Trust that today’s challenges will be responsible for your future
growth.
Every day
Marc and I work with course students who say all the right things and
then do the exact opposite. They hope to experience growth, but they
resist change. They want less stress, yet they indulge in drama. They
long for better relationships, and then they refuse to trust anyone.
In other
words, what they say they want, and what they actually do with their
time, are hopelessly disconnected. And the two will likely never meet
without intervention.
It’s
important to note, though, that I get it. I understand where they’re
coming from. I used to make the same mistakes. Change is hard to deal
with. Needless drama can be addictive. Relationships take a lot of work.
Life is not always as easy as we expect.
In a
nutshell, when it comes to working hard to achieve a substantial life
goal of any kind—earning a degree, building a business, fostering a
relationship, raising a family, becoming more mindful, or any other
personal achievement that takes time and commitment—one thing you have
to ask yourself is:
“Am I willing
to spend a little time every day like many people won’t, so I can spend
the better part of my life like many people can’t?”
Think about
it. We ultimately become what we repeatedly do. The acquisition of
knowledge doesn’t mean you’re growing—growing happens when what you know
changes how you live.
And isn’t it
funny how day by day nothing changes, but when you look back everything
is different? That’s the power of consistency.
Here are
twelve things to start doing consistently for your long-term happiness:
1. Exercise
your integrity.
Living with integrity means: Not settling for less than what you are
capable of. Communicating clearly and asking for what you want and need
from people. Speaking your truth, even when others judge you for it.
Behaving in ways that are in harmony with your morals and values. Making
choices based on what you believe, and not what others believe. And, of
course, always doing the right thing, even when it’s hard, and even when
nobody’s going to know whether you did it or not.
2. Steer
clear of drama and those who create it.
There
comes a time in life when you have to let go of all the needless drama
and the people who create it. Staying out of other people’s drama is an
incredibly effective way to stress less and smile more.
A good rule
of thumb: If you can’t say it to their face, you shouldn’t say it behind
their back. As Eleanor Roosevelt once said, “Great minds discuss ideas,
average minds discuss events, and small minds discuss people.” Life is
much too short to waste time talking about people, gossiping, and
stirring up drama that has no substance. If you don’t know, ask. If you
don’t agree, say so. If you don’t like it, speak up. But never judge
people behind their back.
3. Replace
judgment with encouragement.
No one
truly knows what they will do in a certain situation until they are
actually in it. Yes, it’s very easy to judge someone else’s actions by
what you assume your own actions would be if you were in their shoes.
But you only know what you THINK you would do, not what you WOULD do.
The truth is,
we tend to judge others by their actions and ourselves by our ideals. So
do your best to catch yourself when this happens. Remember that when we
judge or criticize another person, it says nothing about that person,
and everything about our own need to be critical.
Bottom line:
We have enough critics in this world. Be an encourager. You’ll see why.
4. Be
positive and spend time with positive people.
Happiness is not the absence of problems, but the ability to deal with
them. Raise your awareness to your own inner strength and positivity.
You are in charge of how you react to the people and events in your
life. You can either give negativity power over your life, or you can
choose to be positive instead by focusing on the great things that are
truly important. So talk about your blessings more than you talk about
your problems. Just because you’re struggling doesn’t mean you’re
failing. Every great success requires some kind of worthy struggle to
get there.
In addition,
do your best to spend more time with positive people and less time with
negative ones. People that deliberately doubt, judge and disrespect you
are not worth your long-term time and attention.
5. Make new
choices as needed, rather than letting old ones make you.
You
don’t get to decide if or when you might get hurt in this world, but you
do have some control over who and what hurts you. After all, who we
ultimately become depends, in part, on who and what we let into our
lives. So don’t just settle for relationships and situations that have
proven to be unworthy. Exercise your right to choose differently.
Be the hero
of your life, not the victim. You may not control all the circumstances
that happen to you, but you can decide not to be continuously reduced by
the same ones.
6. Simplify
whatever you can, whenever you can.
As E.F.
Schumacher once said, “Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more
complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius and a lot of
courage to move in the opposite direction.”
Simplifying
is not seeing how little you can get by with – that’s poverty – but how
efficiently you can put first things first, and use your time
accordingly to pursue the things that make a lasting difference in your
life. Less really is more. Instead of adding, improve your life by
subtracting. Get rid of unnecessary clutter, negative influences and
toxic relationships. There is a big difference between what you want and
what you need – between what’s excessive and what’s essential.
7. Uphold
your truth.
Too
many of us prefer gentle lies to hard truths. But make no mistake, in
the end it’s better to be hurt by the truth than comforted by a lie.
Especially if this lie is tied to your identity in any way. Because you
can pretend for a while, but you can’t get away from yourself. You can’t
decide not to see and feel yourself anymore. You can’t decide to turn
off the noise in your head and be someone else entirely.
Don’t try to
be what “they” like – be who you are. The people worth spending time
with are interested in others who are confident enough to be themselves.
And that works out well, because you won’t be happy being anyone else.
(Read The Gifts of Imperfection.)
8. Express
your love without reservations.
Love
is a verb. Act on it. Today, be the reason someone feels incredibly
loved and needed. Give your love away like your life depends on it.
Many moons
from now, people won’t remember what clothes you wore, the car you
drove, and maybe not even your name. But they will remember how you made
them feel and the positive memories you gave them. The true impact you
make on people will depend on the time and attention you give to
teaching those who know less, caring for those who have less, supporting
those who are striving, and tolerating those who are different than you.
All of which represent the full expression of your love.
9. Nurture
your relationship with your significant other.
Intimate love is not just about finding the right person, but working
with them to create the right relationship. It’s not about how much love
you have in the beginning, but how much love you build and nurture until
the end. A relationship should be healthy, caring, loving, kind, upbeat
and positive. It should make your smile a little wider and your life a
little brighter in the long run.
A
relationship like this sounds great, but it isn’t easy. It takes time
and attention, and two people who are willing to work together every day
to build something special.
10. Loosen
your grip on what’s not meant to fit in to your life.
Things
will happen that you will not always understand, but maybe you’re not
supposed to understand everything. Maybe you’re just supposed to have
faith, accept it and let it happen.
So never
force anything. Give it your best shot, and then let it be.
Most negative
circumstances are only a part of your life because you keep thinking
about them. Positive things happen in your life when you emotionally
distance yourself from the negative things. So stop holding on to what
hurts, and make room for what feels right. Don’t let what is out of your
control interfere with all the things you can control.
11. Embrace
your humanness.
“Human” is the only real label we are born with. Yet we forget so
easily.
To become
attached to an opinionated label of depressed, divorced, diseased,
rejected, or poor, is to be like the rain, that doesn’t know it is also
the clouds… or the ice, that forgets it is water. For we are far more
than the shape we’re currently in. And we, like the wind, water, and
sky, will change forms many times in our lives, while forever remaining
beautifully human.
12. Ask
yourself the right questions.
What
questions are you asking yourself on a regular basis? Are they helping
you better understand your purpose? Or do they have your mind spinning
in circles?
Truth be
told, the questions you’re regularly exposed to act as guideposts that
have a powerful influence on the direction of your life. And, not
surprisingly, the questions you hear most often come directly from YOU.
So instead of looking outside yourself for answers, start asking
yourself the right questions. For instance…
-
“Who am
I?”
-
“What do
I need?”
-
“How do I
function best?”
-
“What do
I have to give?”
-
“What’s
the next step I can take right now?”
It’s all
about self-inquiries that help you stay true to your principles, pursue
your desires, grow through adversity, and add value to the world around
you. (Marc and I cover dozens of important life questions as a theme
that radiates through every chapter of our NEW edition of 1,000 Little
Things Happy, Successful People Do Differently.)
Now, it’s
your turn…
Today, I hope
you will have a delightful day, that you will dream boldly and
dangerously, that you will make something that didn’t exist before you
took action, that you will love and be loved in return, and that you
will find the strength to accept and grow from the troubles you can’t
change. And, most importantly (because I think there should be more
kindness and wisdom in this crazy world), that you will, when you must,
be wise with your decisions, and that you will always be extra kind to
yourself and others.