with something as meaningful as I know you will. So it seems super aligned. Nothing in your energy
was saying that it's not the time or not the the right project. Cool. So then now, now we can be intentional about design. So design covers
ideal outcome, impact, and then we'll design the process. So like how we free you from your
business in order to do this. So what is your ideal outcome? If you were to go away for a month,
what would you want to come back with?
A solid, let's call it draft of a manuscript. And again, I'm not sure whether this ever sees the light of day as a commercial piece of work, but I still want it to be sort of like a complete
piece of work. Absolutely.
So I would say like the outcome would be a solid draft of a manuscript.
Beautiful. And what would be your solid draft of a manuscript. Beautiful.
And what would be your ideal outcome for the two businesses?
The ideal outcome was that nobody would know I was gone.
They would function as effectively and efficiently.
Everything that needed to be done would be done.
And maybe even better without me in the mix.
Awesome. Awesome.
Awesome.
So ideal outcome is you come back with a manuscript in draft form and no one really even notices you're gone.
The month flies by.
Maybe things even improve because you're gone during this time.
Yep.
Anything else for ideal outcomes?
How will you feel at the end of this month?
Content. Like the feeling that I had the final day, like the final hour, the final day that I spent a month building a guitar
was just like a full body. Oh, hell yeah, that was worth it. And now I'm proud of what I, what I did. So that, like that feeling.
That's so beautiful. Content and proud.
Yeah.
Awesome. What about ideal impact? So we, we may not all, all of us listening may not get to see
the manuscript TBD.
But what impact do you want to have on the person who it is for, person or people, plural?
What impact do you hope that this will have?
For them to feel seen, to know me differently, and to feel better prepared to take on the world.
For them to feel seen, for them to know you even deeper and feel prepared to take on the world.
Yeah, I think so. I love it. Any other impact or what about like on you,
on the business or anything else in terms of designing the ideal impact of this project in
this time? The impact on me, just knowing that it's out of my head, you know, that I took this
thing and it now exists outside of me.
Yes. And you described at the beginning feeling tension because it's kind of knocking at your
door, it seems like, and it's on your mind and it's getting ready for you. We talked about the
fruit metaphor, but that at the end of this month, you could feel relieved a little bit. It's stage one. It's out, at least out of your mind. And maybe that would enable you to actually something that either in its state or adjusted,
it was something that would at some point be for public consumption, then there's a potential
impact at that scale as well. Absolutely. And that you'll know,
I think you can't quite know that until it's out. Draft one is out.
Yeah. So let's talk about the third part of design,
which is process. This is where we shift into a little bit of the nitty gritty.
At a high level, what would enable this to flow?
So how do you want to design the month, whether it's where you are, what decisions you need to make?
And then we could also look at process in terms of stepping away from the business for this month of what needs to happen.
Yeah.
So on two levels, one would be probably to find a place to go for a month where the physical
location was beautiful, was inspiring, was natural.
Also, by sort of like the nature of what it was removed a lot of distractions and probably had
really terrible cell signal and and super slow wi-fi so that i was like not you know it was just
so hard to try and like do all the things that would normally distract me that i just gave on
up on them fairly quickly and also where i where I could be and physically feel at peace
and move my body and be in nature,
you know, like sort of like pulse between creation
and immersion in nature.
Because both of those tend to be a really powerful cycle
for me that one fuels the other, which fuels the other.
And of course be with my wife the whole time
so that we could sort of like be in it together to the extent that it was something that like would be nourishing to her also. Or maybe she's there for part of the process and structure, because a lot of what we do is
produce media and trainings and things like this, we'd have to really anticipate probably months
out, what's the buffer that we need to build in order for me to step away and know that we're
completely fine. We're all produced and ready to go and ready to air with multiple
properties and shows. And for any engagements, basically just block out a month where we're not
booking anything where I would actually be physically or virtually present for keynotes
or workshops and facilitating and stuff like that where I wouldn't be needed for anything like that.
I'm hearing three big homeworks, which are joy works.
Number one would be pick a location.
And maybe Stephanie would have fun picking with you because you said she's invited and it's with her, for her as well.
So picking somewhere in nature, ideally with terrible cell and Wi-Fi signal.
Picking the time window, so far enough out that you can plan and that you from now don't have
any keynotes or anything that requires your presence. And then the big, the third big chunk
is telling the team so you can get enough in the can, as we say in the biz, enough episodes
scheduled and ready that no one's in a scramble either before you go or afterward.
Yeah, no, I think those are like the three big things. Is there anything else that would fall apart during this month that if you
were not to design it now or upfront, they would go, oh my God, everything's on fire because Jonathan
is gone this month and we didn't think about X, Y, Z. Is there anything like that we're missing?
Put another way, is there anything that wouldn't be able to wait until you got back?
Probably very little.
I'm sure there would be some things, but nothing major is coming to mind right now.
Okay.
So those three big chunks, finding the joyful location, picking when, and then just creating a work back plan.
As you said, earn your way in. And the way you're going to earn your way in is just get a jump on all the media that you produce. Yep, that works.
Okay, so that's the design stage. We're designing the ideal outcome, the ideal impact,
and the ideal process. The third and final stage is assign. Who will do what by when?
So let's just get clear on those three things we just mentioned. Let's assign them.
You don't have to do it all.
You're just going to help get everyone on board.
And I know that's something you're really good at.
So who will do what by when?
Who needs to do what by when for these three things?
Well, I need to write.
That will be essential.
To source a location, I'd probably do that in harmony with Stephanie.
For those who don't know, Stephanie is my wife and business partner.
And very good at this.
I'll say she's very talented for finding joyful spots.
Really, really, really, really good at finding joyful spots. Um, we have lived in 18 different homes over the last 18 months before finally settling
into one longer term place.
So all sourced by her, um, on businesses, production teams that are in place. So it
would be a matter of just coordinating with those people already to make things happen,
but just to record at a pace where by a certain date we had enough episodes in the can where everybody felt
really good with me vanishing for a month. So the folks in production who we have in place,
and I think that would probably be it. Those would be the main things. Again, I'm sure there,
we have lots of other folks outside of our immediate teams, but that we'd probably need
to figure out little tweaks too. I don't think there's anyone new. We're not a giant like company.
So it's like fairly small number of people who handle different things. So it's like sort of
coordinating among our awesome human beings that this is coming and sort of like, this is how we
all need to prepare for it. And maybe to that end, a little fourth homework is just the communication plan while you're gone.
So is there a situation where they should email you or when do they text or call you of what scenarios might be happening?
But just so that everyone feels good, like they know when to bother you or not.
And you know that they'll get in touch when something's urgent.
Yeah, no, that sounds great.
Okay.
So we're recording this in February.
Oh, are you going to hold me to something?
Yes.
What month would be joyful from now, knowing what you know about your production schedule
and seasonality and this project that is just knocking at the door of your mind?
When would you love, when would be your ideal month to do this?
In theory, I would say May, but I'm not sure if that's enough lead time to make all of this happen. So it may be more realistically something like September where I can literally just buy
myself a month to completely vanish and do this, which isn't that far off in the larger context of things.
Totally. So May is ideal. That sparked something, thinking about May. And if it didn't put too much
undue pressure on the team, May seems like that called to you. And then back up could be August
or September. Yeah. No, that makes sense. Okay.
Great.
So with this in place, that assigned stage, you know, at least loosely defined, now rate on a scale of one to 10, we started at a six.
How do you feel about your approach to this writing project?
How do I feel about my approach to it?
Yeah.
Probably closer to an eight okay i feel like
it's not like it's not really entirely sussed out i'm not like you know like all in on it quite yet
but i can yes i can see more clearly like the steps that i would need to really think through
i understand like you know like why it's really important to me i understand what the outcome
is that i want what the impact i want from that is i have to think more about what the actual
granular processes would be like as part of that design stage so i think that's why i'm not entirely
there yet also because that's going to take some some figuring out and that's actually not my
sweet spot that's not the type of stuff that I'm super skilled at or love doing.
So I'll have to sort of like figure out
how to move through that.
And in terms of the like assigned part of it,
like I think that's actually relatively straightforward,
the who, what, when.
So I feel like I'm closer.
And once I actually figure out a granular process,
like here's what needs to happen between now and then,
then I start moving much closer to like, oh yeah, this is starting to feel really exciting.
Yes. Yeah. That we have at least the loose architecture of it. And maybe you could even
assign that piece you mentioned, like the granularity, maybe there is someone you can
engage to help you think that through or map it out. Yeah, no, for sure.
I always like to wrap up.
I like two questions.
I know you have your famous last question of the pod, but two questions to wrap up this
little micro coaching.
What's one insight or aha from this mini session?
Probably that there is this sort of like fairly straightforward linear process that if I want, if I'm walking around saying this really matters to me and I'm not doing it, that it was probably because I didn't just have sort of like a fairly straightforward process to just say this, then this, then this. And now I feel like I do. And there's still work to be and Gleepers, we crave for you to do this
project.
We might not ever see it, but knowing how much it lights you up and what a friggin talent
you are at writing and communicating, I think all of us could say, yes, Jonathan, please
step back from the day to day systems and go do your thing because we all benefit so
much from it.
Last question.
What's one small next step that you can take in the next week?
Okay.
So because this I think would be like one of the most fun things to do.
Stephanie and I looking for a place, a location, an escape, like a creative escape to make
it happen.
Yes.
Awesome.
So you're going to tell Stephanie and look and start looking for a place.
And I have to sneak in what one next step would have the biggest impact.
Figuring out our production schedule that would allow me the greatest amount of freedom to choose when to do this.
Okay.
I love it.
I have my orders.
You'll touch base with Steph.
You have your marching orders.
I might also add maybe just like starting an outline, like doing some, as far as big
impact, something on the creative side, like drop one next step into the creative bucket next step.
That's great.
Yeah.
Especially because I'm a maker.
So that actually is something that I would really,
that would immediately be energizing to me.
Yeah.
A little kindling to just get you excited for this.
This has been awesome.
This is super helpful.
And zooming the lens out, you know,
what I think is so fascinating too is, you know,
like the, we started the conversation around the context of free time and how valuable it is to us and how much we considered work, but it's actually just to do
something which has been something I've wanted to do for a long time that is a joyful expression of
my ideas, my identity, my craft, my skills, like the thing that I feel like I'm partly here to do,
even though it will take a lot of work and a lot of effort, and some of it will be angsty.
I'm buying my ability to do that effectively.
Because to me, that's one of the ways that I actually want to spend my quote free time,
whether it ever becomes something that's commercially viable or generates income or
revenue for the businesses or not. So I think it's just a really interesting sort of like frame on
how we can use these ideas to just create time and space to do whatever it is that we want to do, whether that's hiking on
the Appalachian Trail or just doing something that actually takes a lot of work, but that's
deeply meaningful to us. Absolutely. And I think when we are truly rested and present with our
free time where we're not doing anything at all. I think so many of us can
relate to that. We want to work on legacy projects, big, meaningful, juicy stuff, building guitars,
writing these meaningful words for others. Like that is so much of how I do think a lot of us
want to spend our free time is doing really meaningful work that we know can serve others and
help others and change the world.
Love that. And that feels like a good place for us to come full circle. So just as you asked me
your two closing questions for a mini coaching session, I'm going to ask you my final question,
which I ask with everyone. So sitting in this container of good life project, if I offer up
the phrase to live a good life, what comes up? I would say presence and choice, as we've been talking about these themes. But a good life is
the ability to be there and be in the moment and be present for whatever it is that we're doing,
and not to feel those tugs of guilt and angst and just not being able to keep up and burn out,
you know, so just really being able
to be present and good life is choosing, choosing who we want to spend our time with and how and
what to work on that. I think that is one of the greatest privileges that we can all work toward
if we're lucky. Thank you. Thank you so much, J.F. And thank you for being open and letting us all
into your world a little bit. It's really an honor. Before you leave, if you love this episode, safe bet you will also love the
conversation we had with Brene Brown about doing more of what fills you up and not getting derailed
by inner or outer criticism. You'll find a link to Brene's episode in the show notes. And of course,
if you haven't already done so, go ahead and follow Good Life Project
in your favorite listening app.
And if you appreciate the work
that we've been doing here on Good Life Project,
go check out my new book, Sparked.
It'll reveal some incredibly eye-opening things
about maybe one of your favorite subjects, you,
and then show you how to tap these insights
to reimagine and reinvent work
as a source of meaning, purpose, and joy. You'll find
a link in the show notes, or you can also find it at your favorite bookseller now. Until next time,
I'm Jonathan Fields, signing off for Good Life Project. Apple Watch Series 10 making it even more comfortable on your wrist, whether you're running, swimming, or sleeping.
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Mayday, mayday. We've been compromised. The pilot's a hitman. I knew you were gonna be fun. January 24th. Tell me how to fly this thing. results will vary.