The Chase Jarvis LIVE Show
Hey friends, Chase here Let’s talk about one of the most important questions every creator eventually asks: How do I find my creative voice? Or maybe you’ve heard it framed another way: How do I develop a personal style? How do I make work that actually feels like mine? How do I stop copying what everyone else is doing and start creating from a place that is uniquely my own? This question comes up all the time because it sits at the center of the creative life. Whether you’re a photographer, designer, writer, filmmaker, musician, entrepreneur, or someone who simply feels called to make...
info_outlineThe Chase Jarvis LIVE Show
Hey friends, Chase here Let’s talk about reality. Not the abstract, philosophical version. Not the version you argue about over coffee or read about in some dusty book. I mean the reality you wake up inside every day. The job. The schedule. The obligations. The story you tell yourself about what is “practical.” The version of your life that everyone around you seems to agree is reasonable. And then there’s the other thing. The thing you can see in your mind that does not exist yet. The book. The business. The body of work. The new way of living. The creative practice. The conversation....
info_outlineThe Chase Jarvis LIVE Show
Hey friends, Chase here Let’s talk about something that gets romanticized way too much in the creative world: inspiration. We’ve been taught to wait for it. To trust it. To believe that the best work comes when lightning strikes, when the muse shows up, when the feeling is right. And while inspiration is real — and beautiful when it arrives — it’s also wildly unreliable. That’s the trap. If you build your creative life around inspiration, you build it around something you cannot control. And anything you can’t control is a dangerous foundation for a meaningful body of work. This...
info_outlineThe Chase Jarvis LIVE Show
Hey friends, Chase here Let’s talk about something that looks responsible on the surface — but quietly steals momentum from your life underneath it. I’m talking about overplanning. Not thoughtful preparation. Not healthy strategy. I mean the kind of planning that masquerades as progress. The kind that lets you feel productive without actually moving. The kind that sounds smart, looks disciplined, and gets praised by the world… but keeps you from starting the thing that matters most. That’s what this episode is about. Because there’s a hidden cost to overplanning, and most people...
info_outlineThe Chase Jarvis LIVE Show
Hey friends, Chase here. I want to talk about something that might be uncomfortable — but if you’re willing to really look at it, it can change everything. What if you’re working incredibly hard… at the wrong thing? This is one of the scariest patterns I’ve seen — not just in the creators I coach, but in my own life. People are climbing. Grinding. Achieving. But they’re climbing a mountain that isn’t theirs. What’s Really Going On Most people don’t realize they’re succeeding at the wrong thing. From the outside, it looks like progress: Momentum Validation Money Status ...
info_outlineThe Chase Jarvis LIVE Show
Hey friends, Chase here Let’s talk about something that quietly holds a lot of people back — something we’ve been taught to believe for most of our lives: Talent. The idea that some people are just born with “it.” The gift. The spark. The thing that makes them exceptional. And if you don’t have it? Well… maybe you just weren’t meant for this. Let me be clear: That idea is mostly a lie. Not because people don’t have natural inclinations or perspectives — they do. But because what we call talent is usually something much more accessible, much more practical, and much more...
info_outlineThe Chase Jarvis LIVE Show
Hey friends, Chase here Let’s talk about something that might feel uncomfortable at first — especially if you’ve spent years trying to get better, sharper, more polished, more “professional.” Perfection is dead. Not metaphorically. Not eventually. I mean right now. And if you’re paying attention to what’s happening in the creative world — especially in an era of AI, automation, and endless content — you’re starting to feel it too. The things that used to signal quality… now feel generic. The things that used to impress… now barely register. And the things we used to...
info_outlineThe Chase Jarvis LIVE Show
Hey friends, Chase here Let’s talk about something that quietly holds a lot of creators back — the belief that your work needs to resonate with everyone. It feels natural. We’re wired for connection. We want to be seen, appreciated, recognized. That’s human. But when that instinct starts driving your creative decisions, it can pull you further and further away from the very thing that makes your work meaningful in the first place. So here’s the truth I want you to hear clearly: You don’t need everyone. Not their approval. Not their attention. Not their validation. In fact, trying...
info_outlineThe Chase Jarvis LIVE Show
Hey friends, Chase here Let’s talk about something every creator experiences — but almost nobody talks about openly. Rejection. If you’re pursuing anything creative — photography, writing, design, building a business, launching a project — you already know the truth: you hear a lot more no than you hear yes. But here’s the twist. Most people think rejection is the signal to stop. In reality, rejection is often the signal that you’re doing the work. In this episode, I’m unpacking why hearing “no” isn’t something to avoid — it’s something to learn from, grow through,...
info_outlineThe Chase Jarvis LIVE Show
Hey friends, Chase here If you’re a creator who’s ever wondered why someone with “less talent” seems to get more opportunities… this episode is for you. Because here’s the truth: being great at your craft is only the price of admission. It gets you in the door. But what happens after that? That’s where your career is made. In today’s micro-show — Craft Is the Entry Fee — I’m talking about the things that matter most in the work you do… and the things that matter just as much in the way you do it. The stuff you can’t always point to on a resume. The stuff you can’t...
info_outlineHey friends, Chase here
Let’s talk about something that looks responsible on the surface — but quietly steals momentum from your life underneath it.
I’m talking about overplanning.
Not thoughtful preparation. Not healthy strategy. I mean the kind of planning that masquerades as progress. The kind that lets you feel productive without actually moving. The kind that sounds smart, looks disciplined, and gets praised by the world… but keeps you from starting the thing that matters most.
That’s what this episode is about.
Because there’s a hidden cost to overplanning, and most people don’t notice they’re paying it until years have gone by. It shows up in the projects you never started. The ideas you softened so they’d be easier to explain. The creative risks you talked yourself out of because the timing wasn’t quite right, the plan wasn’t complete, or the path wasn’t clear enough yet.
And here’s the truth I want to put on the table right away: clarity is not a prerequisite for action. It is a reward for action.
That’s the heartbeat of this episode.
If you’ve been waiting until you know more, until you feel more confident, until the uncertainty settles down… this one is for you.
What This Episode Is Really About
This micro show starts with an idea I’ve been thinking about a lot lately: there’s a kind of tax we pay in life, and it doesn’t come out of our paycheck. It comes out of our potential.
It’s the tax of sensible decisions.
The choices that seem wise from the outside. The decisions other people approve of. The instincts that keep you safe, polished, prepared, and socially acceptable — but also slightly removed from your own real life.
That tax compounds quietly.
And one of the biggest ways it shows up is through overplanning.
Because overplanning gives us the emotional comfort of movement without the actual vulnerability of motion. It lets us say, “I’m working on it,” while avoiding the part that actually asks something of us. It keeps us in research mode, optimization mode, comparison mode, information-gathering mode — anything except the one mode that changes our life: doing.
The hidden cost of overplanning is not just wasted time. It’s delayed becoming.
It’s the version of you that only appears once you start — and never gets a chance to exist if you stay in your head too long.
The Core Idea
Research can become a very convincing form of avoidance.
That doesn’t mean research is bad. Planning matters. Preparation matters. Reflection matters. But there’s a line — and once you cross it, planning stops serving the work and starts replacing it.
That’s the dangerous part.
Because when planning becomes a substitute for action, it starts to feel noble. It feels mature. Responsible. Strategic. It gives you a reason to postpone the scary part while telling yourself you’re still being productive.
But in reality, what’s often happening is much simpler: fear is dressing up as wisdom.
And fear is clever. It doesn’t always say, “Don’t do the thing.” Sometimes it says, “Do a little more research first.”
Sometimes it says, “Wait until you can see the whole plan.”
Sometimes it says, “You just need one more conversation, one more framework, one more round of prep, one more sign that this is the right path.”
But so much of the creative process — and honestly, so much of life — only reveals itself once you’re in motion.
You cannot think your way into the wisdom that only action creates.
Why We Overplan in the First Place
Most of us don’t overplan because we’re lazy.
We overplan because uncertainty is uncomfortable.
Action creates exposure. It creates the possibility of embarrassment, failure, imperfection, missteps, and outcomes you can’t control. Planning, on the other hand, gives the illusion of control. It lets you stay in a world where everything is still theoretical — and therefore still safe.
That’s why overplanning can feel so seductive.
It soothes the nervous system. It makes you feel like you’re reducing risk. It helps you avoid the messy, irreversible, identity-shaping moment where you stop talking about the thing and actually begin.
But beginning is where the information lives.
The real information.
Not the abstract kind. Not the clean, organized, secondhand kind. I mean the lived information you only get by stepping onto the trail, making the call, hitting publish, building the draft, having the conversation, taking the first rep.
You do not find your way by staring harder at the map. You find your way by moving.
The Story at the Center of This Episode
In this episode, I share a simple story about researching a hike.
I spent weeks getting ready. Trail maps. Elevation charts. Reviews. Recommendations. All the inputs. All the signals. All the ingredients of feeling prepared.
And then Kate and I got to the trailhead, stepped out of the car, and I confidently led us in the wrong direction.
That’s the joke, of course. All that preparation — and I still got it wrong.
But the deeper lesson is what matters.
Because despite all that, we ended up discovering a hike that became one of our favorites.
Not because I had the perfect plan.
Not because I knew exactly where I was going.
But because we started walking.
That’s how creativity works too.
That’s how growth works.
That’s how so many meaningful things in life actually happen: not through perfect foresight, but through imperfect movement.
You stumble. You adjust. You notice. You learn. You refine. And somewhere in that process, the path reveals itself.
What You’ll Hear in This Episode
This one is short, but it lands hard. Here are a few of the big ideas inside it:
- Why “more research” is often just more delay — especially when the decision has already been made and the next real step is action
- How planning can become fear masquerading as wisdom — convincing, articulate, socially approved fear
- Why preparation doesn’t always change what actually happens once reality enters the chat
- How creativity actually works — by starting now and figuring it out as you go
- Why clarity comes from motion rather than waiting on the sidelines for certainty to arrive
Timecodes (So You Can Jump to What You Need)
If you want to skip straight to the parts that speak most to where you are right now, here are a few landmarks from the episode:
- 01:52 – The “tax” of sensible decisions and the cost of staying safe
- 02:38 – The hidden cost of planning and how research can become avoidance
- 03:31 – The hiking story: weeks of preparation, wrong direction anyway
- 04:22 – What that story reveals about how creativity actually works
- 05:06 – Why planning is often fear masquerading as wisdom
- 05:19 – The central takeaway: clarity is a reward for action
- 05:36 – How a wrong turn can still lead you somewhere better
- 06:22 – Final charge: stop planning and start moving toward your dreams
Read This If You’ve Been Waiting to Feel Ready
There’s a trap a lot of smart, capable, ambitious people fall into.
We think readiness comes first.
We think confidence comes first.
We think certainty comes first.
Then we act.
But more often than not, life works in the opposite order.
You act first.
Then confidence grows.
Then data arrives.
Then discernment sharpens.
Then clarity begins to form.
This matters because a lot of people are not actually stuck because they lack talent, opportunity, or ideas. They’re stuck because they’re trying to solve a moving problem while standing still.
And stillness, when it goes on too long, starts to feel like identity.
You become the person who is “thinking about it.” “Working on it.” “Researching options.” “Getting clear.”
Meanwhile, the only thing that would truly help is the very thing you’re postponing: motion.
Action is not what you do after clarity. Action is how clarity gets built.
The Deeper Cost Nobody Talks About
The hidden cost of overplanning is not just that it wastes energy.
It’s that it disconnects you from your own instincts.
When you spend too long looking outward for answers, you start forgetting that some answers can only be found inward — and then tested through lived experience. You begin trusting frameworks more than your own body. Advice more than your own curiosity. Consensus more than your own direct encounter with reality.
And while outside input has its place, there comes a moment when no one can tell you the next right move with more authority than the part of you that is willing to begin.
That’s the part overplanning muffles.
It creates noise where there should be contact.
It creates endless preamble where there should be practice.
It creates the illusion that wisdom lives somewhere “out there,” when in fact some of the most important wisdom arrives through participation.
Questions to Ask Yourself
If this episode hit a nerve, sit with these for a few minutes:
- Where in my life am I calling something “planning” that is actually avoidance?
- What decision have I already made — but keep surrounding with more research?
- What am I hoping more preparation will protect me from?
- What would change if I believed clarity comes after the first step, not before it?
- What is one action I could take today that would teach me more than another week of thinking?
A Simple Practice for Breaking the Cycle
If you’ve been circling something important, here’s a simple way to interrupt the pattern:
- Name the thing. What is the project, conversation, decision, or step you keep postponing?
- Write down the next visible action. Not the whole plan. Just the next move.
- Do it before you optimize it. Let action generate information.
- Reflect only after motion. Use feedback from reality, not just theory.
- Repeat. That is how paths appear.
The goal here is not recklessness. It’s not abandoning thoughtfulness. It’s not pretending strategy doesn’t matter.
The goal is to put planning back in its proper place: in service of action, not in place of it.
One Last Thought
You may not get it right the first time.
You may walk the wrong direction for a while.
You may discover that the thing you planned for is not the thing that actually unfolds.
Good.
That’s not failure. That’s participation.
That’s the process working on you while you work on the process.
And sometimes the “wrong” turn becomes the only reason you ever find the better path.
So let this be your reminder:
You do not need more certainty to begin.
You need a willingness to move.
Stop planning your way around your dreams. Start walking toward them.
Until next time: trust action, let clarity catch up, and remember — the path reveals itself in motion.