Aligning your creative output, marketing, and business rhythm with natural and psychological seasons rather than fighting them.
Murasaki's writing is deeply attuned to seasons—each carries emotional and aesthetic weight in The Tale of Genji. This seasonal consciousness reflects her understanding that human psychology, creativity, and energy naturally fluctuate. Most creative entrepreneurs fight these rhythms, expecting consistent output year-round and interpreting seasonal dips as personal failure. Seasonal attunement offers a different approach: recognizing that spring calls for expansion and new projects, summer for output and visibility, autumn for reflection and refinement, winter for rest and planning. You structure client commitments, marketing efforts, and creative projects in concert with these natural cycles. This reduces burnout, increases the quality of work produced during high-energy seasons, and honors the necessary fallow periods. It also allows you to communicate transparently with clients about your working rhythm, building understanding and reducing the shame many creatives feel about their natural rhythms.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.