šš¼Ā Hey, IāmĀ Anna! Iām a founder and startup consultant in an ongoing relationship with writing. Welcome to my weekly newsletter, where I share insights and ideas across career, business, personal development, creativity, productivity..and everything in between.
In my late twenties I landed my dream job at Mecca; a beauty retail powerhouse with a cult-like following similar to Apple or Tesla (at least for the Aussie makeup junkies). After just a few months I found myself working directly with the CEO and founder Jo Horgan, who unlike me, had an impressive resume filled with accolades like āEY Entrepreneur of the Yearā and ā#38 on the AFR Rich Listā. It was my first time working with someone so doggedly determined, permanently optimistic, and equal parts charming and ruthless.
During those first few months I sat back a little, surveying the landscape and sussing out the dynamic. I rarely raised my hand in meetings and felt anxious expressing opinions to the team.
Some time later, a company-wide presentation was held to share recent results and plans for the year. As I entered the conference room, chairs laid out facing a presentation screen, I made a beeline for a seat at the back. At that exact moment Jo caught my eye and gestured to come and sit beside her up front. As the lights went down and the screen lit up, she leaned over and whisperedā¦
āAnna if thereās one piece of advice I can give you, itās to always sit in the front row.ā
Afterwards I pondered her words, and realised that she wasnāt just saying to literally sit in a chair up the front, but rather to sit in the front rowĀ of life.
Itās a nice sentiment but in practice, it aināt easy putting yourself out there. Many of us donāt do it, not because we lack ambition but because weāre scared. Scared of judgement, of looking dumb, or of how others will react. Iām no different - Iāve certainly shied away from tough situations because of how someone might respond. But a front-row mentality forces us to challenge these fears head on, and inspired by Joās tenacity I started to make big moves in my own life, ironically one being to quit my job at Mecca to start my own business (lol sorry, Jo).
Big bets and tiny choices.
Living a bold life can mean taking grand leaps and assuming large amounts of risk; leaving a steady paycheque to start a business, putting yourself forward for a role thatās above your capability and experience, saying yes to delivering a keynote at a conference.
But Iāve come to realise that being bold also looks mundane.
Itās having a hard conversation with your partner even though keeping the peace feels easier. Itās showing up to a blind date even though you might not get along. Itās saying I love you first. Itās deciding not to be a martyr and ask for help. Itās confronting the brutal facts of your life and recognising when the best decision is to walk away. Itās reaching out to your dream mentor on LinkedIn. Itās not saying yes when you mean no. These tiny moments might seem like nothing at first, but theyāre the daily decisions that, when stacked up, lead to our biggest and brightest wins.
If life is a novel, big bets are the chapter titles and tiny choices are the words on the page. Both have a role in moving your plot forward.
Make your move.
If, like younger me, you struggle sitting in the front row of life, perhaps my story and these lessons will help:
Start with baby steps. Begin by putting yourself out there by taking the smallest step possible, donāt try to make life-altering decisions right away. Show up in small moments and watch how your confidence muscle starts to build.
Choose to assume that everything will go right. With tricky situations I find it helpful to visualise the best possible result. Deluding myself into thinking the best outcome is the likely one, helps short circuit my fear response and move me into action.
Let go of self-sabotaging thoughts. When (not if) one creeps in, ask yourself āis this negative thought based in fact or fear?ā
Reflect on this:
Lifeās most colourful experiences aren't found in the nosebleed section. Next time you find yourself hesitating or holding backā¦step forward, even just a bit. Choice by choice. Moment by moment. Day by Day.
If you do, I promise that before you know it youāll find yourself up front where you belong.
Next weekās post āš¼
Why creativity is a lifeline when weāre drowning in responsibilities.
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I really enjoyed this piece. Growing up I would often hear 'fortune favours the brave' and wondered if it was actually true, but the more I say 'yes' to things, the more doors just seem to open.
Although I must confess, I was upset to read that you left Mecca ā I was going to ask if you could get me some MFK perfumes š