I took a business management degree with 300 other people.

Only 3 started their own business after graduating.

Why?

Setting up on your own wasn't the default path. Most people follow the default path. That was applying to jobs, moving to London, and becoming a consultant or middle manager for some bank.

Some people flit around forever and never find their thing. Others fixate on one path only to realise it wasn't the right one.

Intentionality matters. But it's complicated.

But how do you know when you've found your thing?
How do you avoid following the wrong path?

And what are the signs you're making the right moves?

Does success find you or do you go out and look for it? If everyone else is doing it, does that mean you should too?

Will good things come to those who wait or does walking on the way make the way appear?

When should you push, grind and make an effort? When should you relax, allow, and go with the flow? Think or feel? Logic or intuition?

More questions than answers.

Because the balance between searching and finding, pushing and allowing, chasing and attracting, is fascinating and confusing.

I used to swear by structure. I coined the perfect repeatable day framework. The profession, obsession, decompression way of living.

I planned every minute of every day - in advance - and diligently followed the schedule.

But recently I changed my mind.

In this podcast episode with Freddie Pullen I walk through how to get intentional and take aligned action towards having everything you want.

Without it feeling like hustle and grind
Without overthinking the next step
Without feeling lost and confused

Work through the C.L.A.I.M.S framework (of course there's a framework!) and do your thing 😄