Girl Code: Unlocking the Secrets to Success, Sanity, and Happiness for the Female Entrepreneur
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Girl Code by Cara Alwill Leyba (1)
You Better Work
“I never dreamed of success, I worked for it.” – Estee Lauder By most standards, I am a workaholic. I work seven days a week. I over-serve my clients. I over-deliver in all areas. I work on every single holiday. I work on vacation. I wake up early and start working before I’ve even had a sip of coffee (which my husband finds completely insane). I often wake up in the middle of the night to check my email or respond to social media comments. I understand that my success depends entirely on myself. But none of this feels like work because I am passionate about what I do. When you are aligned with your purpose and truly doing what you love, it feels like a privilege to get to do it every single day. I feel so lucky that people want to read my books and enroll in my coaching programs. I also remind myself of the long, hard road I took to get here, and I am grateful every single day. This doesn’t mean you shouldn’t take a break, get a message, or even go on vacation. But if you’re under the impression that you don’t have to live and breathe your business every day – at least in the beginning while you’re building it up – you are sorely mistaken. When I first became a life coach, I was working in my full-time job at MTV. In fact, I was a director with major responsibilities, a team of twenty people under me, and a hefty workload. The months leading up to receiving my coaching certification were brutal. I’d work eight hours a day (on top of commuting three hours round trip from Brooklyn to Manhattan), then come home, eat dinner, and attend coaching school for three hours per night, two nights a week. The other nights were spent buddy coaching classmates on the phone and working on assignments. I was also blogging regularly at The Champagne Diet. It was exhausting, it was stressful, but it was worth every second. I knew I wanted to become a coach and I knew I wanted to leave MTV. My hustle was my escape plan. After receiving my certification, I launched my coaching practice. Still working at MTV, I’d take my clients in the evenings and on weekends. I also began writing my first book, Sparkle, during that time, so every spare minute was filled with hustling to make my dreams a reality. I used my vacation and personal days to work on book edits. I declined weekend getaways with my girlfriends and stopped watching television. If you’re feeling overwhelmed, or thinking you don’t have time to work on your business, think again. You can eliminate more things out of your day than you realize. Work during your commute, wake up an hour earlier, and slice your time on Facebook in half. Instead of surfing the web during your lunch hour, use that time to dream up new ideas or research a new project. Give up Netflix for a night. We all have the same hours in a day. It’s how you choose to spend them that counts. And there is always, always a choice. Download 0.97 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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