In a culture that seeks quick results, we must learn the beauty of
effort, patience, and perseverance.
Have you ever
told yourself that you’re going to make something happen and then
nothing happened? All details aside, it’s because you didn’t have the
right habits in place—the little things you do every day that build up
to something bigger.
Habits define you. All the results in your life come from your daily
habits.
If you’re out
of shape and overweight, you have different habits than someone who’s
physically fit. If you’re fit, you jump out of bed early every morning
and sweat before preparing a healthy breakfast. If you’re out of shape,
you sleep in and eat whatever is fastest and easiest.
This may be a
bit of a generalization, but it’s not far from the truth for the average
able-bodied person.
In all walks
of life, you don’t become an overnight success. You become successful
over time from all the little things you do one day at a time.
Failure
occurs in the same way. All your little daily failures (that you don’t
learn and grow from) come together and cause you to fail…
-
You fail
to check the books.
-
You fail
to make the calls.
-
You fail
to listen to your customers.
-
You fail
to innovate.
-
You fail
to do what must be done.
And then one
day you wake up and your business has failed. It was all the little
things you did or didn’t do along the way—your daily habits—not just one
catastrophic event.
Let this be
your wake-up call.
YOUR LIFE IS
YOUR BUSINESS!
YOUR HABITS
ARE YOUR BUSINESS!
So today,
let’s discuss some super-common habits Marc and I have seen plaguing
thousands of our course students and Think Better, Live Better live
event attendees over the past decade—little things too many people do
every day to gradually wreck their own lives:
1. Change
nothing and expect different results.
There’s a
saying that the definition of madness is doing the same thing over and
over again and expecting different results. Take this to heart. If you
keep doing what you’re doing, you’ll keep getting what you’re getting.
Period.
Oftentimes
the only difference between a successful person and a person who makes
little progress is not one’s superior abilities, but the courage that
one has to bet on one’s ideas, to take calculated risks, and to take
steady steps forward. In other words, some people sit and wait for the
magic beans to arrive while the rest of us just get up and get to work.
2. Keep
waiting and waiting and waiting for the right time.
Remind
yourself of how often we waste our time waiting for the ideal path to
appear. Then remind yourself of how often it never appears. Seriously,
we forget that paths are made by walking, not waiting.
So think of
today as the beginning—the conception of a new life. The next nine
months are all yours. You can do with them as you please. Make them
count. Because a new person is born in nine months. The only question
is: Who do you want that person to be? Now is the right time to decide.
And no, you
shouldn’t feel more confident before you take the next step. Taking the
next step is what builds your confidence and fuels your inner and outer
growth.
3. Expect
good things to come easy.
A goal is a
point of achievement that requires effort and sacrifice. There are no
esteemed ventures worth participating in that don’t require some level
of effort and sacrifice. Trust me, decades from now when you’re resting
on your deathbed, you will not remember the days that were easy, you
will cherish the moments when you rose above your difficulties and
conquered challenges of magnitude. You will dream of the strength you
found within yourself that allowed you to achieve what once seemed
impossible.
So don’t do
what’s easy, do what you’re capable of. Astound yourself with your own
abilities. And as you struggle forward, remember, it is far better to be
exhausted from lots of effort and learning than to be tired of doing
nothing. Effort is never wasted, even when it leads to disappointing
results. For it always makes you stronger and more experienced in the
long run.
4. Refuse to
accept necessary risks.
Living is
about learning as you go. Living is risky business. Every decision,
every interaction, every step, every time you get out of bed in the
morning, you take a small risk. To truly live is to know you’re getting
up and taking that risk, and to trust yourself to take it. To not get
out of bed, clutching to illusions of safety, is to die slowly without
ever having truly lived. This isn’t drama—it’s real life.
Think about
it. If you ignore your instincts and let shallow feelings of uncertainty
stop you, you will never know anything for sure, and in many ways this
un-knowing will be worse than finding out your instincts were wrong.
Because if you were wrong, you could make adjustments and carry on with
your life, without looking back and wondering what might have been.
5. Make the
rejections of yesterday the focal point of today.
Be okay with
walking away when the time comes. Rejection teaches us how to reject
what’s not right for our well-being. It won’t be easy, but some chapters
in our lives have to close without closure. There’s no point in losing
yourself by trying to fix what’s meant to stay broken.
All too often
we let the rejections of our past dictate every move we make thereafter.
We literally do not know ourselves to be any better than what some
opinionated person or narrow circumstance once told us was true. Of
course, this old rejection doesn’t mean we aren’t good enough; it means
the other person or circumstance failed to align with what we have to
offer. It means we have more time to improve our thing—to build upon our
ideas, to perfect our craft, and indulge deeper in to the work that
moves us. And that’s exactly what you need to do, starting now.
6. Refuse to
take responsibility.
You aren’t
responsible for everything that happened to you, but you need to be
responsible for undoing the thinking and behavioral patterns these
outcomes created. Blaming the past for a limiting mindset today doesn’t
fix it. Change your response to what you remember, and step forward
again with grace.
A combination
of your decisions and external factors for which you had no control
brought you to where you are in the world today. Negatively blaming
someone else, or some other past circumstance, will change nothing.
Positively taking full responsibility for your situation and your path
forward can change everything. Leave the unchangeable past behind you as
you diligently give yourself to the present moment. In this moment is
every possibility you seek. Take responsibility for it, and bring these
possibilities to life.
7. Close your
mind to new ideas and perspectives.
Even as you
grow wiser and wiser with age you must remind yourself that an
understanding is never absolutely final. What’s currently right could
easily be wrong later. Thus, the most destructive illusion is a settled
point of view. So, remember that success in life does not depend on
always being right. To make real progress you must let go of the
assumption that you already have all the answers.
Bottom line:
Don’t stop learning. Don’t stop investing in yourself. Study. Read.
Devour books. Engage with people, including those who think differently.
Ask questions. Listen closely. And don’t just grow in knowledge. Be a
person who gives back. Use what you’re learning to make a difference.
8. Let a few
negative people fill your mind with garbage.
Your mind is
your private sanctuary; do not allow the negative beliefs of others to
occupy it. Your skin is your barrier; do not allow others to get under
it. Take good care of your personal boundaries and what you allow
yourself to absorb from others.
Of course,
there will inevitably be a few people in your life who will be critical
of you regardless of what you do or how well you do it. If you say you
want to be a dancer, they will discredit your rhythm. If you say you
want to build a new business, they will give you a dozen reasons why it
might not work. They somehow assume you don’t have what it takes, but
they are dead wrong. Let that sink in.
It’s a lot
easier to be negative than positive—a lot easier to be critical than
correct. When you’re embarking on a new venture, instead of listening to
the few critics that will try to discredit you, spend time talking to
one of the thousands of people in this world who are willing to support
your efforts and acknowledge your potential, respectfully. And go ahead
and leave us a comment on this post if you think you can’t find one.
9. Hold tight
to something that’s not real.
One of the
most important moments in life is the moment you finally find the
courage to let go of what can’t be changed. Because, when you are no
longer able to change a situation, you are challenged to change
yourself—to grow beyond the unchangable. And that changes everything.
Seriously,
remind yourself right now that not everything is meant to be. You have
to seriously sit down with yourself and come to grips with the fact that
you were wrong about it all along. It was just an illusion that never
really was what you thought it was. It’s one of the most difficult
realizations to accept, to realize that you feel a sense of loss, even
though you never really had what you thought you had in the first place.
The key is knowing this, learning from it, letting go, and taking the
next step. (Marc and I discuss this in more detail in the “Adversity”
chapter of the NEW edition of 1,000 Little Things Happy, Successful
People Do Differently.)
10. Maintain
rigid expectations every step of the way.
Simple things
become complicated when you expect too much. Expectation truly is the
root of all heartache. Don’t let it get the best of you. Every difficult
life situation can be an excuse for hopelessness or an opportunity for
personal growth, depending on what you choose to do with it. So start by
choosing to let go of the ideas and expectations that aren’t serving
you.
Remember that
there’s no such thing as a perfect life. There’s just this moment you’re
living through and what you choose to do with it. You can be
disappointed in this moment and do nothing, or you can practice being
satisfied with the opportunity to make the very best of it.
Closing
Exercise: Build Better Habits
Choose any
area in your life that you want to improve, and then:
-
Write
down the specific details about your current circumstances. (What’s
bothering you? What’s wrong? What do you want to change?)
-
Write
down your answer to this question: What are the daily habits that
have contributed to your current circumstances? (Be honest with
yourself. What are you doing that contributes to the situation
you’re in?)
-
Write
down the specific details about your ideal circumstances. (What
would make you happy? What does your ideal situation look like?)
-
Write
down your answer to this question: What are the daily habits that
will get you from where you are to where you want to be? (Think
about it. What small, daily steps will help you move forward?)
NOTE: Marc
and I build tiny, life-changing habits with our students in the “Goals
and Growth” module of the Getting Back to Happy Course.
Your turn…
Which point
above resonated the most?
(Or, what’s
one habit you want to change in your life?)