29. What I’ve Learned Walking Through All Four Stages
If you’ve followed this series from the beginning, you’ve seen the full arc of the side hustle journey:
Each one comes with its own emotions, questions, and turning points.
But today, I want to zoom out and share what this looked like for me.
Not as a coach or writer—but as a person who started with the same fears, doubts, and messy beginnings.
It Didn’t Start With a Business Plan
It started with an itch.
A need to create something of my own.
A late-night feeling that I was meant for more than just clocking in and out.
A notebook full of ideas that all felt kind of… half-baked.
I spent a long time in Stage 0—wondering if I was “allowed” to do something different. If I had anything worth sharing. If I’d be taken seriously.
And then, one day, I stopped asking for permission.
I decided to explore—just to see what might happen.
Choosing One Idea Felt Like a Risk
When I entered Stage 1, I felt overwhelmed.
I had too many directions I could go.
I was terrified of choosing “wrong.”
But eventually, I picked something. Not forever—just for now.
I started talking about it. Writing about it.
And that clarity I was chasing? It didn’t come all at once—but it did come through action.
Testing My Idea Was Terrifying
Stage 2 was easily the scariest for me.
Putting my idea into the world—where people could ignore it, reject it, or not get it—felt deeply uncomfortable.
But the moment I ripped the bandaid off (the first post, the first email, the first offer), I realized:
I’d spent so much time worrying about what might go wrong…
That I’d never stopped to imagine what might go right.
And when that first person replied, or engaged, or said “I needed this”—everything shifted.
Growth Is Messy, But Worth It
In Stage 3, things started to click.
I had traction—but I also had new problems: time, energy, structure, focus.
I learned that saying no is just as important as showing up.
I learned that done consistently beats done perfectly.
And I learned to build systems that support me, rather than exhaust me.
This stage isn’t glamorous—but it’s where the real magic happens.
If You’re Just Starting Out…
Here’s what I want you to know:
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You don’t have to know exactly where it’s going
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You don’t need a niche, a brand, or a big audience
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You just need to be curious enough to try
Start messy. Stay open. Trust that clarity, confidence, and momentum will come.
Because they will.
And if you’re somewhere between the early stages and growth—don’t rush it.
You’re not behind.
You’re not late.
You’re on the path.
Thanks for coming on this journey with me.
This might be the last article in this series, but your journey is just getting started.
If you ever want help navigating your own stages, you know where to find me.
Talk soon,
Nathan Pearce
Creator of Risk Free Side Hustle
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