August 21st, 2014 — 5:30am
If you spend too much time looking at what success will be like when you get there, and not enough time taking action, you probably won’t get anywhere.
If you spend too much time taking action and not enough time looking at what success will be like, you might get there and find out you are not where you want to be.
The second mistake is sneakier than the first, because all the effort and motion feels responsible and can create a long (even lifelong) illusion that you are getting closer to where you want to be.
When setting out in a rowboat, choice of destination and pulling on the oars are both make-or-break important.
August 14th, 2014 — 5:30am
What’s the real reason…
…you started this?
…you showed up today?
…you are doing this for a living?
…you are in that relationship?
… or haven’t started yet?
If you lie to yourself that it’s for the money, or because you “have to”, or because it’s the best you can do, you just might act like the pretend reasons are real.
Being honest about the real reasons is a key step toward on-purpose choices to end up where you actually want to.
August 7th, 2014 — 5:30am
I recently spent some time between conference sessions with indie musician Hannah Elizabeth Smith. The night before, she had thrilled the crowd with her masterful main stage performance. While we chatted she was messing around on her guitar with skills so impressive and seemingly easy for her, I just had to shake my head and laugh.
Thinking of Malcom Gladwell’s 10,000 hours of practice to master anything, I asked 20-year-old Hannah if she thinks she has 10,000 hours of guitar practice in. After some quick mental math she said “I think it’s a lot more than that”.
Calling her gifted would be an insult. She’s spent a big fraction of the waking hours in her life practicing guitar. That’s earned, not given.
Almost anyone can be “gifted” at almost anything, if they put in the practice time. That includes you, and that means “not gifted” is no excuse.
July 31st, 2014 — 5:30am
This week, for the first time, I did a session with a personal trainer. I learned things about my posture and how I tense up that seem obvious in hindsight. The thing is, I’ve been hanging out with my body for 35 years and I never noticed those things. In five minutes my trainer did.
Our brains are made to notice change and contrast, not things that have always been that way. And things look different from the other side of your eyeballs.
Recognize your blindness to yourself and ask trustworthy people to be mirrors for you.
July 24th, 2014 — 5:30am
If you set your mental GPS to head straight for “make money” and pursue it with passion, you won’t get good guidance, and you probably won’t reach that destination.
If you set it for “solve this customer problem” or “make the world a better place” and pursue it with passion, you’ll probably succeed and open doors to making a lot of money.
Nobody is interested in paying you so you can make your dream of making money come true. Lots of people are interested in paying you for solutions to their problems. Create and sustain success with focus on those you serve.