The "Ready" Trap: 3 Lessons from Saying 'Yes' to the Unknown
In the world of entrepreneurship, we are conditioned to worship the trifecta of preparation, planning, and execution. We tell ourselves that growth is a linear result of effort and that readiness is a prerequisite for action.
But reality rarely follows a syllabus.
The most transformative opportunities often arrive with terrible timing. They show up before you feel qualified, stretching your identity and exposing every hidden insecurity. If you listen to that inner voice of doubt, you’ll walk away from the very thing meant to build you. I’ve learned that you don't need to feel ready to be ready. Your willingness to step into the arena is exactly what prepares you for the fight.
Here are the three lessons I’ve gathered from leaning into the opportunities I felt completely unprepared for.
1. Effort is Your Primary Qualification
When I was invited to interview Jay Shetty, my initial reaction wasn't excitement—it was a frantic internal interrogation. Why me? I’m not a professional interviewer. I don’t have the pedigree he’s used to.
I eventually realized that effort is often the only qualification opportunity requires. We often mistake fear for a lack of talent. Whether it was that interview or the years it took me to finally admit I was writing a book without adding a self-deprecating caveat, the hurdle was the same: I felt I hadn't "earned" the right to be there.
The Lesson: Fear isn’t a sign that you’re a fraud; it’s a sign that you’re evolving. When an opportunity taps into your identity rather than just your resume, it’s going to feel risky. Do it anyway.
2. "Do It Scared" is a Growth Strategy
The real magic didn't happen during the interview itself—it happened in the aftermath. I showed up, I followed the script, and I survived. Was it perfect? No. I played it safe when I could have injected more of my own personality.
However, that "imperfect" performance provided something more valuable than a flawless one: Data.
By doing it scared, I identified my blind spots and learned how I react under high-pressure stress. I realized that the "messy" middle of an experience is where the most potent growth lives. Hands-on experience is a form of alchemy; it takes the leaden weight of nerves and transforms it into the gold of competence.
3. Confidence is Built in the Rearview Mirror
If I were to interview a figure like Shetty today, the conversation would be entirely different. That change wouldn't be the result of a sudden burst of talent, but of reflection.
Confidence doesn’t come from the act of doing; it comes from analyzing what you did.
Reflection turns experience into insight.
Insight leads to better decision-making.
Discernment (born from reflection) builds true confidence.
When I’m working on my book and the old insecurities start to scream, I have to remind myself that questioning the process isn't the same as failing. Looking back at uncomfortable moments allows you to refine your intuition, making your future moves more intentional and informed.
Final Thoughts
As the crew was clipping the microphone to my clothes for that interview, I caught myself spiraling: "Who am I to be here?" Then, I asked a better question: "Who am I to turn this down?"
Entrepreneurship is a guarantee of discomfort. You will be invited into rooms before you feel prepared to sit at the table. You can wait for confidence to arrive, or you can let your courage build it for you. If an opportunity makes you nervous because it’s stretching you—that’s exactly why you should say yes.
