There's a popular notion that in order to be an entrepreneur you must be a card-carrying risk taker, but the average experience is closer to the truth. You don't have to be a big risk taker to participate in the Joyfully Jobless life, but you do have to be willing to experiment. In fact, the word "experiment" keeps coming up over and over again in people's stories.
The willingness to approach building a business as an experiment assumes that both success and failure will occur. That might sound somewhat unemotional and left-brained. It doesn't have to be that way. Handled properly, an experimental approach makes you smarter and more confident. You continually evaluate results, eliminate what doesn't work so well, have the fun and excitement of doing things in new and different ways.
Why don't you test this out? For the next 90 days, focus on creative experimentation. Challenge yourself to find one new approach every week. Or every month. Give it some time, then decide if you want to keep it in your portfolio or move on to another approach. Who knows what you might discover?
Patti writes, "For the past two years, my standard graduation gift for high school and college graduates is: a tool kit, a cookbook, and a copy of 'Making a Living Without a Job'. I feel these three items contain the basics for starting a young (or any age) person off on the right path to a future of 'get(ting) out of bed excited and happy about how we're going to spend the day.' I want my children, and my friends and their children, to feel the self esteem to become joyfully jobless."
Per il vostro successo,
Terry

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