Are You a Multi-Possibilitarian?
When you stand for a lot and can’t choose there is a point of saturation that happens and you get overwhelmed and don’t know how to move forward and take action because of all that chaos in your head.
Do you have many talents and interests?
Are you passionate about many things?
Do you get caught up in the many possibilities for yourself?
Welcome to the Multi-Possibilitarian Club!
Over the past 10 years as an online entrepreneur, I’ve explored many rabbit holes developing skills and expertise in many areas including branding, marketing, coaching and business strategy — and I use all of those in my business mentoring and courage coaching practice.
But I have sub-passions that serve my coaching practice well. Passions — such as spirituality and activism — that I bring alive in various ways throughout the Brave Yes brand ecosystem.
Rather than see passions as possible paths to niche down and go all in on, I encourage my clients to embrace them and use them holistically in your work.
This is what I call your Brave Yes Impact Zone and once you nail it, your feelings of creativity, freedom, wholeness and joy return to you fivefold.
Over the years, I’ve seen multi-possibilitarians called renaissance souls, multipassionates and multipotentialites.
Are You a Multi-Possibilitarian?
In my experience working with thousands of women around the world over the past 25 years, many of us have a lot of goals, desires and interests.
But, the explosion of the ability to easily and effortlessly learn online has exponentially created experts in many things out of all of us.
All that learning needs a place to express itself!
Perhaps you’ve found yourself thinking … I need to focus on just one thing.
When you stand for a lot and can’t choose there is a point of saturation that happens and you get overwhelmed and don’t know how to move forward and take action because of all that chaos in your head.
I’ve been there. My clients have been there. Many times.
I was working with a filmmaker earlier this year who embodied the definition of multi-possibilitarian perfectly. If this word was in the dictionary, there would be a picture of her.
What we had to do to help her market and get funding for her film was pull back the many, many layers of her interests and depth of knowledge and distill it down to a simple, relatable and passionate idea she could communicate with confidence.
This focus container opened a space for her to embrace her many multitudes — and she was able to market her work so much more clearly.
Rather than see passions as possible paths to niche down and go all in on, I encourage you to embrace them all by creating a container that stores them all strategically in your life’s work.
The key is to know which passions will serve your work and which ones will take away from it.
I help consultants, thought leaders and creators find their umbrella mission that serves as a personal or business brand superpower. Finding this umbrella mission and going all in on it allows you to operate with focus and clarity.
So … What do you stand for?
One thing?
Many things?
Nothing, yet?
Doesn’t matter — so long as you are ready and willing to lean in, find it and use it.
That’s where you can begin to lead more boldly.
The essential piece of this puzzle is to know which passions serve your life’s work and which ones take away from it.
I help my clients find their umbrella mission that serves as their personal or business brand superpower. '
Finding an umbrella mission and going all in on it allows you to operate with focus and clarity.