19 min

Fighting fear and stepping into your calling 8 Minute Mastermind

    • Emprendimiento

Charity is a middle and high school teacher. She thinks it's time to pursue entrepreneurship. She's celebrating a family reunion for the first time in six years. 
 
01:40 Challenge: I know I'm interested in being an entrepreneur, but I have no idea what I want to do. 
02:00 Opportunities have presented themselves, that sound great. But I have reservations. I think I'm still stuck in my teacher mindset.
02:18 Question: Why can't you be a teacher? Why can't you do that as an entrepreneur?
02:26 Charity: I still want to teach, regardless of what I do.
02:29 Question: What do you love to teach? 
02:37 Psychology.
02:42 Suggestion: So that's like information; you could sell that all day long! 
02:48 Question: What format do you want to teach to? Courses? Online? Events?
02:55 Charity: I'd like to do it in-person. 
03:03 Suggestion: You have a great presence about you. You'd easily sell tickets. 
03:12 Suggestion: You look like an expert. You're eloquent - your energy, the way you carry yourself. 
03:17 Question: What's the fear?
03:20 Charity: I don't know where to start. I've had some opportunities come up in network marketing and trading. My question is, do I go after something that I know works? 
03:48 Brad: Both of those have a steep learning curve, and a lot of risk. Trading especially. 
04:02 Suggestion: It's funny that you're asking if you should go after something that "works" after you just said that teaching works. Being a teacher is in your bones. It's about shifting that to a different format. 
04:31 Question: If you could have it all your way, what would that look like?
04:38 Charity: I love the age group that I teach, but I'd be teaching lots of different things related to psychology, with young adults or adults. Mostly young adults, college age. 
04:58 Question: Is there a specific reason why you like teaching young adults about psychology?
05:05 Charity: I want them to know themselves. I didn't when I was that age. I've learned a lot, so I want to give that back.
05:15 Question: What results will they get from knowing themselves at that age? 
05:22 Charity: Not going after things that they're told to do. Looking at the world differently. Being confident.
05:36 So you want to create a generation of critical thinkers who living lives that create for themselves, as opposed to fitting into a mould? That's pretty powerful!
05:47 Brad: Are you worried that you won't make enough money? 
05:53 Charity: Yeah.
05:54 Brad: The self-education industry, which is essentially what you're talking about, is $355 million a day industry that's poised to triple in the next five years, to $1 billion a day? That's 1,000 $1 million a day!
06:13 Question: What's your bare minimum that you would want to make? That would make it okay to leave your job?
06:24 Charity: I've thought about this a lot. $250,000. I don't know why. That's what makes sense to me. 
06:43 This is a beautiful vision. I know motivational speakers that travel to high schools around the world, and they get paid big bucks, because the school has the money. They change 1,000s of lives at a time, in person. And they get an exciting life. I also know people who are deep in with small groups. 
07:48 It can look a lot of different ways.
07:55 Or it could be online, teaching homeschoolers or other teachers. 
08:06 Question: What other fears do you have? If you hold on to the vision, it will pull you to it. It's the fears that you have that are blocking you.
08:22 Charity: I guess just believing that I'm worth that. I'm so stuck in my path, that I know and is comfortable, that it's hard to look outside that, and believe that I can do it. 
08:50 So before you learn how to ride a bike it was unknown. It was probably scary. But as you do it, it becomes second nature. It's the same for every big decision we make. There's always a learning curve. We all struggle with worthiness. 
09:50 There's a

Charity is a middle and high school teacher. She thinks it's time to pursue entrepreneurship. She's celebrating a family reunion for the first time in six years. 
 
01:40 Challenge: I know I'm interested in being an entrepreneur, but I have no idea what I want to do. 
02:00 Opportunities have presented themselves, that sound great. But I have reservations. I think I'm still stuck in my teacher mindset.
02:18 Question: Why can't you be a teacher? Why can't you do that as an entrepreneur?
02:26 Charity: I still want to teach, regardless of what I do.
02:29 Question: What do you love to teach? 
02:37 Psychology.
02:42 Suggestion: So that's like information; you could sell that all day long! 
02:48 Question: What format do you want to teach to? Courses? Online? Events?
02:55 Charity: I'd like to do it in-person. 
03:03 Suggestion: You have a great presence about you. You'd easily sell tickets. 
03:12 Suggestion: You look like an expert. You're eloquent - your energy, the way you carry yourself. 
03:17 Question: What's the fear?
03:20 Charity: I don't know where to start. I've had some opportunities come up in network marketing and trading. My question is, do I go after something that I know works? 
03:48 Brad: Both of those have a steep learning curve, and a lot of risk. Trading especially. 
04:02 Suggestion: It's funny that you're asking if you should go after something that "works" after you just said that teaching works. Being a teacher is in your bones. It's about shifting that to a different format. 
04:31 Question: If you could have it all your way, what would that look like?
04:38 Charity: I love the age group that I teach, but I'd be teaching lots of different things related to psychology, with young adults or adults. Mostly young adults, college age. 
04:58 Question: Is there a specific reason why you like teaching young adults about psychology?
05:05 Charity: I want them to know themselves. I didn't when I was that age. I've learned a lot, so I want to give that back.
05:15 Question: What results will they get from knowing themselves at that age? 
05:22 Charity: Not going after things that they're told to do. Looking at the world differently. Being confident.
05:36 So you want to create a generation of critical thinkers who living lives that create for themselves, as opposed to fitting into a mould? That's pretty powerful!
05:47 Brad: Are you worried that you won't make enough money? 
05:53 Charity: Yeah.
05:54 Brad: The self-education industry, which is essentially what you're talking about, is $355 million a day industry that's poised to triple in the next five years, to $1 billion a day? That's 1,000 $1 million a day!
06:13 Question: What's your bare minimum that you would want to make? That would make it okay to leave your job?
06:24 Charity: I've thought about this a lot. $250,000. I don't know why. That's what makes sense to me. 
06:43 This is a beautiful vision. I know motivational speakers that travel to high schools around the world, and they get paid big bucks, because the school has the money. They change 1,000s of lives at a time, in person. And they get an exciting life. I also know people who are deep in with small groups. 
07:48 It can look a lot of different ways.
07:55 Or it could be online, teaching homeschoolers or other teachers. 
08:06 Question: What other fears do you have? If you hold on to the vision, it will pull you to it. It's the fears that you have that are blocking you.
08:22 Charity: I guess just believing that I'm worth that. I'm so stuck in my path, that I know and is comfortable, that it's hard to look outside that, and believe that I can do it. 
08:50 So before you learn how to ride a bike it was unknown. It was probably scary. But as you do it, it becomes second nature. It's the same for every big decision we make. There's always a learning curve. We all struggle with worthiness. 
09:50 There's a

19 min