The Multipassionate Soul

Career Clarity Framework for Multi-Passionates

9 min · 13. mar. 2026
episode Career Clarity Framework for Multi-Passionates cover

Description

For years, I thought I had a commitment problem. I would get excited about new ideas, pursue them intensely, and then eventually feel scattered again. The advice I heard over and over was simple: “Just pick one thing.” But what if the problem isn’t that you have too many interests? What if the real issue is that you’re missing the one thing that actually organizes them? In this episode, I share the framework that completely changed the way I think about careers, creativity, and building a business as a multipassionate person. You’ll learn why trying to force yourself into a single niche often creates more confusion—and what to do instead. We’ll explore: • The hidden reason multipassionate people often feel scattered• Why “follow your passion” advice can backfire• The psychological concept that can help guide your career decisions• The difference between a passion and a value (and why this matters more than you think)• The metaphor that explains why so many talented people drift between paths• The one concept that can help bring all your interests together And I’ll introduce the Anchor & Toybox Framework—a way of organizing your interests so that your creativity, work, and projects can finally start working together instead of competing with each other. If you’ve ever wondered: Why do I have so many interests but still feel unclear about my direction? Do I actually have to choose just one path? Is it possible to build a career that includes multiple passions? This episode will give you a different way of thinking about the problem. I also created a free Inventory Worksheet to help you explore the patterns in your skills, interests, experiences, and values. It includes a copy-and-paste ChatGPT prompt to help you reflect on your answers and start identifying the deeper themes that may point toward your Anchor. You can get the worksheet by subscribing on Substack using the link below. Because once you discover the one thread that connects what you do… Your interests may stop feeling scattered—and start making sense. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit themultipassionatesoul.substack.com [https://themultipassionatesoul.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

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All episodes

17 episodes

episode 17 The Clarity Question Every Multi-Passionate Needs to Hear artwork

17 The Clarity Question Every Multi-Passionate Needs to Hear

Feeling stuck in your 9-to-5, dreaming about building a business but not sure how to make the leap? This episode is for you. I spent years asking the wrong question before I built my business — and that one wrong question kept me financially trapped and scattered as a multi-passionate for longer than I needed to be. Today I’m sharing the reframe that changed everything, walking you through my real numbers, and giving you the journal prompts that helped me work through the psychology of money, budgeting, and guilt along the way. In this episode: * The question most people ask that keeps them stuck — and the one to ask instead * How I redesigned my expenses to reduce pressure as I built * How I generated $1,000–2,000/month from a skill I already had to pay off debt and build a safety fund * Journal prompts for overspending and budget guilt * Why living lean while building is a season, not a sentence This episode is part of the Career Framework for Creatives & Multi-Passionates. Check out the episode mentioned in this video using the link below: EP3: You’re “Small” Skills Can Actually Be Your Biggest Asset [LINK TO SMALL SKILLS EPISODE] [https://themultipassionatesoul.substack.com/p/ep-03-your-small-skills-can-actually] If this resonated, leave a review — it helps more multi-passionates find the show. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit themultipassionatesoul.substack.com [https://themultipassionatesoul.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

Yesterday16 min
episode 16 Clammy Hands, Imposter Syndrome & My Closet artwork

16 Clammy Hands, Imposter Syndrome & My Closet

📝 FULL SHOW NOTES Have you ever walked into something fully prepared — and then immediately felt like a fraud? Imposter syndrome hits differently when you’re building your own business. You’ve done the work. You have the credentials. And yet, the moment someone more experienced walks in the room, your body starts sending panic signals your brain never asked for. In this episode of The Multi-Passionate Sould, Crystal — multipassionate entrepreneur, associate marriage and family therapist, and someone currently learning to sew her own clothes — shares the moment a client revealed she was also a therapist, and what that clammy-hands experience unlocked about the psychology of confidence and entrepreneurship. What she discovered goes way beyond mindset work. There’s a Gestalt therapy technique, a body of research on enclothed cognition, and a surprisingly practical tool called the Bank of Success — and together, they point to something most business coaches won’t tell you: How you get dressed might be one of the most underrated confidence tools you have. But there’s a tension here, too — and [YOUR NAME] doesn’t skip it. What happens when you genuinely love comfort? When formality feels performative? When you’re doing telehealth from home and wondering if any of this even matters if no one can see below the waist? That part’s in here too. Honestly. SOURCES * Adam, H. & Galinsky, A.D. (2012). Enclothed cognition. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. * Slepian, M.L. et al. (2015). The cognitive consequences of formal clothing. Social Psychological and Personality Science. * Maran, T. et al. (2020). Clothes make the leader. Journal of Business Research. * Wesemann Lekkas, H. et al. (2025). Appearing authentic: How dress formality influences perceived authenticity in investment evaluations. Journal of Management. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit themultipassionatesoul.substack.com [https://themultipassionatesoul.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

1. maj 202618 min
episode The Permission Slip: Psychology for Creative Entrepreneurs artwork

The Permission Slip: Psychology for Creative Entrepreneurs

You have too many ideas. Too many passions. Too many half-started things in too many tabs. And somewhere between the vision and the first real step, a voice shows up and asks the question that stops everything: who are you to do this?Hosted by an Associate Marriage and Family Therapist with a background in entertainment and business, each episode goes where most business podcasts won't: into the psychology behind why brilliant people stay stuck, and the science-backed tools to get unstuck for good.This is not a marketing show. It's not a hustle show. It's the conversation your therapist and your business coach would have if they were the same person.Expect raw personal stories, frameworks made genuinely useful, and the kind of honest, practical episodes that make you feel seen — and then make you do something about it.Your many passions are not the problem. They are the product. We're just going to figure out what to build with them. Sources: Newman, A., Obschonka, M., Schwarz, S., Cohen, M., & Nielsen, I. (2019). Entrepreneurial self-efficacy: A systematic review of the literature on its theoretical foundations, measurement, antecedents, and outcomes, and an agenda for future research. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 110, 403–419. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvb.2018.05.012 [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvb.2018.05.012] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit themultipassionatesoul.substack.com [https://themultipassionatesoul.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

20. apr. 202621 min
episode Career Clarity Framework for Multi-Passionates artwork

Career Clarity Framework for Multi-Passionates

For years, I thought I had a commitment problem. I would get excited about new ideas, pursue them intensely, and then eventually feel scattered again. The advice I heard over and over was simple: “Just pick one thing.” But what if the problem isn’t that you have too many interests? What if the real issue is that you’re missing the one thing that actually organizes them? In this episode, I share the framework that completely changed the way I think about careers, creativity, and building a business as a multipassionate person. You’ll learn why trying to force yourself into a single niche often creates more confusion—and what to do instead. We’ll explore: • The hidden reason multipassionate people often feel scattered• Why “follow your passion” advice can backfire• The psychological concept that can help guide your career decisions• The difference between a passion and a value (and why this matters more than you think)• The metaphor that explains why so many talented people drift between paths• The one concept that can help bring all your interests together And I’ll introduce the Anchor & Toybox Framework—a way of organizing your interests so that your creativity, work, and projects can finally start working together instead of competing with each other. If you’ve ever wondered: Why do I have so many interests but still feel unclear about my direction? Do I actually have to choose just one path? Is it possible to build a career that includes multiple passions? This episode will give you a different way of thinking about the problem. I also created a free Inventory Worksheet to help you explore the patterns in your skills, interests, experiences, and values. It includes a copy-and-paste ChatGPT prompt to help you reflect on your answers and start identifying the deeper themes that may point toward your Anchor. You can get the worksheet by subscribing on Substack using the link below. Because once you discover the one thread that connects what you do… Your interests may stop feeling scattered—and start making sense. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit themultipassionatesoul.substack.com [https://themultipassionatesoul.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

13. mar. 20269 min
episode From Hobby Prices to Profitable Business artwork

From Hobby Prices to Profitable Business

If you’ve ever thought, “I love too many things—how could I ever build a consistent, profitable business?” this episode of The Multipassionate Soul Podcast is for you. I’m Crystal—associate marriage and family therapist, retired advertising professional, and your guide to building a business that actually fits how your creative brain works. In this episode, we’re talking directly to multipassionate creators—sewers, designers, painters, astrologers, eco-conscious makers—whose inventory changes constantly and who feel stuck between loving many things and needing financial stability. You’ll learn why launching all your ideas at once is the fastest path to burnout, how to choose a focus without betraying your creativity, and the pricing framework that helps you honor your energy and your future vision—without relying on hustle, guilt, or undercharging. This isn’t about forcing yourself into a niche that feels suffocating. It’s about learning how to price in a way that allows evolution, sustainability, and real income. 🔑 Key Takeaways * Your multipassionate nature isn’t the problem—but how you’re pricing it might be. There’s a specific way multipassionate creators can use limited focus without losing freedom—and most people get this part wrong. * Consistency doesn’t come from doing fewer things—it comes from sequencing them correctly. The difference between burnout and momentum isn’t discipline… it’s structure. And once you see it, you can’t unsee it. * If pricing feels emotionally uncomfortable, that discomfort is data—not a stop sign. There’s a hidden psychological reason high prices feel “wrong,” and it has very little to do with your customer. * You may be pricing for survival instead of pricing for replacement. This single shift explains why so many creative businesses stay stuck at the same income level year after year. Video Mentioned in the Show: This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit themultipassionatesoul.substack.com [https://themultipassionatesoul.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

20. feb. 202611 min