I write a fortnightly newsletter that teaches you how to build ecosystems for social change without burning out. Subscribe for professional insights, a peek of my bookshelf and the weekly Shen-Anika-ns of living, working and building community in the Shenandoah Valley, VA.
Hello Reader,
I took two months off from this newsletter. Snow days (weeks!?), sickness and a long weekend on top of regular work and personal life left me feeling like I was swimming upstream. Every time I started to think about writing a newsletter - which I typically enjoy tremendously - a wise voice in my head said, "not yet".
Anika-from-two-years-ago would have outright forced it. My discipline and commitment tend to overwrite (steamroll!?) my intuition.
But I've learned over the last two years that good things take time. In season one Michelle Arevalo-Carpenter said,
"An ecosystem is like a wild plant. If you ask a wild plant to give you flowers when it's not its time, you don't hate it. You don't take it personal. You understand that that plant is also in a process."
So instead of forcing things that my ambitious brain wants to see happen, I'm growing more comfortable with waiting for the right time to do them. My whiteboard that I typically use for quarterly planning has been blank since mid-December. I feel a lot less stressed at work over deadlines and projects because - miraculously - they still get done. I just lose a lot less sleep over it!
As I look at our local efforts in the Shenandoah Valley, I am astonished by the activity and level of collaboration I see - all of which would have been unthinkable two years ago.
When I first started in this role, we were trying to host events for entrepreneurs but it felt like pulling teeth at times. We tried to work with higher education partners but processes was painfully slow, until it stalled. We were looking for grants to support our work but sometimes, we came up empty-handed.
None of it was devastating by any means - sometimes you have to try things in order to decide whether or not the tie is right.
But fast forward to today and it feels like we're finally hitting out stride. Opportunities seem to find us and we are well equipped to seize them. We are hosting regular events that have a great turnout, we have several collaborations with colleges in the area and we will be hosting a national conference for entrepreneurial ecosystem builders at the end of April.
Read on to hear more about what's working right now and what life looks like outside of work:
Life, most recently: Things I'm excited about, pondering and trying out:
What I'm working on right now:
| Anika Lives |
I come across a lot of resources that I want to share with fellow ecosystem builders and changemakers. If we're connected on LinkedIn or Instagram, they might already show up in your feed! In case you missed any, here's my curated list from the last two weeks:
During the pandemic, I was fortunate to participate in a week-long workshop called Personal Mastery by Learning as Leadership (LaL). It was a deep and hard look at self-sabotaging thought patterns, fears, my inner critic(s) - and a journey into how to change these behaviors. LaL is currently accepting scholarship applications for this program and I recommend it highly. If you're interested and ready for this deep dive, learn more here and apply here.
Mark your calendars for 2024:
I will be back in your inbox in two weeks!
In camaraderie,
Anika
I write a fortnightly newsletter that teaches you how to build ecosystems for social change without burning out. Subscribe for professional insights, a peek of my bookshelf and the weekly Shen-Anika-ns of living, working and building community in the Shenandoah Valley, VA.