Shaboom, Inc. Personal Growth Coaching for Accidental Entrepreneurs- HOME Shaboom! is about the bigger life dream of successful self employment Personal Growth and Small Business Coaching for Accidental Entrepreneurs Personal Growth and Development Workshops for Accidental Entrepreneurs and Small Business Owners Keynote speaking and facilitation The Accidental Entrepreneur's Guide to Self Employment Success, a blog on personal growth and development Small Business Marketing  for the self employed />
          <area shape=

:: About Personal Growth and Coach and Accidental Entrepreneur Molly Gordon::
:: Have you reserved your copy of The Way of the Accidental Entrepreneur? ::

May 17, 2004 2:32 PM

Wet Princesses

The Bad Princesses: We're fast; we're female; we're (mostly) over 50. And yes, we are rather pleased with ourselves.

itp at work
The princess thing grew out of a random comment I made after biking 10 miles in the pouring rain to show up for a Saturday ride. I said to my coach, "I didn't know you could get this wet." A guy sitting with him said, "Oh, you can get wetter than that."

I thought for a moment, and out of nowhere spoke this thought:

Princesses don't get wetter than this.

Understand, until that moment I had never, ever, claimed princess-ship. Au contraire, I'd eschewed all things that smack of cuteness, sweetness, and privilege. Yet, in that brief moment, a princess was born.

Some weeks later one of the other women, Sally, noticed that I was regularly riding 10 miles on my own just to get to a Saturday ride. (That's not as studly as it sounds. I was the newbie, and riding in was one way for me to get the miles my coach wanted me to get since I would fall back from the more advanced group during the main ride.) Sally is my best cheerleader, and she made a big deal of this. Next thing I know, Julie is saying, "You're a bad princess."

It was too good an identity to keep for myself, so now we are all Bad Princesses. We continue to ride in the rain, (hello, we live in Western Washington) as you can see from this snapshot of a ride in May, 2004. We'd just taken our fenders off for the "dry season."

Comments

I think I got it!

Posted by: Debbie Buxton at October 17, 2005 6:17 PM

Newsletter Signup
First Name
Last Name
Email

Spam Free RSS | Privacy Policy

Font size too small?
Click here for options.

Subscribe to this blog

Are We Connected?

Follow Molly at Twitter

Molly Gordon's profile on Facebook

Biznik - Business Networking

View Molly Gordon's profile on LinkedIn

Good Stuff from Smart, Nice People

 

 

 

The Eight Irresistible Principles of Fun

 

 

 

JUST-RIGHT BIZ

Administrivia or Momentum?
Interview with a Whale Hunting Woman
Wildcard Wednesday: success, fanaticism
What to do when there's too much to do
Of Women, Whale Hunting, and Big Deals
How to Feel Good About What You Charge
Create a Personal Safety Zone: Cultivating Presence to Attract Clients that Fit Just Right

ART BIZ

Wildcard Wednesday: success, fanaticism
How to Get Organized Without Dowsing Your Creative Fire
How Prospective Clients Can Teach You Marketing: The Surprising Relationship Between Marketing and Empathy
Only the Cows Know: 21 Economic Models
Artists, Should You Lower Your Prices?

DON'T SAY NICHE

How Prospective Clients Can Teach You Marketing: The Surprising Relationship Between Marketing and Empathy
Are You Overlooking This? How your weaknesses make you a one-of-a-kind perfect fit for your just-right clients.
Talk to me: how does my non-traditional background serve you?
Marketing to Mr. and Ms. Right
How to Find the Sweet Spot for Effective Niche Marketing

AUTHENTIC MARKETING

Wildcard Wednesday: success, fanaticism
Self Employment TV: Free Stuff, Should You Give It?
Of Women, Whale Hunting, and Big Deals
Create a Personal Safety Zone: Cultivating Presence to Attract Clients that Fit Just Right
It's All Connected: Why Elevator Speeches Are Icky

HONEST SELLING

Self Employment TV: Free Stuff, Should You Give It?
Are you really listening to prospective clients?
Create a Personal Safety Zone: Cultivating Presence to Attract Clients that Fit Just Right
The Co-Dependent Entrepreneur: Why Self-Employment Feels Hard
10 Mistakes Accidental Entrepreneurs Make When Worried about Money

JUST RIGHT PRICING

How to Feel Good About What You Charge
Are You Worth It? How to Establish the Value of Your Work Even When Times Are Tough
Money Magic How to Stop Hiding When Clients Have Money Issues
Beyond the Success Formula: Do The Work on Selling and Sales
Strategies for Setting the Just Right Price

CLIENT CARE

Are you really listening to prospective clients?
Why I Don't (Seem to) Care About Mistakes
Content Is King, but Connection Rules
10 Mistakes Accidental Entrepreneurs Make When Worried about Money
Talk to me: how does my non-traditional background serve you?
Money Magic How to Stop Hiding When Clients Have Money Issues
The Grace of Rejection: How to Turn Disappointment into Work That Fits Just-Right

MONEY

Wildcard Wednesday: success, fanaticism
How to Feel Good About What You Charge
The Co-Dependent Entrepreneur: Why Self-Employment Feels Hard
Why Trust Is the Most Valuable Currency (or Why Makes Marketing & Sales Are Duties We Owe Our Clients)
10 Mistakes Accidental Entrepreneurs Make When Worried about Money

PRODUCTIVITY

Administrivia or Momentum?
What to do when there's too much to do
Maybe You Aren't Stuck (It's worth a thought)
Time (Where Does It Go, Anyway?)
Why I Don't (Seem to) Care About Mistakes

BOOKS | TOOLS

Consumerism and Depression - A Link?
Going Sane: Working on Your Work
Why Mike Dooley Rocks
A Meditation Book Review: A Monk's Alphabet
I want God to play...
Thank you [CPR for the Soul]
8 Irresistible Principles of Fun

FEAR

Is It Time to Be Disappointing?
The Co-Dependent Entrepreneur: Why Self-Employment Feels Hard
Who can you trust? Why the hardest trust to earn is your own
Fear and self-loathing in the entrepreneurial trenches
I'm Not Cinderella: The Split in the Soul of the Accidental Entrepreneur

SPIRIT

How to Use Affirmations to Get What You Intend and Intend What You Get
I'm Not Cinderella: The Split in the Soul of the Accidental Entrepreneur
Confessions of a Moody Marketer or Self Employment for Aspiring Grown Ups
Why Trust Is the Most Valuable Currency (or Why Makes Marketing & Sales Are Duties We Owe Our Clients)
What the World Needs Now... Is a Generous Helping of Self Promotion

LIFE SKILLS

Of Women, Whale Hunting, and Big Deals
Maybe You Aren't Stuck (It's worth a thought)
How a Bogus Email Led Me to Clean Up My Stuff
Create a Personal Safety Zone: Cultivating Presence to Attract Clients that Fit Just Right
Self Employment Overhead: It's not what you think.

THE WORK of BYRON KATIE


Ajax CommentLuv Enabled 108416996a693056b333f7715907a0c5



Track referers to your site with referer.org free referrer feed.

Powered by FeedBlitz

 

* * *
Molly Gordon's blog, The Accidental Entrepreneur's Guide to Self-Employment Success, is listed in:
Blog Flux Directory | Blog Directory | LS Blogs | Globe Of Blogs | Blog Universe | Blog Directory | Blogdigger |BlogRankings.com
BlogSweet.com
| Weblog Directory | SynBlog.com | All-Blogs.net | Blog-Watch.com
Shaboom, Inc.
© copyright 2005-2009 * shaboom inc * all rights reserved * design by superwebgroup.