It's was easy to say "I want to go into full time consulting", it was not easy to leave behind people that I won, lost, laughed, bled, cried, and sang karaoke with. It was difficult to leave behind a well paying position and give up my stock in a high profile, high growth company in exchange for paying my own insurance, finding my own work, and having no guarantees. It's exciting but the fear is more than I expected. I assumed I would find a new surge of courage after I stepped out on my own and became "free" to do what I wanted. I should have known better.
I think the easy part is over. I seem to have a whole list of things that scare me now. Recently, I put together a list of things I needed to do and instead of rating them by importance or urgency, I rated them by how scary they are. Here it is:
- Contract with client A (very scary)
- Contact people about part time work (very scary)
- Invoice Client B (not scary)
- Remaining hours for Client B (not scary)
- Email guy I went to church with who now may be able to send work my way (very scary)
- Follow up with potential client who keeps blowing me off because they think I'm too small (very scary)
- Invoice Client C (not scary)
- Finish reading book (not scary)
- Write employee handbook (kinda scary)
- Client D system restores (not scary)
- Work on open source project I want to help with (kinda scary)
- Follow up with people now that I'm gone (very scary)
- Redesign website (very scary)
- A blog entry (EXTREMELY SCARY)
- Business budgeting/ book keeping for 2011 (very scary)
I want to acknowledge my fear and be real about it. When my kids are afraid I tell them that courage is taking action when you're afraid. I have to set the example.
So here I am with this domain I've owned for almost two years now, I don't like the design and it is definitely not how it needs to be. But I know myself, if I wait until it is "just right", I'll never get started. So here I am, diving in.
I hope the kids are proud someday.
Great post. Congratulations on going out on your own--huge (and, yes, scary) step!
ReplyDelete> I hope the kids are proud someday.
I like that.