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Hi.
I am Sergey Faldin.
And this is the Honest Creative Podcast.
***
I canât say it was easy. It was scary.
But after several months of deliberation, I finally did it. I hit âpublishâ on my Anchor dashboard and now my new podcast is available on eight major platforms.
But because I love you, youâll be receiving new episode updates right here, in the comfort of your email inbox. So thereâs no need to go anywhere unless you prefer to listen to it elsewhere.
Making this podcast already taught me two things about the creative process.
#1. The only way to fight procrastination is to set yourself deadlines.
This reminds me of what Tim Urban (Wait But Why) said in his famous TED talk, âWeâre all procrastinators. Some of us are just worse than others.â
Unless thereâs a deadline coming up, thereâs no âpanic monsterâ. The monkey mind keeps postponing the task in favor of watching whale videos on YouTube.
I told myself I should go live in the first week of September.
Was I ready? No.
But this is exactly why you need deadlines: youâre never fully ready.
#2. âGood enoughâ is good enough.
I canât say I am 100% happy with how the first few episodes (which youâll hear throughout September) turned out.
But itâs âgood enoughâ. And I trained myself to be OK with âgood enough.â
Because when you reach for the stars, for perfection, what you usually end up with is nothing (or, in worse cases, s**t).
As soon as I picked a jingle that was âgood enoughâ and recorded an intro that was âokâ, I knew I had to publish. After all, the deadline was zooming in.
âWhatâs the way to get projects done on time and budget?â
âSimple. As soon as you run out of time or budget, hit publish.â
So there. Enjoy the short intro. And wait for the next email with the actual first episode. (That should be tomorrow.)
Recording the episodes youâre about to listen to over the next few weeks was a thrill. It was a lot of work â preparing, shooting, editing, putting it all together.
But it didnât feel like work.
When I look at people making money podcasting, I see how good they have it. They get to talk to amazing people, discussing interesting topics, and get paid for it. If thereâs a better job, please tell me about it.
Which is to say, I am enjoying every minute of preparing these interviews for you. (I hope you like them!)
You can check out the Anchor page for this podcast â where you can see all the episodes and click on any platform you like.
And, of course, if you like what you hear â please share it with a friend or two.
We need your support.
As for me, thereâs no turning back. I quit my job a few weeks back and I am in this for the long haul. Letâs just see what happens.
P.S. What do you think of the cover?
By Sergey FaldinHi.
I am Sergey Faldin.
And this is the Honest Creative Podcast.
***
I canât say it was easy. It was scary.
But after several months of deliberation, I finally did it. I hit âpublishâ on my Anchor dashboard and now my new podcast is available on eight major platforms.
But because I love you, youâll be receiving new episode updates right here, in the comfort of your email inbox. So thereâs no need to go anywhere unless you prefer to listen to it elsewhere.
Making this podcast already taught me two things about the creative process.
#1. The only way to fight procrastination is to set yourself deadlines.
This reminds me of what Tim Urban (Wait But Why) said in his famous TED talk, âWeâre all procrastinators. Some of us are just worse than others.â
Unless thereâs a deadline coming up, thereâs no âpanic monsterâ. The monkey mind keeps postponing the task in favor of watching whale videos on YouTube.
I told myself I should go live in the first week of September.
Was I ready? No.
But this is exactly why you need deadlines: youâre never fully ready.
#2. âGood enoughâ is good enough.
I canât say I am 100% happy with how the first few episodes (which youâll hear throughout September) turned out.
But itâs âgood enoughâ. And I trained myself to be OK with âgood enough.â
Because when you reach for the stars, for perfection, what you usually end up with is nothing (or, in worse cases, s**t).
As soon as I picked a jingle that was âgood enoughâ and recorded an intro that was âokâ, I knew I had to publish. After all, the deadline was zooming in.
âWhatâs the way to get projects done on time and budget?â
âSimple. As soon as you run out of time or budget, hit publish.â
So there. Enjoy the short intro. And wait for the next email with the actual first episode. (That should be tomorrow.)
Recording the episodes youâre about to listen to over the next few weeks was a thrill. It was a lot of work â preparing, shooting, editing, putting it all together.
But it didnât feel like work.
When I look at people making money podcasting, I see how good they have it. They get to talk to amazing people, discussing interesting topics, and get paid for it. If thereâs a better job, please tell me about it.
Which is to say, I am enjoying every minute of preparing these interviews for you. (I hope you like them!)
You can check out the Anchor page for this podcast â where you can see all the episodes and click on any platform you like.
And, of course, if you like what you hear â please share it with a friend or two.
We need your support.
As for me, thereâs no turning back. I quit my job a few weeks back and I am in this for the long haul. Letâs just see what happens.
P.S. What do you think of the cover?