You’ve opted out of the welcome series, but you’ll still receive the Flux & Flow newsletter every Wednesday.
Thanks for being here. I know your time and attention are valuable, and I’m glad you’ve chosen to stay connected.
If you’d like to dive deeper right now, you can explore past issues of Flux & Flow in the carousel below. Each one is packed with insights and resources to help you cut through the noise, find clarity, and build systems that support your creative growth.
- [Flux&Flow] Breaking Free from Overwhelm: The Power of Daily Reflection
Flux & Flow Issue #21 “This one a long time have I watched. All his life has he looked away… to the future, to the horizon. Never his mind on where he was.” – Yoda Too often, we get so caught up in chasing the next goal, the next project, or the next breakthrough that we forget to pause and understand where we are right now. It’s a cycle of forward momentum that feels productive—until it leads to confusion, frustration, and burnout. When you don’t take time to reflect, everything starts to...Read more
- [Flux&Flow] Ever Get Stuck Between Thinking and Doing?
Flux & Flow Issue #20 “The best way to face the future is to create it.” – Jennifer Riel Ever notice how your brightest ideas seem to get trapped in the space between “I should” and “I did”? I've seen way too many creative professionals master the art of ideation—filling notebooks with possibilities and planning ambitious projects but then struggling to transform those intentions into tangible progress. It often feels like trying to cross an invisible bridge. The space between where you are...Read more
- Subject: [Flux&Flow] Align your creativity with what matters (without rigid plans)
Flux & Flow Issue #19 “The only way to make sense out of change is to plunge into it, move with it, and join the dance.” - Alan Watts When it comes to creative work, we’re often taught to start with the end in mind. Set your goals, they say. Work backwards from your desired outcome. Create detailed five-year plans. While this approach might work well for linear projects, it can create deep resistance and confusion in creative work, where the path forward often reveals itself only as we move...Read more