Uninspired today so grabbing an item off the Blaugust prompt list: What is a favorite Quote/s, and tell us why?
One of my favorite quotes: "If something is worth doing, it's worth doing wrong"
I cannot say definitively where it originates but I first heard it from Joel Salatin during a Mother Earth News Fair speech he gave about homesteading. Looking around the Internet I found that the quote "If something is worth doing, it's worth doing wrong" is often associated with Murphy's Law, which emphasizes that taking action is more important than achieving perfection.
That last bit "taking action is more important" is where I wanted to focus because it's relevant to Blaugust and highlights why I really love this quote. Some folks want to blog for Blaugust and they will spend time on social media wondering what to post about. Analysis paralysis is a real problem. At that point the desire to do something right is irrelevant if you never do it.
This is why I like the weekly focus areas for Blaugust. It helps me form a plan and take action for that week. Then when my brain gets stuck the prompt list is a good backup to get that drive to action. Underlying this is the reality that blogging has no rules except for those that you make for yourself.
A blog post doesn't need 1,000 words. It doesn't even need to be edited. There is nothing wrong with grabbing a screenshot from your favorite game, writing a sentence about it, and publishing it. That counts. Check the box. You blogged! I even recommended this yesterday to a fellow blogger that was getting stuck. Since the rules of blogging are your own only you know if its right or not so be flexible with yourself and you can find success!
In the real world I am in senior management and oversee a lot of projects. My team is well known as the "get sh!t done club". We do lots of things wrong but we do them fast. We get feedback and work to get them "right" (which is often 80% of the way there since the last 20% of anything is perfection and not worth the squeeze).
I've been asked numerous times by more senior folks how we do it. I always answer with some form of "we just get going". There is also an aspect of breaking big things up into small things. People understand small and are less likely to get analysis paralysis when presented a puzzle piece vs the entire box of puzzle pieces. Big things don't get made into smaller things without getting started and just getting started is often where so many projects fall down.
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