Breaking Free from Productivity Paralysis

If you’re a creative or entrepreneur, you’ve probably felt the weight of too many ideas, too many deadlines, too many shiny objects, and not enough real accomplishments. The half-finished projects. The Word docs full of first chapters you abandoned, convinced they were terrible.

I know it well, because I’m a writer. This is how we tend to operate.

My Own Worst Enemy

There have been days where I’ve sat at my desk, staring at the blinking cursor, completely frozen. Not because I didn’t care about the work, but because I cared too much. Everything sounded amateur in my head, boring and not worth sharing. The pressure to create something meaningful, something flawless, something that would finally live up to my own standards was numbing.

Other times, it wasn’t perfectionism but redirection. Should I chase this new client idea? Build that product I thought of during my morning run? Get back to writing? Or maybe just clean the house so I feel more “ready”? (Cleaning is my go-to procrastination tactic.)

From the outside, it looked like procrastination. On the inside, it was fear and overwhelm.

What’s Helped Me

Here’s what I’ve learned about moving through it:

  • Just friggin’ start. It doesn’t have to be perfect. That’s what I’m doing with my podcast.

  • Manage the scope. Every Monday I look at my week and plan my productivity windows. I work best in long, uninterrupted stretches, so I block off whole days to write and support my clients.

  • Set your schedule. Deadlines are my drug, and accountability is my currency. Small commitments keep me moving and help me balance my work with family time. It also keeps things interesting and challenging.

  • Collaboration is key. Hearing other creatives talk about their own messiness always reminds me I’m not the only one, and collaboration fuels creativity.

You’re Not Alone

If you’ve been there, or maybe you’re in it right now, please hear this: it’s not a flaw. It’s part of the creative life. The work isn’t to eliminate it. The work is to learn how to balance it.

That’s why I started sharing real stories on my podcast. Not the highlight reels, but the real stuff, the fear, the false starts, the breakthroughs, the breakdowns, the resilience.

I’d love for you to come hang out with us there. You’ll hear from entrepreneurs and creatives who are figuring it out in real time, just like you and me.

👉 Listen to the podcast here.

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Leaning on Community and Grit in the Hard Seasons