What Have I Just Done? is a short, practical mini-training for the moment right after you’ve put your work out into the world and things start to go a bit pear-shaped.
It’s designed to help you navigate the post-sharing wobble- the second-guessing, the urge to take it all back, the feeling that you may have made a terrible mistake- so you can regain perspective and keep on keeping on.
Inside, we’ll run through a series of simple principles to help you move through this very human part of the creative process, so you can continue showing up for your ideas without making it a whole thing every time.
It’s a simple, rubber-meets-the-road guide to help you find your feet, get some perspective, and most importantly, keep on going (because we need your fabulous work out there!).
A personal survival kit for the post-sharing-your-work panic.
Get immediate, lifetime access to the mini-course on sign up. Includes video lessons, podcast option, and downloadable poster.
🎥 A 30-minute mini-course, broken into bite-sized lessons so you can take it in all at once or whip straight to something specific
🎧 The option to listen via a private podcast. Listen on the go! Hurrah!
✏️ A downloadable poster with all of the key strategies in one place (and have something lovely to look at).
This Is For You If...
👉🏻 You’ve ever shared your work and had the reflexive response of wanting to take it all back
👉🏻 You recognise the urge to delete, pull, edit, or pretend it never happened
👉🏻 You care about what you make and want to keep putting it into the world but find it emotionally and physically challenging
👉🏻 You would quite like to move through the post-sharing wobble without it becoming a full-blown situation every time
👉🏻 You want to keep showing up for your ideas without getting derailed at the point they leave your hands
Hey 👋 I’m Jane! I’m an artist, writer, and creative mentor based on the South Island of Aotearoa, New Zealand.
My work centres on helping people make more art, more often, inside the reality of their actual lives, and supporting people to share more of their work in the world.
A big part of what I do is weaving together creative practice and nervous system awareness, so instead of forcing things or tipping into burnout, we can find ways of working that actually support our energy and capacity.
This training comes directly from years of putting my own work out there and learning how to stay with the process when it got bumpy. Particularly in the moments where my brain had other ideas and suggested we perhaps never do that again.