POSSIBILITY BOOTCAMP
Four days where you stop talking about what you want to do and start doing it.
You’ll arrive with ideas, doubts, and a dozen reasons why your creative practice can’t work the way you want it to. You’ll leave having stood in front of the room and told everyone exactly what you’re going to create this year. Not a vague aspiration. A specific thing, for specific people, that you’re now on the hook for.
Between those two points, expect to be uncomfortable. You’ll do exercises that might feel strange. You’ll be asked questions you don’t want to answer. You’ll notice patterns in yourself you’ve been running from for years... the perfectionism that stops you starting, the people-pleasing that has you hiding your real work, the voice that says you’re not ready yet.
None of that goes away. But you’ll start to see it for what it is. And once you can see it, you can act despite it.
The people around you will surprise you. By Day 2, strangers become collaborators. By Day 3, someone will say out loud the thing you’ve been thinking privately for months, and half the room will nod. By Day 4, you’ll have a small crew of people who know what you’re up to and won’t let you off the hook.
It’s not a lecture series. There’s very little sitting and listening. You’ll be in and out of small groups all day, doing exercises, sharing what came up, getting pushed further than feels comfortable. The facilitators will challenge you. Not to be difficult... to get you closer to what’s actually going on, underneath the stories you’ve been telling yourself.
You won’t leave with a polished plan. You’ll leave with a committed direction and the experience of having taken your first messy steps in front of people who are doing the same thing. That’s worth more than any plan.
