Man, I spent years wondering why I kept hitting walls in my career. I always walked into a room and everybody was fired up about my ideas. I could sell ice to an Eskimo, you know? But six months later, I’d be bored stiff, already looking for the next mountain to climb. My resume was a mess. Every time I landed a decent job, I ended up ditching it because the detailed execution just felt like suffocating bureaucracy.
I finally identified what was going on about two years ago. I was talking to a friend who is super into Tarot stuff—don’t laugh, stick with me—and she pointed out that my entire professional M.O. was pure King of Wands energy. Big vision, huge energy, charismatic leader, but zero patience for maintenance. A project starter, not a finisher. I looked at my last three job failures and realized she nailed it. I was burning out because I’d launch the ship and then jump off before it reached the dock.
I decided to structure an experiment. Could I harness that fire without letting it consume the stable foundation I needed? I needed three simple rules I could actually stick to, rules that forced my KoW energy to play nice with the real world.
The Practice: Admitting I Needed a Brake Pedal
The first step was the hardest: I had to admit I was great at the vision part, and terrible at the follow-through part. I accepted that my superpower was also my biggest vulnerability. I landed a director role at a mid-sized tech company, the kind of place where you needed both innovation and rigorous reporting. This was my test environment.

My entire practice revolved around three core disciplines. I had to mandate them into my daily work routine right from the start, or I knew I’d slip back into chaos.
Here’s what I put into action:
- Tip 1: Hire and Empower the Administrator.
- Tip 2: Create the Mandatory 72-Hour Cooldown.
- Tip 3: Build the “Micro-Vision” Wall.
Implementing Tip 1: The Administrative Anchor
My tendency is to just blurt out ideas—fire, ready, aim. I used to overwhelm my teams. This time, I immediately hired a senior executive assistant, Sarah. But her job wasn’t just scheduling. I explicitly told her: “You are my anchor. When I walk into your office excited about Project X, you immediately stop me, make me write the first three actionable steps, and then you take over the project timeline and all the annoying details.”
It was brutal at first. I fought her constantly. I’d try to bypass her and talk directly to the engineering team. But she’d calmly email the team, CCing me, saying, “The Director’s vision is great, but we are prioritizing the 72-hour sprint for Project Z first.” It forced me to delegate the details I hated. I had to train myself to trust her handling the fire extinguisher while I started the fires. This freed up 40% of my mental energy that used to be wasted trying to manage spreadsheets I hated.
Implementing Tip 2: The Mandatory 72-Hour Cooldown
The KoW thrives on impulsive launches. I would wake up at 3 AM with a killer idea and try to launch a whole new initiative by 9 AM. Disastrous. So, I implemented the 72-hour rule. If I had a new, massive, company-altering idea—something that gave me that adrenaline rush—I was not allowed to mention it to anyone, not even Sarah, for three full days.
I forced myself to write the idea down in a private notebook, sit on it, and revisit it exactly 72 hours later. You wouldn’t believe how many “genius” ideas dissolved into utter nonsense after 72 hours of objective cooling. This wasn’t about killing ambition; it was about filtering recklessness. I started only bringing high-quality, pre-vetted ideas to the table, and suddenly, my team stopped seeing me as an unstable maniac.
Implementing Tip 3: Building the “Micro-Vision” Wall
My KoW energy requires constant movement and big wins. If the current project (say, a six-month software rollout) felt too long, I got bored and started looking for another job. I needed quick dopamine hits.
I structured my work environment to provide these hits without derailing the main goal. I created a “Micro-Vision Wall”—literally a whiteboard broken into small quadrants. The main priority went in the center. But the outer quadrants were for small, exciting, low-stakes projects that could be finished in less than a week. Things like optimizing one small corner of the website or launching a tiny internal mentorship program.
When I felt the inevitable boredom creeping up, I channeled that restless energy into finishing one of those small quadrant tasks. I leveraged my need for excitement to get small, tangible wins. It made the long haul (the main project) feel less draining because I was constantly achieving something new and exciting on the periphery.
The Final Outcome
I observed the results after six months. For the first time in my career, I completed a major corporate initiative on time, under budget, and didn’t quit halfway through. I realized that the King of Wands isn’t bad; he just needs a detailed plan, a patient manager (Sarah), and a sandbox to play in when the real work gets heavy. I didn’t kill my drive; I just refined it. If you have that massive, fiery, entrepreneurial spirit but keep burning your bridges, try these methods. They stabilized my career and let the fire actually heat the house instead of just burning it down.
