How to Create and Finish... Anything
Steve Kayser
Award-Winning Business Writer & AI-Enhanced Content Strategist | Expert in SEO, PR, & Social Media | Published Author"
by?Steve Kayser
International bestselling author, screenwriter, and renowned military historian Steven Pressfield?wrote a book called?Do the Work?that I've read and reread multiple times. It's about how to create and finish anything.?A business. A book. A song. A philanthropic venture.
Whatever point?you are at on your life's journey –?take the time to read?Do the Work.?It's not work. It's a joy. It's not long. If you're slow like me, it takes about an hour to read. It's not dull; it's brilliance, wrapped around hard-earned knowledge,?deep inside timeless wisdom.
THEY JUST DON'T TEACH THIS IN SCHOOLS
I met Steven Pressfield when I interviewed him for an article called?"How to Defeat Your Inner Deadbeat."
BULL-SHIITAKE
To that, Steven would say, "Bull-Shiitake," and laugh when he said it. Then he'd say, "You can do it too – just DO THE WORK." He's one of the true renaissance writing geniuses of our times. So why do I say that? I don't.
HIS WORK DOES
Steven Pressfield?has written or co-written 34 screenplays and is the author of international bestsellers "The Legend of Bagger Vance" (also a movie),; "Gates of Fire, An Epic Novel of the Battle of Thermopylae,"; "Tide of War,"; "The Afghan Campaign,"; "Virtues of War,"; "The War of Art: Break Through the Blocks and Win Your Creative Battles," "Killing Rommel,"; "THE PROFESSION,"; "Do the Work"; The Warrior Ethos,"; and his latest book, "The Lion's Gate," which film rights were recently acquired by?Basil Iwanyk, who backed 'The Expendables.'
THE SEARCH FOR MEANING, ART & WORK
I first became aware of Steven – not from any of his famous books or movies – but because a writer friend of mine gave me his book?"War of Art."?Anyone who has ever met me knows that "art" is not the first word that comes to mind when describing my reading fare. Not the first word, but maybe right after the last word. However, my friend was dogging me out for always spouting off about what a great book should be – short, clear, emotionally powerful, life-changing – and he said "War of Art" was right up there with my all-time favorite, Viktor Frankl's "Search for Meaning."
I didn't believe it.
I only read the?"War of Art"?so I could refute, belittle, and humiliate my well-meaning, but almost always wrong, friend about the absurd deficiencies of the book in comparison to "The Search for Meaning."
I read?"The War of Art."?
I was wrong. Completely. Utterly. Embarrassingly.
It was just as good in a different kind of way. The Search for Meaning?was about finding ways to survive in any environment – even a death camp?– and how to find meaning in it.
The War of Art?is about finding a way to?create?in any environment – even a boring or bad one – and how to?experience meaning while doing it.
Do the Work?is a companion to?The War of Art.?A workbook. A shut up and do-it guide. It treads some of the same turf?as the?War of Art.?It fights the intractable, implacable, insidious foe of humankind?–?Resistance.?But it's also an indispensable guide to winning at business or?life.
NOT TAUGHT AT ANY SCHOOLS
The lessons in?Do the Work?are not taught at any business school. Couldn't be. This is wisdom of the elders?secret knowledge type of stuff passed on only by someone who has experienced it. Someone who has seen further, accomplished more, experienced more because they DID THE WORK.
领英推荐
THREE-CLASS ACTS
Do the Work?is a 1-2-3 type process of getting a project accomplished, a book completed, a business started. Music, science, business, and writing all seem to follow a similar three-act structure.
Musicians?(which I don't claim to be but hack around at it)?have the Sonata form, consisting of a statement, development, and recapitulation.
Scientists?use the hypothesis, inference, and verification method.
Philosophers?use hypothesis, antithesis, synthesis (Hegel's dialectic).
Writers?focus on three acts; the beginning, middle, and end.
Do the Work?shows you DaVinci, the Vietnam Memorial, and Facebook – in three acts.
WHO TEACHES THESE GEMS?
What school or teacher would tell you …
These gems are like master ideas. Once you get them, you never forget them. But these ideas and lessons are necessary to get your work done. Any work. They're also essential because the creation of any great thing is born in chaos. Not ease.
Babies are born in blood and chaos; stars and galaxies come into being amid the release of massive primordial cataclysms.
The most highly cultured mother gives birth sweating and dislocated and cursing like a sailor.
The hospital room may be spotless and sterile, but birth itself will always take place amid chaos, pain and blood. – Steven Pressfield
AND…
When I was writing?"The Greatest Words You've Never Heard: True Stories of Triumph" and mentioned it to Steven, he had the perfect comment to me … and it led to me?finishing the book (you'll have to read the intro to see what it was.) I thanked him in the book's introduction for his inspiration and help through the years. But, he said one thing, and I heard but didn't hear. I didn't understand it until I finished.
We must do our work for its own sake, not for fortune or attention or applause.
That's hard. Really hard. But when you do that, you will become the consummate pro. You will concentrate on?making meaning?… you won't have to search for it.
So … how do you create and finish anything?
Work the DO
Do the WORK.
Member of Camara Internacional da Indústria de Transportes (CIT) at The International Transportation Industry Chamber
6 年Great job here