14 min listen
How to Grind Outside the Day Job & Fight Comparison with Nick Slater
How to Grind Outside the Day Job & Fight Comparison with Nick Slater
ratings:
Length:
43 minutes
Released:
Dec 5, 2018
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Leveling the Playing Field & Proving Your Humanity
If you’re a creative like me, you deal with imposter syndrome, burnout, finding time to make personal work, and trying to make something meaningful.
Some people refuse to admit these “flaws” publicly, as they feel it would tarnish their potential professional perception. In my eyes, showing the world that you're human attracts more people to you—no matter if you’re a wide-eyed rookie or a polished vet in the game.
No one has it all figured out, no matter how hard someone tries to convince you otherwise.
We appreciate knowing that the people we admire struggle with the same things we do—at least I do. It levels the playing field and empowers us to take it up a notch because if they can do it, we can too.
Battling Comparison, Fighting Burnout, and Crushing Your Grind with Nick Slater
Queue today’s guest, Nick Slater, illustrator and design Goliath slanging jaw-dropping work out of the Bay Area. He’s worked with big brands like Lyft, Slack, Twitter, Asana, Zendesk, Airstream, Epicurrence, and The Washington Post.
His creativity, diverse skillset, and frequent output certainly may persuade you he’s a robot. However, with how open he is about the struggles we all deal with, reminds you he’s definitely human just like the rest of us.
That’s what I love most about Nick—he’s got big-time work, but doesn't have a big head.
In today’s episode, Nick Slater and I go into the nitty gritty about:
Getting caught in the comparison trap even after you've "made it"
Making time to grind outside a day job
Fighting burnout by finding new outlets
Looking inside to create impactful work outside
What his last slice of pizza would be if he was on death row
This one is going to give you all the feels and set a fire under your ass to push to the next level as we finish this week and year strong.
You know the drill! Take a screenshot or share a video of the episode you’re listening to and tag me on IG @perspectivepodcast and let me know what you think. I enjoy the hell out of connecting with you each week there.
—
Shownotes
Listener of the Week: Aloysiusrichtofen
Podcast Editor: Aine Brennan
Shownotes Editor: Paige Garland
Podcast music: Blookah
—
Want to Support the Show?
Become a backer on Patreon
Leave an Apple Podcast Rating and Review
Share the show on social media or follow the Perspective Podcast Instagram
####Crypto Donation Support
Bitcoin: 1j5vE64PWgkJHGnGSrAiJK82bnfn7fBgu
Ethereum: 0xFf60588C873E34235dE371450d58129d8d7cAC16
Litecoin: LerTFZfvtW4iH7qJM8vSE9mkdQA24yKmB6
####Subscribe via your favorite podcast player:
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Play Music
Overcast
If you’re a creative like me, you deal with imposter syndrome, burnout, finding time to make personal work, and trying to make something meaningful.
Some people refuse to admit these “flaws” publicly, as they feel it would tarnish their potential professional perception. In my eyes, showing the world that you're human attracts more people to you—no matter if you’re a wide-eyed rookie or a polished vet in the game.
No one has it all figured out, no matter how hard someone tries to convince you otherwise.
We appreciate knowing that the people we admire struggle with the same things we do—at least I do. It levels the playing field and empowers us to take it up a notch because if they can do it, we can too.
Battling Comparison, Fighting Burnout, and Crushing Your Grind with Nick Slater
Queue today’s guest, Nick Slater, illustrator and design Goliath slanging jaw-dropping work out of the Bay Area. He’s worked with big brands like Lyft, Slack, Twitter, Asana, Zendesk, Airstream, Epicurrence, and The Washington Post.
His creativity, diverse skillset, and frequent output certainly may persuade you he’s a robot. However, with how open he is about the struggles we all deal with, reminds you he’s definitely human just like the rest of us.
That’s what I love most about Nick—he’s got big-time work, but doesn't have a big head.
In today’s episode, Nick Slater and I go into the nitty gritty about:
Getting caught in the comparison trap even after you've "made it"
Making time to grind outside a day job
Fighting burnout by finding new outlets
Looking inside to create impactful work outside
What his last slice of pizza would be if he was on death row
This one is going to give you all the feels and set a fire under your ass to push to the next level as we finish this week and year strong.
You know the drill! Take a screenshot or share a video of the episode you’re listening to and tag me on IG @perspectivepodcast and let me know what you think. I enjoy the hell out of connecting with you each week there.
—
Shownotes
Listener of the Week: Aloysiusrichtofen
Podcast Editor: Aine Brennan
Shownotes Editor: Paige Garland
Podcast music: Blookah
—
Want to Support the Show?
Become a backer on Patreon
Leave an Apple Podcast Rating and Review
Share the show on social media or follow the Perspective Podcast Instagram
####Crypto Donation Support
Bitcoin: 1j5vE64PWgkJHGnGSrAiJK82bnfn7fBgu
Ethereum: 0xFf60588C873E34235dE371450d58129d8d7cAC16
Litecoin: LerTFZfvtW4iH7qJM8vSE9mkdQA24yKmB6
####Subscribe via your favorite podcast player:
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Play Music
Overcast
Released:
Dec 5, 2018
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Clarity Comes From Dipping Your Toes in the Water: This episode of the Perspective Podcast is centered around breaking away from thinking and planning and dipping your toes in the water and taking action. You can’t make progress by sitting on dry land. Yet, you also can’t commit and dive into the deep end when you're not confident in the direction you pick. Scotty talks more in depth about: - **you fail by default by never trying in the first place** - _Trying anything over doing nothing_. - you having a difficult time finding clarity by getting trapped in the world of thinking and planning - **it being impossible to be perfect** , especially when you start. Music by: [Blookah](https://soundcloud.com/blookah) by Side Hustler's Perspective with Coach Scotty Russell