Audit > Edit > Move Forward

Let’s keep it simple.

We get stuck when there’s too much in the way.

Sometimes it’s projects we’ve outgrown.
Sometimes it’s ideas we’re clinging to.
Sometimes it’s just noise—tasks, habits, or people pulling us in ten directions.

So instead of powering through, you pause and clear the path.

Here’s the process I use:

1. AUDIT

Take stock. What’s here right now?

Ask:

  • What’s working?

  • What’s draining?

  • What’s outdated?

  • What am I tolerating that’s costing me energy?

This isn’t about fixing everything. It’s about getting honest.

2. EDIT

Now comes the shift.

Editing doesn’t always mean cutting. Sometimes it means reframing. Upgrading. Letting go. Saying no. Saying yes, but with limits.

Examples:

  • You realize one “quick” recurring task eats up a full day each month. Automate it or delegate it.

  • You drop a service that no longer fits.

  • You rename an offer to reflect what it actually does—suddenly people get it.

3. MOVE FORWARD

This is where momentum comes back. You’re no longer dragging the old stuff.

You don’t need a full new plan. Just the next right step that fits the clarity you’ve just created.

Maybe you:

  • Launch something that’s been stuck in draft.

  • Follow up with someone you’ve been circling.

  • Take a week off from a habit that isn’t helping.

It doesn’t have to be huge. It just has to be true.

This is what I help people do.

Not just make things look better.
Make them feel better. Work better. Mean more.

The Clarity Edit isn’t a one-time thing.
It’s a tool you can use again and again—whenever things feel off.

Audit. Edit. Move forward.

Repeat as needed.

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The Shift