The One Thing
question
Focus

In Chapter 1, the author propounds: “Extraordinary results are directly determined by how narrow you can make your focus."
Chase Reeves, Fizzle co-founder, rests supreme importance on focus, writing:
Focus really changes everything. It supercharges your natural talents, your humanity. Here’s a few things I’ve learned about focus:
Focus is “this, not that.”
Focus is like grit. Maybe grit is the momentum of focus.
Clarity comes before focus… Clarity makes the blueprint. Focus orders the parts, manages the labor, builds the house.
Focus is a battery… it’s an energy source, it powers you up. Fk’n cheezy sounding, I know. But it’s true.
Focus comes from earnest digging… self awareness, a real desire to find something, the guts to move on when you know this thing is not what you’re looking for.
Earnest digging doesn’t have a deadline… you commit to the work, the digging, the search, and to yourself as the digger. You can’t commit to finding focus. It comes to you when it trusts you, like Pressfield’s muse.
There’s a deep connection between focus and faith… the digging convinces you about yourself; who you are, what you’re good at, why you’re here, where you’re valuable. Faith is not decision, you don’t just decide to focus on something; you’ll fizzle out. There has to be a deep belief that this is for you… that it’s possible for you. Faith is not deciding and then gritting your teeth and muscling your way through it. It’s more like this.
Feedback leads to focus… From Father Apprentice to Ice to the Brim to Fizzle, The Fizzle Show and The Sparkline, hearing from multiple hundreds of people about what they like, what they struggle with, where they are and what they want has built a faith in me about what I’m good at, what I can make that’s valuable for other people.
The best feedback comes from real work… make things, then connect with people about those things. You could talk to folks up front, but I always need to get my hands dirty to hear what they mean.
Focus takes forever… It took me 10 years of trying pretty damn hard to get to any clarity or focus. I was the entrepreneur in the Feld quote above for those 10 years; thrashing, manic, depressed, way too confident, way too clueless… I was so over-confident about the wrong things and unaware of the good stuff I actually did have. This pressure didn’t help one bit. I wish I could have given myself a break and invested in the digging… which is a way of investing in myself.
SweatWorkers - some food for thought as we read the beginning of this book...
What are your thoughts on focus? Do you ascribe similar importance to it in your life and business? Less? More?
How do you find focus? What behaviors do you employ for focus - whether immediate (blasting music and dancing around the room, or three full breaths, before attending a task); routine (good sleep every night); external (caffeine or herbal supplements)? Do you think your "focus behaviors" are healthy and, if not, what could be substituted?
Chase Reeves, Fizzle co-founder, rests supreme importance on focus, writing:
Focus really changes everything. It supercharges your natural talents, your humanity. Here’s a few things I’ve learned about focus:
Focus is “this, not that.”
Focus is like grit. Maybe grit is the momentum of focus.
Clarity comes before focus… Clarity makes the blueprint. Focus orders the parts, manages the labor, builds the house.
Focus is a battery… it’s an energy source, it powers you up. Fk’n cheezy sounding, I know. But it’s true.
Focus comes from earnest digging… self awareness, a real desire to find something, the guts to move on when you know this thing is not what you’re looking for.
Earnest digging doesn’t have a deadline… you commit to the work, the digging, the search, and to yourself as the digger. You can’t commit to finding focus. It comes to you when it trusts you, like Pressfield’s muse.
There’s a deep connection between focus and faith… the digging convinces you about yourself; who you are, what you’re good at, why you’re here, where you’re valuable. Faith is not decision, you don’t just decide to focus on something; you’ll fizzle out. There has to be a deep belief that this is for you… that it’s possible for you. Faith is not deciding and then gritting your teeth and muscling your way through it. It’s more like this.
Feedback leads to focus… From Father Apprentice to Ice to the Brim to Fizzle, The Fizzle Show and The Sparkline, hearing from multiple hundreds of people about what they like, what they struggle with, where they are and what they want has built a faith in me about what I’m good at, what I can make that’s valuable for other people.
The best feedback comes from real work… make things, then connect with people about those things. You could talk to folks up front, but I always need to get my hands dirty to hear what they mean.
Focus takes forever… It took me 10 years of trying pretty damn hard to get to any clarity or focus. I was the entrepreneur in the Feld quote above for those 10 years; thrashing, manic, depressed, way too confident, way too clueless… I was so over-confident about the wrong things and unaware of the good stuff I actually did have. This pressure didn’t help one bit. I wish I could have given myself a break and invested in the digging… which is a way of investing in myself.
SweatWorkers - some food for thought as we read the beginning of this book...
What are your thoughts on focus? Do you ascribe similar importance to it in your life and business? Less? More?
How do you find focus? What behaviors do you employ for focus - whether immediate (blasting music and dancing around the room, or three full breaths, before attending a task); routine (good sleep every night); external (caffeine or herbal supplements)? Do you think your "focus behaviors" are healthy and, if not, what could be substituted?
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