
The Big Thing
How to Complete Your Creative Project Even If You're a Lazy, Self-Doubting Procrastinator Like Me
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

Long-term creative projects and career goals are often tied up with personal issues that give them an unmanageable tension, says Korkki, a NEW YORK TIMES journalist who writes with candor and psychological sophistication. Narrator Sandy Rustin, narrating with youthful intonation and conversational cadences, mirrors the author's vulnerability without diminishing the validity of her insights and experience. Referencing her own struggles to get busy working on her "big thing" (this book), Korkki unpacks every possible attitude and personal practice that can get in the way of progress, including fear of failure, crippling self-doubt, and sometimes fear of success. More than any other audiobook on this type of procrastination, this one brings these dilemmas down to earth in a way that will give listeners new freedom to choose--and more energy to move forward with their lives. L.W. © AudioFile 2016, Portland, Maine

June 13, 2016
Spurred by an impending deadline for a column, New York Times assignment editor and reporter Korkki turned her difficulty writing the piece into the subject of this book. In it, she asks why so many creative people stall out. Moreover, how do the ones who make it keep their drive? Korkki sets out to help people approach their long-term projects with an eye toward actually getting the work done. These projects can be traditionally creative (books, paintings) or organizational (start-ups, charities). In any case, making progress on them requires tuning out the distractions of everyday life, committing wholeheartedly, and doing what one loves out of love, not for wealth and fame. In order to get to work on one’s “big thing” and keep working, she recommends breathing and relaxation, concentration even through illness, taking necessary breaks, managing day jobs while working, and maintaining relationships with loved ones. More of a meditation than a prescriptive lesson, this is a helpful if not particularly fresh guide to getting one’s heart’s project moving.
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