Episode

What Are Your Escape Hatches?

Podcast
Daily Creative with Todd Henry
Published
Dec 2, 2025
Duration seconds
1076
Processing state
not_requested
Canonical source
https://podcast.toddhenry.com/86
Audio
https://dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/episodes.captivate.fm/episode/fd78257e-188f-43e4-a5bb-d3aebc093653.mp3
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/v1/public/podcasts/daily-creative-with-todd-henry-745412/episodes/what-are-your-escape-hatches
Markdown
/podcast/daily-creative-with-todd-henry-745412/what-are-your-escape-hatches.md

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Summary

In this episode of Daily Creative, Todd Henry explores the subtle ways in which we avoid true commitment to our creative and professional ambitions. Todd discusses the concept of "escape hatches"—the backup plans, excuses, and rationalizations that prevent us from risking real vulnerability and discovering what we’re truly capable of. Drawing from personal stories and practical frameworks, we unpack three common escape hatches that undermine creative and leadership excellence: procrastination and last-minute work, dilution and divided attention, and backward rationalization of success. Todd also digs into actionable strategies to help you spot these patterns in your work, close escape hatches, and move forward with greater intentionality. Whether you lead teams, dream of launching a business, or simply want your creative efforts to have more impact, this episode offers practical, non-obvious guidance for getting braver, more focused, and brilliant every day. Five Key Learnings from the Episode: Escape hatches often feel like wisdom, but are usually just disguised fear.  We tend to rationalize delay or avoid commitment under the guise of being "prudent," when in reality it is keeping us from meaningful progress. Procrastination and last-minute work protect us from knowing what our best effort truly looks like.  Setting step goals and using time blocking can counter the urge to push everything to the last minute and drive more consistent creative output. Dilution and divided attention dilute impact.  By focusing on your "Big Three" priorities and carving out protected space to pursue them, you ensure that your energy is devoted to what matters most—and can actually achieve excellence. Backward rationalization undermines growth.  Defining what success…