A metaphor is
not an ornament. It’s a necessary lens of perception that allows us to
experience and think about ourselves and the world more clearly.
Metaphors have a way of relating to us in the most profound way, by
clarifying immense truths and intricate lessons in fairly minimal space.
Marc and I
have shared the following metaphors and corresponding stories with our
students, readers, and conference attendees dozens of times over the
past decade, and we usually get thanked for doing so. The specifics
differ slightly every time we share them, but the core lessons carry
forth.
My challenge
for you today is to read the first metaphor below. Then come back
tomorrow and read the next one. Give yourself a little extra perspective
every day this week. See how doing so gracefully changes your thinking
from day to day.
1. THE WEIGHT
OF THE GLASS
(Note: This
first metaphor is an excerpt from our NY Times bestselling book.)
Twenty years
ago, when Marc and I were just undergrads in college, our psychology
professor taught us a lesson we’ve never forgotten. On the last day of
class before graduation, she walked up on stage to teach one final
lesson, which she called “a vital lesson on the power of perspective and
mindset.” As she raised a glass of water over her head, everyone
expected her to mention the typical “glass half empty or glass half
full” metaphor. Instead, with a smile on her face, our professor asked,
“How heavy is this glass of water I’m holding?”
Students
shouted out answers ranging from a couple of ounces to a couple of
pounds.
After a few
moments of fielding answers and nodding her head, she replied, “From my
perspective, the absolute weight of this glass is irrelevant. It all
depends on how long I hold it. If I hold it for a minute or two, it’s
fairly light. If I hold it for an hour straight, its weight might make
my arm ache. If I hold it for a day straight, my arm will likely cramp
up and feel completely numb and paralyzed, forcing me to drop the glass
to the floor. In each case, the absolute weight of the glass doesn’t
change, but the longer I hold it, the heavier it feels to me.”
As most of us
students nodded our heads in agreement, she continued. “Your worries,
frustrations, disappointments, and stressful thoughts are very much like
this glass of water. Think about them for a little while and nothing
drastic happens. Think about them a bit longer and you begin to feel
noticeable pain. Think about them all day long, and you will feel
completely numb and paralyzed, incapable of doing anything else until
you drop them.”
Let our past
professor’s words be your wake-up call today.
If you’ve
been struggling to cope with the weight of what’s on your mind, it’s a
strong sign that it’s time to put the glass down.
2. LIKE
ELEPHANTS
Zookeepers
typically strap a thin metal chain to a grown elephant’s leg and then
attach the other end to a small wooden peg that’s hammered into the
ground. The ten-foot-tall, ten-thousand-pound elephant could easily snap
the chain, uproot the wooden peg, and escape to freedom with minimal
effort. But it doesn’t. In fact, the elephant never even tries. The
world’s most powerful land animal, which can uproot a big tree as easily
as you could break a toothpick, remains defeated by a small wooden peg
and a flimsy chain.
Why? Because
when the elephant was a baby, its trainers used the same methods to
domesticate it. At the time, the chain and peg were strong enough to
restrain the baby elephant. When it tried to break away, the metal chain
would pull it back. Soon the baby elephant realized that trying to
escape was impossible. So it stopped trying. And now that the elephant
is fully grown, it sees the chain and the peg and it remembers what it
learned as a baby—that the chain and peg are impossible to escape. Of
course this is no longer true, but it doesn’t matter. It doesn’t matter
that the two-hundred-pound baby is now a ten-thousand-pound powerhouse.
The elephant’s self-limiting thoughts and beliefs prevail.
If you think
about it, we are all like elephants. We all have incredible power inside
us. And we have our own chains and pegs—the self-limiting thoughts and
beliefs that hold us back. Sometimes it’s a childhood experience or an
old failure. Sometimes it’s something we were told when we were younger.
The key thing to realize is this: we need to learn from the past, but
also to be willing to change our assumptions—our perspective—about the
way things are now. Life is not static. You can break free.
3. SEE THE
FLOWERS
Once upon a
time there was an elderly woman who needed to walk down to the river
every morning to fetch water for drinking, cooking and cleaning. She
carried two buckets with her, filled them up at the riverbank, and
walked back with them to her rural cottage home.
One of the
buckets was newer, perfectly sealed, and held its water flawlessly. But
the second bucket was older and contained a few thin cracks that would
leak water onto the ground as the elderly woman walked. By the time she
arrived home, typically about one third of the water in the second
bucket had leaked through its cracks.
One day, on
the walk down to the river, the cracked bucket—who had always felt like
it wasn’t as good as the other bucket—said to the elderly woman, “I want
you to know that I’ve been leaking water every morning for the past
several years. I’m so sorry for being cracked and making your life more
difficult. I understand if you need to replace me with a better bucket.”
The elderly
woman smiled. “Do you really think I haven’t known about your cracks
this whole time?” she asked. “Look at all the beautiful flowers that
grow on the path from my cottage to the river. I planted their seeds,
but every morning it’s you who does the watering.”
Remember,
feeling good enough in life, in work, in business, and in our
relationships has everything to do with how we personally judge the
cracks in our own bucket. Because we all have a few cracks!
But are they
cracks that wreck us, that taint us, and that ruin our experience and
desirability?
Or do our
cracks water a trail of flowers we haven’t even stopped to appreciate?
Choose to see
the flowers through the cracks in your own bucket—choose to see how it’s
exactly those cracks that make you good enough—and your whole universe
will shift!
4. THE
TANGERINE
Imagine you
had a ripe, juicy tangerine sitting on the table in front of you. You
pick it up eagerly, take a bite and begin to taste it.
You already
know how a ripe, juicy tangerine should taste, and so when this one is a
bit tarter than expected, you make a face, feel a sense of
disappointment and swallow it, feeling cheated out of the experience you
expected.
Or perhaps
the tangerine tastes completely normal—nothing special at all. So, you
swallow it without even pausing to appreciate its flavor, as you move on
to the next unworthy bite, and the next.
In the first
scenario, the tangerine let you down because it didn’t meet your
expectations. In the second, it was too plain because it met your
expectations to a T.
Do you see
the irony here?
It’s either
not good, or not good enough.
This is how
many of us live our lives… unhappily.
It’s why so
many of us feel let down, disappointed, and unexcited about almost
everything.
Because
nothing really meets our expectations.
Now, imagine
you try this instead: remove your expectations of how the tangerine
“should” taste. You don’t know, and you don’t expect to know, because
you haven’t even tried it yet. Instead, you’re genuinely curious,
impartial and open to a variety of possible flavors.
You taste it,
and you truly pay attention. You notice the juiciness, the texture of
the pulp, the simultaneously tangy, tart and sweet flavors swirling
around on your tongue, and all the other complex sensations that arise
in your awareness as you chew. You didn’t know how this tangerine would
taste, but now you realize it’s different than the rest, and it’s
remarkable in its own way. It’s a totally new experience—a worthwhile
experience—because you’ve never tasted THIS tangerine before.
Mindfulness
experts often refer to this as “beginner’s mind,” but really, it’s just
the result of a mindset free of needless, stifling expectations.
The
tangerine, of course, can be substituted for almost anything in your
life: any event, any situation, any relationship, any person, any
thought at all that enters your mind. If you approach any of these with
expectations of “how it should be” or “how it has to be” in order to be
good enough for you, they will almost always disappoint you in some way…
or be too plain and unexciting to even remember. And you’ll just move on
to the next disappointment or unworthy life experience, and the next,
and the next, and so on and so forth…
Until you’ve
lived the vast majority of your life stuck in an endless cycle of
experiences you barely like or barely even notice.
5. ONLY WATER
AROUND YOU
Most of the
things we desperately try to hold on to, as if they’re real, solid,
everlasting fixtures in our lives, aren’t really there. Or if they are
there in some form, they’re changing, fluid, impermanent, or simply
half-imagined in our minds.
Life gets a
lot easier to deal with when we understand this.
Imagine
you’re blindfolded and treading water in the center of a large swimming
pool, and you’re struggling desperately to grab the edge of the pool
that you think is nearby, but really it’s not—it’s far away. Trying to
grab that imaginary edge is stressing you out, and tiring you out, as
you splash around aimlessly trying to hold on to something that isn’t
there.
Now imagine
you pause, take a deep breath, and realize that there’s nothing nearby
to hold on to. Just water around you. You can continue to struggle with
grabbing at something that doesn’t exist… or you can accept that there’s
only water around you, and relax, and float.
Today, I
challenge you to ask yourself:
Then imagine
the thing you’re trying to hold on to doesn’t really exist. Envision
yourself letting go… and just floating.
How would
that change your situation?
6. A GAME OF
CHESS
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.
The same is
true of life.
Because
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 getting yourself moving in the right direction again.
7. THE MIND
IS A MUSCLE
Think about
the most common problems we deal with in our lives—from lack of presence
to lack of exercise to unhealthy diets to procrastination, and so forth.
In most cases, problems like these are not caused not by a physical
ailment, but by a weakness of the mind.
Just like
every muscle in the body, the mind needs to be exercised to gain
strength. It needs to be worked consistently to grow and develop over
time. If you haven’t pushed yourself in hundreds of little ways over
time, of course you’ll crumble on the one day that things get slightly
challenging.
But it
doesn’t have to be that way. You have a choice…
You can
choose to pay attention when it would be easier to pick up your phone.
You can choose to go to the gym when it would be more comfortable to
sleep in. You can choose to create something special when it would be
quicker to consume something mediocre. You can choose to raise your hand
and ask that question when it would take less nerve to stay silent. You
can prove to yourself, in hundreds of little ways, that you have the
guts to get in the ring and wrestle with life.
Mental
strength is built through lots of small, daily victories. It’s the
individual choices we make day-to-day that build our “mental strength”
muscles. We all want this kind of strength, but we can’t wish our way to
it. If you want it, you have to create positive daily rituals in your
life that reinforce what you desire.
Now, it’s
your turn…
Please let us
know:
Which
metaphor above resonates the most with you right now?