When do you know that it’s time? Introducing a month of posts about how I learned to stop worrying, buck up and do the work.
I’ve had a song stuck in my head for a few weeks now, and it just won’t leave. It’s called “Too Late Too Soon,” and it’s by a Nashville musician, Will Hoge. The song is technically about love lost, but that’s not what I heard when I first heard it.
Hoge sings:
But you say that it’s too late too soon
And your eyes ain’t the only thing blue
I try and I try just to make one thing true
But sometimes it’s just too late too soon
But what I heard was this: You wanted something, and you worked for it, and the timing just never worked out.
There were a handful of points during my adventures with Stry.us where I realized the importance of timing. I’d be doing work that I thought was really great, but then I’d try to get the work out into the world, and I’d get pushback. Sometimes, they weren’t ready for the work I was doing. More often, I wasn’t ready for the work they wanted.
The cycles weren’t lining up, and I was frustrated.
I tried and tried, but you can’t change timing. Sometimes, it really is too late, and sometimes, it really is too soon.
So this month, I’m going to write exclusively here on the blog about the concept of Too Late/Too Soon, and walk you through the entirety of Stry.us. I hope that people out there who want to do great work read these posts and understand: We all go through this. We all struggle with it.
With patience, and hustle, and time, the work can eventually get out there.
Come along this month with me. Learn from my mistakes.
We have much to learn about our work.