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The Work That Outlasts You

The Work That Outlasts You

Season 7 Episode 34 Published 3 weeks, 6 days ago
Description

You’re still making sure they know it was you. It’s worth looking at before it quietly shapes everything.

Not overtly, you’re not that obvious. But it’s present in the language you use when you talk about what you’ve built and in the quiet need for the work to be traceable back to you.

It’s not ambition. It’s something older than ambition. And it’s worth looking at directly before it shapes everything you’re trying to build.

In this episode of Daily Power Boost, Shawn Michael opens the legacy block with the question underneath every other question this season has been asking. What are you actually building. And does it need you to survive. Or does it need something more than you.

Most builders start from a genuine place. At some point the ego finds the work. Not dramatically. Quietly. It shows up in how threatened you feel when someone builds something similar. Whether you can celebrate the work of others in the same space without measuring it against your own. The decisions about what to share and what to protect.

Work built around someone’s need to be seen won’t survive their absence. It just becomes a monument.

But the work that gets built the moment you stop needing it to be yours. that’s a different texture entirely. Less polished in the performed sense. More true in the way that only things built without the ego armor can actually be.

People feel the difference even when they can’t name it. And what they feel tends to stay with them.

That’s the work that outlasts you. Not because your name is on it. Because something true got through.

In This Episode

* The specific way the ego finds work that started from a genuine place. and why it happens quietly rather than dramatically

* How the need for the work to reflect well on you shapes decisions you can’t fully see at the time

* The difference between caring about the work and needing the work. and why only one of them produces something that outlasts you

* What changes in the quality of attention when the work stops being organized around the builder’s need to be seen

* Why work built around someone’s worth becomes a monument rather than a legacy when they’re gone

* What the gap between how you build now and how you’d build if your name were never attached reveals about where the ego found the work

Reflection Prompts

* What would change about how you’re building if you knew your name would never be attached to it? Don’t answer hypothetically. Use it as a genuine diagnostic.

* Where in your work are you half present to what you’re building and half monitoring how you’re landing? What does that split cost the person in front of you?

* Where do you feel threatened when someone builds something similar in your space? What does that response reveal about what the work is actually organized around?

* Think about a moment you made the work more about the lesson than the person in front of you. What was running underneath that?

* What is the gap between how you build now and how you’d build without your name on it? That gap is exactly where the ego found the work.

✦ The Boost (Action Step)

Ask yourself this question as a genuine diagnostic. Not hypothetically.

“What would change about how I’m building if I knew my name would never be attached to it?”

The gap between how you build now and how you’d build in that scenario. That’s exactly where the ego found the work.

And it’s the most honest place to start your next iteration.

On the Next Episode

The people watching you, not your audience. The people in your actual life who are learning what’s possible by watching how you move. Most leaders never fully reckon with that. Next episode does.

If Today’s Episode Sparked Something

* Forward this to a builder who’s been making great work and quietly making sure everyone knows it<

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