Where do you fall on a scale of
meh to meltdown?
Feeling restless and not sure why?
Life doesn’t change just because the date does.
Forget resolutions.
It might be a time for a total reboot.
Replays available for
The Winter Reset
A 3-part workshop series
Reboot your mood.
Renew your focus.
Reclaim your confidence.
Register now & check your email
for next steps!
You don’t need be a new “you” this year—there was nothing wrong with the old one! In fact, you’ve barely scratched the surface of who that is and can be.
In this engaging and interactive workshop series, you will:
• CHALLENGE the ideas you’ve mistaken for rules (for way too long)
• IDENTIFY the blocks and limiting beliefs that keep you stuck
• RESET and generate new ideas
• RECONNECT with passion and focus
• TRY A CREATIVE TOOL for discovering your own thoughts and ideas you’ve inherited from other people
• ESTABLISH your next steps for making your ideas real
Program Overview
Session 1 | Questioning the rules: What’s wrong with (most of) the ideas you’ve been handed
Session 2 | The power of story and how to explore your own.
Session 3 | The truth about confidence and why it doesn't need to lead
Session 4 | Unpacking the critic: How to get out of your own way
Session 5 | Keep going: How to create the conditions for momentum
Session 6 | Reflection + next steps; Q&A
The Winter Reset
Replays available!
About Terri
Terri Trespicio helps people who want to work with meaning and live with purpose to stop waiting to find their passions and instead unlock their creative genius—so they can share it. Her TEDx talk, “Stop Searching for Your Passion,” has been viewed more than 7.5 million times, and she’s the author of Unfollow Your Passion: How to Create a Life that Matters to You (Atria/Simon & Schuster). An award-winning writer and keynote speaker, she’s a former magazine editor at Martha Stewart, and her writing has been featured in Marie Claire, Jezebel, Business Insider, Oprah magazine, and others. She earned her MFA in creative writing from Emerson College, where her thesis won the graduate dean award, and she placed first for creative nonfiction in the Baltimore Review’s 2016 literary contest. Terri lives in Manhattan.