

Acknowledging the Lizard – Acknowledging the Lizard is the part of our brain that fears negative criticism towards our work more than anything else. Upon being told it's “wrong”, it can cause us to just give up.
Fail – Failing is the ability to accept that what you did was total crap and being able to move onto the next project with our heads still held high regardless.
Connect – Connecting is the ability to share our thoughts and feelings with a wide range of people at simply the press of a button rather than the limitations innovators had in the past.
Accurate...? Somewhat.
While I didn't agree with all 7 of Seth Godin's tips, I do agree with the 3 I chose to summarize. To start, I'll talk about “Acknowledging the Lizard”. The concept of this is incredibly correct, and I know this from experience. There are numerous accounts of times when I've spent a lot of time on some sort of project and gotten it to a point where I find it to be acceptable, yet when I show it off to others they proceed to tear it apart. A lot of the time you will find yourself fighting back against their honest opinions and telling them “No, you're wrong.” simply because you yourself doesn't want to be wrong. Following that, upon enough negative criticism, I'll even give up on projects that could have easily been salvageable because of how discouraged the comments made me. This luckily isn't a problem when it comes to our blogging. We're given the ability to speak our minds, where no matter if we're for or against the subject, we will still receive credit for doing it. This is very important in improving as creative individuals because we don't have to fear being told what we've done was incorrect as long as we've followed the broad guidelines. Next comes “Failing”, a word I fear greatly. There is nothing worse than the feeling of knowing all of your hard work spent on something has been a total waste. Recovering from this and allowing yourself to continue to give your everything on the projects to come is a hard task to do, but yet a necessity. Allowing yourself to shortchange your creativity so you just end up doing the bear-minimal to meet a projects specific guidelines is horrible. Luckily, these blogs have incredibly broad rubrics, which allow for us to express ourselves without having to worry about losing large amounts of points all over the place and hence failing that assignment. The third of the terms I chose was “Connecting”, a term that applies perfectly to these blogs because that is entirely what they are. We are posting them to an online public blogging site where they are visible/connectable with the whole world with just the press of the button. This offers the ability for users to contribute feedback and opinions to other users instantly. Concepts like this would never have been possible in the past and restricted peers to only the feedback of their teacher, and even that took a great deal of time.