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In this episode, I share a lesson that came to me while spending a full day working on the landscaping in front of our home.
What began as a simple Saturday project of trimming bushes quickly became a powerful metaphor for life and business. Some of the shrubs in our landscaping had grown far beyond their intended place. They were healthy in one sense, but they had become invasive, disproportionate, and unmanaged. A light trim was not enough. Some of them had to be cut all the way back to the core.
As I worked through that process, I realized that the same thing has been happening in areas of my life and business.
Through my daily audio journaling practice, I have been paying closer attention to where my time, energy, focus, and commitments are actually going. That practice has revealed places where good things have grown beyond their proper boundaries. Some activities are valuable, but they have started to encroach on the space intended for something else.
In this episode, I talk about how this has shown up in my business calendar, my invitation engine, my CRM, podcast production, commitments, spending, tools, and even identity. I also share how I am learning to distinguish between what needs a light trim, what needs radical pruning, and what may need to be removed altogether.
The central idea is this:
Unmanaged growth is not the same as healthy growth.
Sometimes the next level does not begin by adding something new. Sometimes it begins by cutting back what has overgrown.
Not everything that grows is healthy simply because it is growing.
Some things in life and business start out useful, beautiful, or productive, but if they are left unmanaged, they can eventually take over more space than they were ever meant to occupy.
The work of pruning is the work of intentional leadership.
If this episode resonates with you and you would like help getting clarity on where to prune, where to simplify, and where to focus next, feel free to reach out.
Email: [email protected]
Until next time, I encourage you to take everything you do in your life to the next level.
By Cliff Ravenscraft3.7
33 ratings
In this episode, I share a lesson that came to me while spending a full day working on the landscaping in front of our home.
What began as a simple Saturday project of trimming bushes quickly became a powerful metaphor for life and business. Some of the shrubs in our landscaping had grown far beyond their intended place. They were healthy in one sense, but they had become invasive, disproportionate, and unmanaged. A light trim was not enough. Some of them had to be cut all the way back to the core.
As I worked through that process, I realized that the same thing has been happening in areas of my life and business.
Through my daily audio journaling practice, I have been paying closer attention to where my time, energy, focus, and commitments are actually going. That practice has revealed places where good things have grown beyond their proper boundaries. Some activities are valuable, but they have started to encroach on the space intended for something else.
In this episode, I talk about how this has shown up in my business calendar, my invitation engine, my CRM, podcast production, commitments, spending, tools, and even identity. I also share how I am learning to distinguish between what needs a light trim, what needs radical pruning, and what may need to be removed altogether.
The central idea is this:
Unmanaged growth is not the same as healthy growth.
Sometimes the next level does not begin by adding something new. Sometimes it begins by cutting back what has overgrown.
Not everything that grows is healthy simply because it is growing.
Some things in life and business start out useful, beautiful, or productive, but if they are left unmanaged, they can eventually take over more space than they were ever meant to occupy.
The work of pruning is the work of intentional leadership.
If this episode resonates with you and you would like help getting clarity on where to prune, where to simplify, and where to focus next, feel free to reach out.
Email: [email protected]
Until next time, I encourage you to take everything you do in your life to the next level.