Search a title or topic

Over 20 million podcasts, powered by 

Player FM logo
Artwork

Content provided by Patrick Fore. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Patrick Fore or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Player FM - Podcast App
Go offline with the Player FM app!

Yeah, Maybe - Why Some People Kill Your Ideas (And How to Protect Them)

54:45
 
Share
 

Manage episode 516078702 series 3660772
Content provided by Patrick Fore. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Patrick Fore or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Have you ever shared something you were excited about only to have it met with "yeah, maybe" or "how are you going to monetize that?"

In this episode, I sit down with a story that's been eating at me for weeks — a conversation at a coffee shop that revealed something uncomfortable about regret, haunted creatives, and the ghosts of unmade work.

This isn't about toxic positivity or hustle culture. It's about understanding the difference between someone who's tired and someone who's haunted. Between love and regret. Between the people who will protect your ideas and the ones who will kill them — often without realizing it.

And if I'm honest, it's about recognizing when we become those people ourselves.


In This Episode

The Coffee Shop Moment A conversation with a photographer friend that starts with excitement and ends with something closer to mourning.

The Difference Between Tired and Haunted Why some people poke holes in your ideas — and it has nothing to do with you.

Three Faces of Haunting

  • The perfectionist paralyzed by an impossible vision
  • The silent avoider who pretends not to see your success
  • The one with all the resources who just... doesn't

The Idea Graveyard My own confession: the photo essay about my hometown that will never exist, and what it taught me about shelf life.

Love vs. Regret How my wife Jaimi saved me from launching a business I didn't actually want — and how to tell the difference between questions that protect you and questions that undermine you.

The Physics of Regret How other people's ghosts create friction that converts your creative momentum into heat, defensiveness, and eventual paralysis.

Protecting Your Butterflies Practical strategies for guarding your ideas and building a "Go" list instead of a "Know" list.


Key Takeaways

  • Ideas have a life of their own — and a shelf life. They don't wait for you to be ready.
  • "Yeah, maybe" is the sound of a butterfly dying.
  • Tired people say, "I'm exhausted, but that sounds amazing." Haunted people poke holes.
  • The dream can become the cage — perfectionism is just another form of paralysis.
  • Friction is cumulative: each skeptical question converts your creative energy into defensive heat.
  • Most haunted people aren't villains. They're good people carrying ghosts.
  • The only thing worse than starting something and failing is not starting something at all.


Quotable Moments

"He wasn't trying to kill my idea. He was mourning his own."

"When your idea gets that big, that expensive, that unreachable — it becomes a shield. The dream has become the cage."

"Ideas have a shelf life. They start fresh, urgent, necessary. Leave them too long, they spoil."

"Haunted people ask questions to protect themselves. People who love you ask questions to protect you."

"Friction converts kinetic energy into heat. Your momentum gets converted into defensiveness. Your creative energy burns off as anxiety."

"The only thing worse than starting something and failing... is not starting something at all." — Seth Godin

"You can't hitch your momentum to parked cars."


The Light Leak Assignment

Make two lists:

List One: The Haunted People who respond to your excitement with skepticism, apathy, or "yeah, maybe." They don't get access to your butterflies.

List Two: The Builders The ones who finish, ship, say "fuck yes," and offer help instead of obstacles. These are your people.

Stop pitching to List One. Guard your butterflies. Feed them only to people who still believe they're real.

Concepts Explored:

  • Friction (physics)
  • Ideas as living things with shelf lives
  • Haunted vs. tired creatives
  • The "Go" list vs. "Know" list

Quote: "The only thing worse than starting something and failing... is not starting something at all." — Seth Godin


Connect With Patrick

Website: patrickfore.com

Instagram: @patrickfore

Podcast: The Terrible Photographer

Book: Lessons From a Terrible Photographer (coming soon)


Credits

Host & Producer: Patrick Fore

Episode Photography: Amy Humphries Find Amy on Instagram: @amyjoyhumphries

Music Licensed Through:

  • Epidemic Sound
  • Blue Dot Sessions

Support The Show

If this episode resonated with you, here's how you can help:

  • Leave a review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify — it helps other people find the show
  • Share this episode with someone who needs to hear it
  • Subscribe so you don't miss future episodes
  • Send me a DM on Instagram and tell me which list you're on

A Note From Patrick

This episode has been living in my head for weeks. The coffee shop conversation happened months ago, but it took me this long to understand what it was really about.

I hope this gives you permission to protect your ideas. To say "fuck yes" to butterflies when they land on your shoulder. And to stop asking permission from people who stopped saying yes a long time ago.

Thanks for being here.

Until next Tuesday — stay curious, stay courageous, and yeah, stay terrible.

— Patrick

The Terrible Photographer is a podcast for creative humans navigating the messy reality of making work that matters. We don't do hustle culture. We don't do toxic positivity. We do honest conversations about creativity, identity, and finding your voice.

  continue reading

34 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 516078702 series 3660772
Content provided by Patrick Fore. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Patrick Fore or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Have you ever shared something you were excited about only to have it met with "yeah, maybe" or "how are you going to monetize that?"

In this episode, I sit down with a story that's been eating at me for weeks — a conversation at a coffee shop that revealed something uncomfortable about regret, haunted creatives, and the ghosts of unmade work.

This isn't about toxic positivity or hustle culture. It's about understanding the difference between someone who's tired and someone who's haunted. Between love and regret. Between the people who will protect your ideas and the ones who will kill them — often without realizing it.

And if I'm honest, it's about recognizing when we become those people ourselves.


In This Episode

The Coffee Shop Moment A conversation with a photographer friend that starts with excitement and ends with something closer to mourning.

The Difference Between Tired and Haunted Why some people poke holes in your ideas — and it has nothing to do with you.

Three Faces of Haunting

  • The perfectionist paralyzed by an impossible vision
  • The silent avoider who pretends not to see your success
  • The one with all the resources who just... doesn't

The Idea Graveyard My own confession: the photo essay about my hometown that will never exist, and what it taught me about shelf life.

Love vs. Regret How my wife Jaimi saved me from launching a business I didn't actually want — and how to tell the difference between questions that protect you and questions that undermine you.

The Physics of Regret How other people's ghosts create friction that converts your creative momentum into heat, defensiveness, and eventual paralysis.

Protecting Your Butterflies Practical strategies for guarding your ideas and building a "Go" list instead of a "Know" list.


Key Takeaways

  • Ideas have a life of their own — and a shelf life. They don't wait for you to be ready.
  • "Yeah, maybe" is the sound of a butterfly dying.
  • Tired people say, "I'm exhausted, but that sounds amazing." Haunted people poke holes.
  • The dream can become the cage — perfectionism is just another form of paralysis.
  • Friction is cumulative: each skeptical question converts your creative energy into defensive heat.
  • Most haunted people aren't villains. They're good people carrying ghosts.
  • The only thing worse than starting something and failing is not starting something at all.


Quotable Moments

"He wasn't trying to kill my idea. He was mourning his own."

"When your idea gets that big, that expensive, that unreachable — it becomes a shield. The dream has become the cage."

"Ideas have a shelf life. They start fresh, urgent, necessary. Leave them too long, they spoil."

"Haunted people ask questions to protect themselves. People who love you ask questions to protect you."

"Friction converts kinetic energy into heat. Your momentum gets converted into defensiveness. Your creative energy burns off as anxiety."

"The only thing worse than starting something and failing... is not starting something at all." — Seth Godin

"You can't hitch your momentum to parked cars."


The Light Leak Assignment

Make two lists:

List One: The Haunted People who respond to your excitement with skepticism, apathy, or "yeah, maybe." They don't get access to your butterflies.

List Two: The Builders The ones who finish, ship, say "fuck yes," and offer help instead of obstacles. These are your people.

Stop pitching to List One. Guard your butterflies. Feed them only to people who still believe they're real.

Concepts Explored:

  • Friction (physics)
  • Ideas as living things with shelf lives
  • Haunted vs. tired creatives
  • The "Go" list vs. "Know" list

Quote: "The only thing worse than starting something and failing... is not starting something at all." — Seth Godin


Connect With Patrick

Website: patrickfore.com

Instagram: @patrickfore

Podcast: The Terrible Photographer

Book: Lessons From a Terrible Photographer (coming soon)


Credits

Host & Producer: Patrick Fore

Episode Photography: Amy Humphries Find Amy on Instagram: @amyjoyhumphries

Music Licensed Through:

  • Epidemic Sound
  • Blue Dot Sessions

Support The Show

If this episode resonated with you, here's how you can help:

  • Leave a review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify — it helps other people find the show
  • Share this episode with someone who needs to hear it
  • Subscribe so you don't miss future episodes
  • Send me a DM on Instagram and tell me which list you're on

A Note From Patrick

This episode has been living in my head for weeks. The coffee shop conversation happened months ago, but it took me this long to understand what it was really about.

I hope this gives you permission to protect your ideas. To say "fuck yes" to butterflies when they land on your shoulder. And to stop asking permission from people who stopped saying yes a long time ago.

Thanks for being here.

Until next Tuesday — stay curious, stay courageous, and yeah, stay terrible.

— Patrick

The Terrible Photographer is a podcast for creative humans navigating the messy reality of making work that matters. We don't do hustle culture. We don't do toxic positivity. We do honest conversations about creativity, identity, and finding your voice.

  continue reading

34 episodes

All episodes

×
 
Loading …

Welcome to Player FM!

Player FM is scanning the web for high-quality podcasts for you to enjoy right now. It's the best podcast app and works on Android, iPhone, and the web. Signup to sync subscriptions across devices.

 

Copyright 2025 | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | | Copyright
Listen to this show while you explore
Play