
- 138 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
About this book
"MistyĀ .Ā .Ā . is literally the Steve Jobs of the dance world, and the steps she's taken to build her business apply to any business owner out there" (Cody Foster, CEO, Advisors Excel).
Ā
It's the small decisions that lead to big results. People were born to live a life of significance. But busyness and fear of failure can overwhelm and get in the way.
Ā
Now Misty Lownāfounder of More Than Just Great DancingĀ® and MoreThanDancers.comāshares her secrets for following your passion toward success.
Ā
One Small Yes was written for people who want to make an impact, but are not sure where to start. One Small Yes is for you if you have ever wondered:
Ā
*What am I here for?
*What is my calling?
*Can I follow my calling without losing my family or my sanity?
*If what I see in my mind is possible, how on earth can I get it all done?
Ā
Forget about complicated calendars or excessive goal setting exercises. Following your calling is about moving forward, one small yes decision at a time. No matter the size of your dream or the difference you feel called to make, your journey starts with One Small Yes.
Ā
"If you want to build a life and a business that makes a difference, Misty Lown will show you the way. What she has accomplished one 'yes' at time is an inspiration to entrepreneurs everywhere." āDarren Hardy, New York Timesābestselling author of The Compound Effect
Ā
"Misty Lown is a leader of consequence. She knows how to build a winning business through authenticity, grit and determination. Is her book a must-read? YES!" āBill McDermott, bestselling author of Winners Dream
Ā
It's the small decisions that lead to big results. People were born to live a life of significance. But busyness and fear of failure can overwhelm and get in the way.
Ā
Now Misty Lownāfounder of More Than Just Great DancingĀ® and MoreThanDancers.comāshares her secrets for following your passion toward success.
Ā
One Small Yes was written for people who want to make an impact, but are not sure where to start. One Small Yes is for you if you have ever wondered:
Ā
*What am I here for?
*What is my calling?
*Can I follow my calling without losing my family or my sanity?
*If what I see in my mind is possible, how on earth can I get it all done?
Ā
Forget about complicated calendars or excessive goal setting exercises. Following your calling is about moving forward, one small yes decision at a time. No matter the size of your dream or the difference you feel called to make, your journey starts with One Small Yes.
Ā
"If you want to build a life and a business that makes a difference, Misty Lown will show you the way. What she has accomplished one 'yes' at time is an inspiration to entrepreneurs everywhere." āDarren Hardy, New York Timesābestselling author of The Compound Effect
Ā
"Misty Lown is a leader of consequence. She knows how to build a winning business through authenticity, grit and determination. Is her book a must-read? YES!" āBill McDermott, bestselling author of Winners Dream
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Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Yes, you can access One Small Yes by Misty Lown in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Personal Development & Entrepreneurship. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Chapter 1
Finding Your āYesā
Yes. Three little letters with big impact. The word yes is an initiator, an activator and a commitment to something tangible. A yes can be a promise of the heart or a proclamation to the world. Whether itās an internal or external affirmation, saying yes to something leaves a mark on you, the people you touch and the world you live in.
So the question is: āWhat kind of mark will you leave?ā
Everyone is called to leave a mark on this world, but not all people will do it. The excuses are plentiful: I donāt have the knowledge, time, resources, connections, education or influence. My kids are too little, my job is too big, my cash is too low, my debt is too high. I donāt even know what I would do. Iām not big enough, smart enough, strong enough, brave enough, organized enough or disciplined enough.
Enough!
YOU. ARE. ENOUGH.
You have been equipped with everything you need to do what you have been created to do. Not all at once, of course. Not in one day or even one year. But one baby step, one small yes decision at a time, you can make steady progress towards making a mark in the world that is uniquely yours to make.
If you want to make a difference in your life or business, understanding your calling is key. Without it, you cannot make the mark on the world that you, and you alone, were intended to make. So what is the thing that keeps you up at night, that chases you while you sleep and that plays at the edges of your waking thoughts, quietly nudging you for more attention? What would you pursue if you had no constraints on your time and plenty of resources for the journey ahead?
You may refer to this mark you want to make on the world as a/an:
Dream
Idea
Goal
Vision
Hope
Target
Mission
Objective
Project
Duty
Ambition
But I refer to it as YOUR CALLING. Dreams, ideas and goals can change over time. Hope can be dashed and projects can be shelved. Vision can cloud and targets can move. Ambition can be lost. Missions can be rewritten and duties can shift. But a CALLING? That is different. A calling cannot be denied. A calling will keep after you until you answer it.
Discovering Your Calling
Your calling has been hard-wired into your DNA. If you donāt believe me, all you have to do is look to your childhood to realize that a calling has left a trail of clues from your earliest memories to the present day. What did you play as a young child? How did you spend your free time? What subjects did you enjoy in school? What shows did you watch? What made you angry? What made you smile? What got you into trouble? Just like the fairytale Hansel and Gretel your calling has left a path of clues. You just have to follow the path home.
I remember when my calling became clear to me. But it didnāt start out that way. I was a 20-year-old college student, working my way through a Spanish degree by teaching dance lessons at a variety of local studios and a Boys & Girls Club. Although I enjoyed learning Spanish, I had no plans to teach it, and I wasnāt sure what else one would do with a Spanish degree. I had managed a 4.0, but had not managed to make any meaningful relationships as a commuter student at my college. I was looking for a way out.
Out of desperation, I did the most logical thing my brain could think of at the time and made a list of all the possible things I thought I could do with my life. The only thing that interested me was the first item on the list: āBecome a professional dancer.ā
I envisioned myself at the barre for daily classes and sweating through hours of company rehearsals. I could almost smell the theater and see the bright lights on the stage. To be honest, I donāt know if I was convinced I actually wanted to be a dancer or if I was just convinced I didnāt want to be a college student any longer. Either way, I set my eyes on the bright lights of New York City.
Before I go any further, I need to set the stage a bit. For starters, this was the mid-90s. I had no internet and no cell phone. I was still waiting for hours in line at the university computer lab to type papers for school, papers that were produced on a dot-matrix printer. I had no technology to my benefit and no resume to my credit, but I did have a worn-out copy of Dance magazine listing audition dates for a training program at the Alvin Ailey American Dance Center in NYC. Somehow, without a cell phone or internet, I found a flight and just enough courage to walk into one of the most famous dance schools in America and audition for their nine-month training program.
After an intense auditionāone where they lost my paperwork and I was the last one waiting in the lobby for resultsāI got the answer I had hoped for: acceptance!
I envisioned my admission to the nine-month program as the first step towards my only goal of becoming a professional dancer. So when I heard weeks later that the Ailey Company was performing two hours away from my hometown, I made the drive to catch a sneak peek of what I was sure would be my future.
I was sitting solo in the theater watching the athleticism and artistry come to life in Aileyās most iconic piece, āRevelationsā, when suddenly my lifeās true purpose came into focus as I heard a gentle whisper in my heart, a quiet question asking me, āThis is great, but how much of this performance will you remember a year from now, compared with how your students will remember the classes you gave and what you will remember of what you gave them?ā
I slid down in my seat as tears filled my eyes. The truth was clear. I wouldnāt remember the details of that performance in the years to come, but the students I had been teaching every day would remember my daily encouragement for a lifetime. I realized I had been chasing a dream to dance and ignoring my calling to teach.
As the final curtain fell, I rose from my seat. I knew what I needed to do. I donāt remember much of that drive home, but I do remember using the phone in our kitchen to dial the Ailey school the next day to tell them I wouldnāt be coming.
My calling was clear. The classroom would be my stage.
I have followed that calling for almost 20 years, one small yes at a time, and it has become more than I ever could have hoped for or imagined. Over the course of almost two decades, Iāve seen lasting benefits from encouraging my students in the classroom and beyond, mentoring them to use their gifts and talents to serve the community. My family has enjoyed the flexibility that comes with being self-employed, and they have learned from the sacrifices an entrepreneur must make. My employees have gained meaningful work along with full benefitsāa situation that has given them the ability to focus on their calling for teaching. My business has raised more than $400,000 for the local Red Cross and provided more than $250,000 in scholarships to students and teachers and donations to various local causes. I have contributed funds to a new community theater and have partnered with the Boys & Girls Club where I first started teaching. My dance studio affiliation program has helped hundreds of studio owners save their businesses and become deeply involved in their own communities. Last month, more than 1 million students interacted with our online magazine that promotes positive messages to young dancers.
I have to admit that if I hadnāt said that one small yes to my calling in the back of the theater all those years ago, tens of thousands of kids would not have been told āYou have great worth and value as a human beingā in our classrooms. Hundreds of thousands of dollars in scholarships and community grants would not have been funded through my business, and hundreds of dance studio owners would still be struggling to run successful businesses. And millions of dancers around the globe would be missing out on helpful and encouraging messages online, the place where most spend the majority of their free time. If I hadnāt said that one small yes to pursue my calling to teach dance all those years ago, which then led to opening my own dance studio, my family, my employees, my community and the industry I work in would look a lot different.
Having a strong sense of calling is critical in creating a life of significance. If you know what you love to do or what you feel you were created to do, you will have the ability to make a bigger impact on the world because you will be working from a position of confidence rather than hopes and dreams. You will be building your life from a place of strong identity in who you are, instead of wearing other peopleās expectations or interests like a pair of bad-fitting jeans. You have a calling that fits you, and only you, and it is the key to making a difference that only you can make.
Identity Crisis
When I was chasing the dream of becoming a professional dancer instead of my calling to become a teacher, I was experiencing an identity crisis. Perhaps you have faced a similar situation and you have put your stock into something you DO instead of someone you ARE. Your calling, that thing that only you can do in this world, is connected to who you ARE, not necessarily what you DO.
This might seem like an obvious difference, but think for a moment how foreign this distinction is in our daily language. Imagine this scene with me: You are at a reception and you are meeting someone for the first time. After the usual exchange of names and pleasantries, the very next question is going to be, āSo what do you do?ā
The mind has an innate desire to sort information. We are wired to put things, and people for that matter, into categories: safe/unsafe; interesting/boring; friend/foe. Itās a modern version of self-preservation. We may no longer be running from bears or other predators in the wild, but there is still a food chain and our natural instinct is to find out where we fall on the hierarchy as fast as possible.
All of this information sorting, however, has led us to an identity crisis of sorts. We not only categorize other people by what they do, we identify ourselves by our activities as well. Letās unpack this a little deeper for a minute.
Hereās a list of what I DO on a regular basis:
1. I run a dance studio for 750 kids.
2. I coach 164 dance studio owners around the globe.
3. I write articles for magazines.
4. I give keynote speeches.
5. I attend board meetings.
6. I chauffeur my kids around.
7. I eat dinner with my family.
8. I go to church on Sundays.
Thatās what I DO most of the time, but hereās who I AM all of the time:
1. I am a teacher.
2. I am a business coach.
3. I am a writer.
4. I am a communicator.
5. I am a volunteer.
6. I am a parent.
7. I am a wife.
8. I am a child of God.
If my dance school goes away, I would teach something else because I am still a teacher by nature. If I decided to stop coaching studio owners, I would coach other business owners. Iām no longer writing only for magazines, and if I never give another keynote I would still be wired as a communicator. I donāt need a stage to make a speech; just ask my kids. I canāt really wrap my head around it at this point in my life, but someday my kids will go off to college. Iāll still always be a parent and a wife. But, most importantly to me, even if I never had the chance to go to church again, I would always be one of Godās kids.
Take a minute and read the following sentence out loud: Who you ARE is as important to your CALLING as your calling is to creating a life that makes a DIFFERENCE in the world. Now, let it really soak in. Do you see the math inside of that sentence? Here is the formula for you visual learners like me:
Who you are = your calling
Your calling = the difference you were made to make in this world
Sometimes itās easier to see this equation in the lives of other people than it is to see in our own lives. Take Walt Disney for example. Walt Disney was created to, well, create! He said yes to his calling and raised enough money on his own to build the āHappiest Place on Earth,ā despite a lack of support from his board of directors and even his own brother. WHAT he did was build Disney World; WHO he was, however, was a creative genius. Had he not said yes to his calling, 650 million people would not have experienced the wonder of imagination and discovery within its gates, and central Florida would likely still be swampland. Even if you have never visited one of Disneyās theme parks, his characters were probably some of the most recognizable figures of your childhood.
Letās take a look at another recognizable world figure, Mother Teresa, a woman wired with a servant heart. She said yes to her calling to help the poorest of the poor, unwanted and unloved throughout society. WHAT she did was found a new religious community; WHO she was at heart was a messenger of charity. Had she not said yes to her calling, countless people would have suffered lonely, undignified lives and deaths. In 2011, I visited her Home for the Destitute and Dying in Haiti. I encountered profound peace there, despite being in the midst of some of the most heartbreaking situations I had ever witnessed. Had Mother Teresa not said yes in India over a half-century earlier, these men and women in Haiti would have been spending their last days in the garbage-covered streets outside.
Another significant leader, Abraham Lincoln, was a man innately tuned into issues of equality and justice. He said yes to acting on a deep conviction against what he called the āmonstrous injustice of slavery.ā WHAT he did was abolish slavery using his pos...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- Table of Contents
- Dedication
- Introduction
- Chapter 1: Finding Your āYesā
- Chapter 2 The Challenge of Yes
- Chapter 3 The Everyday Yes
- Chapter 4 The One Small Yes Toolbox
- Chapter 5 The Unconventional Yes
- Chapter 6 The Smallest Yes
- Chapter 7 The Art of Yes is No
- Chapter 8 My Wish for You
- Acknowledgements
- About the Author
- Thank You