Do you have unfinished projects lying around making you feel guilty? Or maybe a wonderful dream that has just stayed a dream?
I created A-teams to help people like me – procrastinators and perfectionists – get unstuck and achieve their goals.
A-teams work because they use the best – but most overlooked – resource on the planet:
Your Friends
It turns out support and a bit of accountability take you much farther than willpower and/or beating yourself up – plus it is more fun!
Back in 2009, I developed the A-team model to help myself break through an embarrassing 10 year writers block. It worked! (see story here).
16 years and 48 teams later, my dream is to make A-teams – friends helping each other get hard things done, right in the middle of their busy lives – as common as book groups. That is why I’m sharing this model 100 percent free.
This is not a sales job.
It’s an invitation to try it with your own friends, and watch what happens.
The only equipment you need
What an A-team meeting looks like:
You and 4 or 5 friends sign up to be a buddy team, meeting regularly (every 1-2 weeks).
At each meeting, buddies take turns naming one hard thing they want to get done in the upcoming week or two. It might be making a tough phone call, or going to the gym, or writing for 5 minutes on a sales presentation you’ve been putting off.
Everyone writes down all the steps, and you leave the meeting with steps on a card to tuck into your wallet.
The next week, you come back and report to the group how your step went. There are cheers when you did it, and sympathy when you didn’t. Then you each pledge a new step for the upcoming week.
It sounds so basic, but the results are remarkable! It turns out support and accountability (and sometimes a gentle kick in the pants) really help you get the hard stuff done.
Some of the things my teammates have done:
- Get my college degree at age 75
- Start a non-profit to combat human trafficking
- Clean out my closet
- Finish a sweater I started 20 years ago
- Track my expenses and live within my means
- Find a good home for my late husband’s belongings
- Train for a 5K to feel endorphins once again
- Finally write the book I’ve always had in me
- Become a police chaplain
- Find 2 hours for myself each week not to be taking care of others
- Launch a town-wide Kindness Day in the city of Bath, Maine.
- Have a gallery showing of my photographs
- Go on stage for the first time at age 80.
- Take one day off work every week to rest.
- Live in Tanzania part-time
- Trade in teaching to become a camp director
- Re-kindle my love of singing and join a madrigal group
- Go on silent retreat
- Find a way to pace myself and thrive while living with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
- Develop a morning prayer practice
- Learn how to sew a skirt for my body type
- Walk regularly and eat well so I can get in shape to travel again
- Find a way to earn 300 dollars so I can attend my daughter’s college
- graduation out of state
- Get up the courage to host people in my imperfect, messy home and share love and food with them….
….and so many more!
Could you try this on your own? Absolutely.
But why not take advantage of all my mistakes experience? Through hundreds of hours of trial and error I’ve
- Refined a simple structure that works for people from all walks of life
- Learned 3 great tools – which people can use right away – that break through procrastination and perfectionism
- Gathered some road-tested wisdom (such as how to kindly rein in runaway talkers) so your team STILL end up friends at the end!