Slow down, speed kills
Nov 29, 2021 1:01 pm
Hey there
I was trying to do so much…
But I had it wrong.
You see...
Space is where miracles occur.
And so I began to create space for myself.
And I slowed everything down.
Slow down your conversations with clients and you will notice things they can’t yet see.
Slow down your intake conversations with potential clients and you will create space for them to delve deeper into their lives than ever before.
Slow down the time you spend preparing for a meeting with a new client and you will think of questions that no one has ever asked them.
Slow down enough to get a sense of your client’s world before you meet them and you will be more present for them than anyone else has ever been for them.
I once read that Thomas Edison went fishing a lot.
But he was a terrible fisherman.
He used to spend an hour almost every day fishing but he never caught any fish.
If you are wondering why a genius would be obsessed with fishing when he was so bad at it, you are not the only one.
Someone once asked him why he was such a poor fisherman.
He replied, “I never caught any fish because I never used any bait.”
When they asked why he’d fish without bait, he responded..
“Because when you fish without bait, people don’t bother you, and neither do the fish. It provides me my best time to think.”
It was definitely no coincidence that the world’s best scientist was also the world’s worst fisherman.
Edison really got the power of silence, the power of space and the power of slowing down.
And one day, fishing with a bamboo pole, he had the insight to try bamboo as the filament for the first ever electric light bulb.
Practice regularly setting aside time for yourself to do nothing.
Put time on your calendar for committed, quiet, creative time.
And practice making this time as important a priority as a meeting with a client.
Which area of your life or practice would benefit from you slowing down, right now?
CTM