When you look
back on 2019, don’t think of the pain you felt. Think of the strength
you gained, and appreciate how far you’ve come. You’ve been through a
lot in the past year, but you’ve grown a lot too. Give yourself credit
for your resilience, and then step forward again with grace.
The next best
step forward?
Start doing
something uncomfortable today that will move your life forward in 2020.
Let me explain…
Being
uncomfortable is a form of pain, but it isn’t a deep pain—it’s a shallow
and necessary one. It’s that feeling you get when you’ve stepped outside
of your comfort zone. The idea of exercising every morning, for example,
brings discomfort—so we don’t do it. Eating green vegetables brings
discomfort too. So does meditating, or focusing on a difficult task, or
saying no to others. Of course, these are just examples, because all of
us find discomfort in different things at different times, but you get
the general idea.
The bottom
line is most of us don’t want to be uncomfortable, so we subconsciously
run from discomfort constantly. The problem with this is that, by
running from discomfort, we are forced to participate in only the (easy)
activities and (unexciting) opportunities within our comfort zones. And
since our comfort zones are relativity small, we miss out on most of
life’s greatest and healthiest experiences, and we get stuck in an
endless debilitating cycle.
Turning
Things Around in 2020
Are you tired
of dealing with the same types of headaches and heartache over and over
again?
Then it’s
time to break the cycle, purge some bad habits, and embrace discomfort
as you prepare for the year ahead. It’s time to learn from your mistakes
rather than be conquered by them, and let your errors be of commission
rather than omission.
Remember, you
ultimately become what you repeatedly do. If your habits aren’t helping
you, they’re hurting you. Which means it’s time for a change.
Here are 20
uncomfortable things to start doing for yourself in the year ahead…
01. Challenge
your understandings and certainties.
Warren
Buffett once said, “What the human being is best at doing is
interpreting all new information so that their prior conclusions remain
intact.” This is a tragedy, this kind of thinking. Don’t do it to
yourself. Don’t just look for data that confirms what you already know.
Be willing to be wrong in 2020. Be willing to learn in 2020. Be mindful,
humble and teachable every step of the way. There’s always room for a
new idea, a new perspective . . . a new beginning. Life changes every
second, and so can you. Find ways to provide a healthy challenge to your
current understandings of life, and you will discover and experience far
more of life’s magic in the year ahead.
02. Build up
your confidence and your progress, one day at a time.
Start each
day of 2020 with the truth: It’s not too late. You aren’t behind. You’re
where you need to be. Every day and step is necessary. Don’t judge
yourself for how long your journey is taking. We all need our own time
to travel our own distance. Give yourself credit, and then take the next
step. The present moment is always the beginning of anything you want.
Yet too often we waste our time waiting for the ideal path to appear.
But it never does because we forget that paths are made by walking, not
waiting. And no, you shouldn’t feel more confident before you take the
next step. Taking the next step is what builds your confidence and
ultimately moves your life forward.
03. Track how
you invest your energy and make productive shifts.
To attract
better outcomes in life, you have to become better on the inside. Again,
you can’t do the same things and expect change. You can’t blame someone
else. Take full responsibility for the next step. Start transforming
your mindset. Start upgrading your habits. Your life is 90% your choice!
Seriously, don’t settle! Don’t exchange what you want most for what’s
easiest at the moment. Study your agendas and routines closely. Figure
out where your time goes, and remove needless distractions. It’s time to
focus on what really matters.
04. Work
diligently and consistently on meaningful goals.
When you
focus your heart and mind upon a purpose, and commit yourself to fulfil
that purpose through small daily steps, positive energy floods into your
life. Sadly, many of us miss the mark. A few years ago when the Guardian
asked a hospice nurse, Bronnie Ware, about The Top Five Regrets of the
Dying, one of the most common regrets she noticed was that people
regretted not being true to their goals. In fact, she said that most of
the people she cared for admitted to not honoring even half of the goals
that were meaningful to them, and so they ended up dying with regrets.
Let this be your wake-up call! Good health brings a level of freedom and
opportunity very few of us realize until we no longer have it. As they
say, there are seven days in the week and “someday” isn’t one of them.
05. Do the
hard things.
Lose the
expectation that everything in life should be easier. There are rarely
shortcuts to any place worth going. Enjoy the challenge of your
achievements. See the value in your efforts and be patient with
yourself. And realize that patience is not just about waiting, it’s the
ability to keep a good attitude while working hard on your important
goals. It’s knowing deep down that doing the hard things is worth it.
Why? Because those are the things that ultimately define you. Those are
the things that make the difference between existing and living—between
knowing the path and walking the path—between a life of mediocrity and a
life filled with progress and fulfilment.
06. Allow
yourself to be imperfectly human.
You can
disappoint people and still be good enough. You can fail and still be
smart, talented and capable of success. You can let people down and
still be worthwhile and deserving of love and admiration. We all make
mistakes sometimes. Take a deep breath. It’s OK to be human.
07. Study
your mistakes closely and learn from them.
Disappointments and failure are two of the surest stepping-stones to the
places you want to go. Again, don’t let a hard lesson harden your heart.
When things go wrong, learn what you can and then push the heartbreak
aside by refocusing your energy on the present step. Remember that
life’s best lessons are often learned at the worst times and from the
worst mistakes. We must fail in order to know, and hurt in order to
grow. Good things often fall apart so better things can fall together in
their place. And what’s better already is the more informed step you’re
able to take right now.
08. Choose a
positive and effective response.
Happiness
doesn’t start with a relationship, a vacation, a job or money. It starts
with you. If you want life to be happier, you need to be mindful of your
present response. It’s how you deal with stress in each little moment
that determines how well you achieve happiness in the end.
09. Directly
confront the thoughts that worry you.
A tiny part
of your life is decided by completely uncontrollable circumstances,
while the vast majority of your life is decided by how you respond to
them. Whenever our Getting Back to Happy course students and Think
Better, Live Better conference attendees come to us feeling down about a
life situation they can’t control, we typically start by reinforcing the
hard truth: sometimes changing your situation isn’t possible—or simply
not possible soon enough. But you CAN always choose a mindset that moves
you forward. And doing so will help you change things from the inside
out, and ultimately allow you to grow beyond the struggles you can’t
control at any given moment. Here’s a powerful question that will
support you with an attitude adjustment when you need it most: Who would
you be, and what else would you see, if you removed the thought that’s
worrying you?
10. Learn to
be more present again.
Don’t avoid
eye contact. Don’t hide behind gadgets. Smile often. Ask about people’s
stories. Listen. You can’t connect with anyone, including yourself,
unless you are undistracted and present. And you can’t be either of the
two when you’re Facebooking, Instagramming or Snapchatting your life
away on your smartphone. You just can’t! If you are constantly attached
to your smartphone and only listening with your ears as your eyes check
for the next social update, you are ripping yourself off of actually
experiencing real relationships and real life. The same is true for
texting too. Yes, someday you will be slapped with the reality of a
missed MEMORY being far more unsettling than a missed TEXT!
11. Be strict
about making time for the right people.
At some
point, when it comes to relationships, you’ll just want to be around the
few people who make you smile for all the right reasons. So be
intentional about spending more quality time with those who help you
love yourself more. And remember that nothing you can give them will
ever be more appreciated than your sincere, focused attention—your full
presence. Truly being with them, and listening without a clock and
without anticipation of the next event, is the highest form of
compliment.
12. Choose
yourself, too.
You won’t
always be a priority to others, and that’s why you have to be a top
priority to yourself. Learn to respect yourself, take care of yourself,
and become your own support system. Love yourself first and foremost
every day, instead of simply loving the idea of other people loving you.
Your needs matter. Start meeting them. Don’t wait on others to choose
you—choose yourself! And remember that once your needs are met, you will
be better equipped and capable of meeting the needs of those few people
who matter most to you. (We discuss this in more detail in the
“Self-Love” chapter of our NY Times bestselling book.)
13. Invest in
your health.
There’s no
getting around it: no matter how much you think you dislike exercise and
healthy eating, both will make you feel better in the long run. If you
don’t have your physical energy tuned up, then your mental energy (your
focus), your emotional energy (your feelings), and your spiritual energy
(your purpose) will all be negatively affected. In fact, did you know
that recent studies conducted on people who were battling depression
showed that consistent exercise combined with a healthy diet raises
happiness levels just as much as Zoloft? Even better, six months later
the people who participated in this exercise were less likely to relapse
because they had a higher sense of self-accomplishment and self-worth.
14. Walk away
from the drama you feel inclined to engage in.
Say less when
less means more. Sometimes, you are as wise as the silence you leave
behind, because sometimes the right words aren’t words. Deep down you
know this is true. Live accordingly. Do your best not to judge other
people, for you do not know their pain or sorrows. If you cannot speak a
kind word, say nothing at all. And if they cannot speak a kind word, say
nothing at all. Enjoy the inner glow you get from letting go and not
engaging in drama. When you no longer waste your energy worrying about
things that don’t evolve you, everything gradually changes. You stop
doing the wrong things, and the right things suddenly have a chance to
catch up with you.
15. Say “no”
when you need to.
Saying “yes”
to everything puts you on the fast track to a regretful existence.
Feeling like you’re constantly busy and overwhelmed is typically the
result of saying “yes” to too often. We all have obligations, but a
healthy, effective pace can only be found by properly managing your
yeses. So stop saying “yes” when you want to say “no.” You can’t always
be agreeable; that’s how people and situations take advantage of you.
Sometimes you have to set clear boundaries.
16. Distance
yourself from hurtful relationships.
One of the
absolute hardest parts of loving someone: you have to give things up
because of them. And sometimes you even have to give them up. Of course,
it’s difficult to distance yourself from someone you care about (or
cared about) without getting hurt in the process. Even if this person
has hurt you a hundred times, you start thinking of all these “what
ifs”—these “maybes” about the future. But that’s just the thing, there’s
nothing concrete and reliable about these fantasies. The reality of this
person’s consistent actions has disproven them. When someone shows you
their true colors time and time again, it’s best to believe them and
distance yourself. (We discuss this in more detail in the NEW edition of
1,000 Little Things Happy, Successful People Do Differently.)
17. Forgive
the people who don’t necessarily deserve it.
Distance
yourself, but don’t forget them; forgive them. Forgetting about the
people who hurt you is your gift to them; forgiving the people who hurt
you is your gift to yourself. Let this sink in. You need to forgive
others not because they deserve forgiveness at the moment, but because
you deserve peace of mind going forward. And also keep in mind that some
relationships will temporarily split, only to heal and grow back
together over time. Forgiveness alone makes this possible, if it’s meant
to be.
18. Find joy
in less.
People who
spend all their time trying to make money, spend all their money trying
to make time. Don’t do this to yourself. Remind yourself that the
richest human isn’t the one who has the most, but the one who needs
less. Wealth is a mindset. Want less and appreciate more today.
Challenge yourself to be less impressed by the things you own, and be
more impressed by the life you live. You are incredibly fortunate to be
experiencing this moment right here, right now. And the more you
appreciate it, the better it will be. (Read The Minimalist Home in the
New Year—it’s a true game-changer.)
19. Say
“goodbye” so you can say “hello.”
Learn to
trust the journey, even when you do not understand it. When people and
circumstances close their doors on you, it’s a hint that your personal
growth requires someone different and something more. Life is simply
making room. So embrace your goodbyes, because every “goodbye” you
receive in life sets you up for an important “hello.”
20. Start
over again, and again.
No one wins a
game of chess by only moving forward; sometimes you have to move
backward to put yourself in a position to win. Think about how this
relates to your life. Sometimes when it feels like you’re running into
one dead end after another, it’s actually a sign that you’re not on the
right path. Maybe you were meant to hang a left back when you took a
right, and that’s perfectly fine. Life gradually teaches us that U-turns
are allowed. So turn around when you must! There’s a big difference
between giving up and starting over in the right direction. And there
are three little words that can release you from your past mistakes and
regrets, and get you back on track in the year ahead. These words are:
“From now on…”
Your 2020
Daily Challenge
I sincerely
hope you found value in the reminders above. No doubt, they are
important to think about. But right now, with 2020 literally knocking
hard at the door, these reminders are even more important to act upon.
And since taking action is where most of us get hung up, let me ask you
a few quick questions…
-
How many
times in the past year has the psychological draw of comfort plagued
your best intentions?
-
How many
workouts have you missed in the past year because your mind, not
your body, told you that you were too tired?
-
How many
workout reps have you skipped in the past year because your mind,
not your body, said, “Nine reps is enough. Don’t worry about the
tenth”?
In the past
year alone the answer to all three questions is probably dozens for most
people, including myself. And obviously these questions can be slightly
tweaked and applied to various areas of our lives too. The bottom line
is that weakness of the mind combined with lack of action devastates our
potential. When we avoid discomfort, nothing worthwhile gets done. And
the only way to fix this predicament is daily practice.
Your mind
needs to be exercised to gain strength. It needs to be worked on a daily
basis to grow. If you haven’t pushed yourself in lots of small ways over
time—if you always avoid doing the uncomfortable things—you’ll almost
certainly crumble on the inevitable days that are harder than you
expected. (Note: Angel and I build small, uncomfortable, life-changing
daily habits with our students in the “Goals and Growth” module of the
Getting Back to Happy course.)
So, my challenge to you in 2020 is this:
Choose to go
to the gym when it would be more comfortable to sleep in. Choose to do
the tenth rep when it would be more comfortable to quit at nine. Choose
to create something special when it would be more comfortable to consume
something mediocre. Choose to raise your hand and ask that extra
question when it would be more comfortable to stay silent. Choose to
stand your ground when it would be more comfortable to fit in. Just keep
proving to yourself, in lots of little ways every day, that you have the
guts to get in the ring and wrestle with life. And reference the list of
20 above anytime you feel like you’re slipping off track.
Your turn…
Which point
above resonates the most with you right now?
Anything else
to share about this article, or your plans for 2020?
We would love
to hear from YOU.