
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


This episode is short and direct — and it centers on an idea that runs counter to how most of us try to solve creative problems. When we feel stuck, uncertain, or restless, our instinct is usually to think harder. To analyze. To wait for clarity.
But here's the truth I've learned the hard way: you can't think your way forward.
Clarity doesn't come from sitting on the couch running mental simulations. It comes from action. From making. From trying things in the real world and paying attention to what happens next.
Early in my career, I hit a real creative rut. I questioned whether photography was truly my thing, or whether some other medium might be a better fit. And I could have stayed stuck in that loop for months — thinking, debating, second-guessing. Instead, I ran experiments. I tried painting. I learned from it. And just as importantly, I learned what wasn't my path.
Here's the core idea: action beats intellect.
Thinking has its place, but it's a terrible primary strategy for getting unstuck. You don't reason your way into momentum — you move your way into it. Volume creates insight. Making creates feedback. And feedback is what quiets doubt.
This episode is about why experimentation isn't a distraction from commitment — it's how commitment is formed. It's about turning down the noise in your head by turning up the work.
In today's episode I cover:
If you've been waiting to feel "ready" before you move, this episode is a reminder that readiness follows action — not the other way around.
Until next time, default to action — and remember: you can't think your way forward.
By Chase Jarvis4.8
570570 ratings
This episode is short and direct — and it centers on an idea that runs counter to how most of us try to solve creative problems. When we feel stuck, uncertain, or restless, our instinct is usually to think harder. To analyze. To wait for clarity.
But here's the truth I've learned the hard way: you can't think your way forward.
Clarity doesn't come from sitting on the couch running mental simulations. It comes from action. From making. From trying things in the real world and paying attention to what happens next.
Early in my career, I hit a real creative rut. I questioned whether photography was truly my thing, or whether some other medium might be a better fit. And I could have stayed stuck in that loop for months — thinking, debating, second-guessing. Instead, I ran experiments. I tried painting. I learned from it. And just as importantly, I learned what wasn't my path.
Here's the core idea: action beats intellect.
Thinking has its place, but it's a terrible primary strategy for getting unstuck. You don't reason your way into momentum — you move your way into it. Volume creates insight. Making creates feedback. And feedback is what quiets doubt.
This episode is about why experimentation isn't a distraction from commitment — it's how commitment is formed. It's about turning down the noise in your head by turning up the work.
In today's episode I cover:
If you've been waiting to feel "ready" before you move, this episode is a reminder that readiness follows action — not the other way around.
Until next time, default to action — and remember: you can't think your way forward.

16,196 Listeners

1,230 Listeners

3,396 Listeners

16,856 Listeners

4,605 Listeners

11,935 Listeners

21,250 Listeners

12,786 Listeners

1,665 Listeners

12,101 Listeners

1,657 Listeners

8,924 Listeners

4,956 Listeners

2,215 Listeners

29,457 Listeners