15 things I learned on sabbatical

These past weeks have been incredible.

I’m so grateful for this time to pour into my project as I figure out What’s Next. As my hiatus winds down, I took some time to reflect on what I’ve learned so far.

Exhibit A

I’m trying something new. Instead of an overwhelming form out of the gate, I have a tiny form. If subscribers want a trading card, they fill in the next page. Maybe fewer people will abandon the page. Or maybe I’ve broken everything.

 

Exhibit B

Here are a few shorts I put together, including one that gives off some unintended ASMR vibes.

Exhibit C

Still learning. It’s all one big experiment. (I envisioned a brilliant book-themed repeating pattern to use for my Bookshop. It looked amazing in my head. You’re gonna have to trust me on that, because in reality it was crap. See? I ended up going a different direction.)

Exhibit D

I’ve abandoned two books so far in 2023. You won’t find them in my list of books I’ve read.

Exhibit E

Mother Nature didn’t understand the assignment. I wanted a cozy day to hunker down and Get Stuff Done. She overcorrected — a storm so bad it cancelled school and cut the power for my five most productive hours of the day. Here’s me, trying to look unphased and chill and not annoyed that Nothing Went As Planned.

Exhibit F

Check it out! I’ve started adding other people (and pets) in a more interactive way. This shows just the non-Americans (and also one non-American American — Pamela Churchill — because I haven’t quite figured everything out. (Here’s the full list, if you’re interested.) There are so many others to add. Feel free to throw any suggestions in to the comments section.

Exhibit G

Not sure how this would be at all helpful. It offers no design control. Somehow, clicking back to see how much I’ve done is satisfying. Probably not to anyone but me. And as my sabbatical comes to an end, the calendar will probably look downright naked. That doesn’t take away from the fact that it’s a thing I learned how to do.

Exhibit H

Are you looking for someone to read interesting biographies and history books? And doodle what they learn and make content (blog posts, videos, social media graphics, etc.)? And the books are all fascinating and entertaining, even if I don’t always agree with the content? Please reach out! Even if I know that’s not an actual job.


The next three weeks will zip by.

Thanks for cheering me on as I try to squeeze every last bit of awesomeness out of this time.

Theodore Roosevelt sabbatical

Like Grover Cleveland, I’m hardy but not “Theodore-Roosevelt-sabbatical-on-a-North-Dakota-ranch-hardy.” If I’m being totally honest, I’m not as hardy as Cleveland either. That man worked ‘round the clock and that’s not for me.

Heather Rogers, America's Preeminent Presidential Doodler

I’ve read at least one book about every U.S. president, never tire of shoehorning presidential trivia into conversations, and am basically an expert at hiding mistakes in my sketchbooks.

https://potuspages.com
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