Boring Bubble
We tend to like living in bubbles. Surrounding ourselves with people who agree with us because it’s safe….safe because it takes energy and thought to have meaningful conversations about polarizing topics.
Making friends based on agreement will stunt your view of the world. Practice listening to others instead of fighting. Seek to understand and ask more questions.
Your bubble is likely boring anyway.
Parting Thought: If you’ve lost a friend via disagreement, it’s likely that one or both of you put being “right” above connection.
Noticing
Noticing opportunity takes practice. Most of the time our attention is consumed by the urgent or things that allow our minds to slide into neutral.
Ask yourself:
What will I do today to open my eyes to opportunity and begin to notice ways to make the world a better place?
Noticing lights the fuse of opportunity.
Trust vs Assumption
When you give a directive you expect them to understand and execute. You trust they will get it done. You trust they see the big picture… but then, nothing happens.
It feels like you can’t “trust” anyone to get the job done, so you continue to do it yourself.
“I just need someone I can ‘trust’”, you say.
It’s worth inspecting your definition of trust. Perhaps what’s really happening is you’re assuming they want what you want.
You’re assuming they can read your mind and they love what it says.
The Thought Doesn’t Count
It’s not the thought that counts.
Think of the last meaningful gift you’ve received. How did it make you feel about that person? Why was it meaningful?
Some notes you receive in the mail matter and others don’t. The difference is the thought behind the thought.
People can tell if you are being authentic.
If you’re not, skip the gesture…
Pro Tip: If you’re writing a note of gratitude, thank them for their character not their actions.
Fitting In [CBA]
The cost benefit analysis of “fitting in” is worth exploring.
Benefit
No one will make fun of you behind your back (acceptance)
It’s the path of least resistance (easier)
Less risk
Others will feel comfortable
Cost
You and your creation will be average
Having little or no impact
Your ideas remain small
You’ll make less money
It turns out that proclaiming your rarity is worth the risk.
Photo Op
Politicians are pros at photo ops. It’s an opportunity to freeze what they want the world to believe. The goal is to use imagery to advance their cause.
To enhance their status… to bolster their reputation. Perfectly curated and staged to catch your eye and tell a story.
The story they want you to believe.
Much like a smoldering duck-lipped selfie.
“Righting” Reflex
If you have a strong urge to make things “right” for others, it’s worth the effort to pause. Pausing is “effort” because there are so many “doing it wrong.”
The external wrongs can preoccupy the mind and keep you from righting the internal wrongs.
The truth is, the “righting reflex” applied to others is lazy. [See your local activists to prove it]
Your Work
The quality of the work you do is important to a point. The point at which the work is tied to your worth is the point the quality suffers. The quality suffers because there is a wall that protects identity.
If your worth is welded to your work, it will be too painful to get feedback and so the quality suffers.
If your heart starts to beat out of your chest when you sense feedback, consider the source of your identity.
Gal 2:20
Stigma
Certain things have a stigma.
Unquestioned stigma can cause you to miss out. Stigma can also save you a lot of heartache. It can be based on truth or can be based on fear.
Our first move as humans is to avoid danger and the fear of something negative is the birthplace of stigma.
Confusing stigma with truth is a direct ticket to being average. Notice and question stigma to give space for a more rich view of the world.
The people you lead, long for you to know the difference.
Big Decision
A looming big decision can stall your momentum. It feels like a binary all or nothing notion. It feels like everything needs to wait until you decide. Deciding can take longer than you think and you want to get it right.
As you mull, the facets and nuances multiply… Which can make the decision feel even bigger.
Pro Tip: Consider breaking the “big” decision into smaller parts and deciding one at a time.
Getting Feedback
Feedback is vital but can also send you on a wild goose chase. When others watch you build, the feedback is likely nearby. You want your project to be awesome and you want people to like it.
The wise builder knows how to filter feedback. He knows how to filter because he’s chased the wild geese.
The good news and bad news is there is feedback everywhere.
Pro Tip: The main reason useful feedback is hard to hear is because of the competing volume of your own internal narrative.
Ruminate
Where you are treated like crap there is a residue. It’s like a greasy film that can dull the shine we had moments ago.
It’s worth noting that the pain comes at least twice
Right at the point of the interaction
The instant replay
The instant replay is in the theatre of the mind and doesn’t actually exist. Each time we replay it however, our chest gets tight and our stomach turns. Rumination perpetuates.
Pro Tip: The number of times you revisit the theatre is up to you.
Flittering Around
If you spend time flittering around knocking out a bunch of low calorie tasks it will feel great. It will feel great because you accomplished so much.
The list you made full of low hanging fruit of unimportant things is complete.
It’s worth noticing the long list of low calorie tasks will yield low calorie outcomes.
Pro Tip: Be mindful of what makes it on your list. Just because you check the box doesn’t mean it matters.
Nothing Nice to Say
Being right and kind at the same time is a struggle. It’s a struggle because the rightness is relieving to our ego. It’s validating to our world view and in our minds, “must be revealed.”
Besides, the truth will set them free. Right?
Allowing your version of “right” to marinate in silence is usually a move you won’t regret. Allowing the silence to re-orient you to a kinder frame will keep you from being an asshole.
Retire?
Is our goal in life to work less? Working hard is hard. Hard makes us grouchy, so logic might tell us if we work less we will be happy.
If the goal is to avoid hard, then what are we left with? We are left with an open feedback loop.
We are hardwired to close loops.
You notice a problem… you work hard to uncover the issues… you grind through all the tests, then… BAM! You find the solution.
Maybe happiness comes from the process of triumph. The elation of a job well done.
Perhaps immersing ourselves in something hard brings more happiness than we might imagine.
Locus of Control
We all like control.
It gets dangerous when we:
Try to control others
Try to control our feelings
The craziness that bubbles up when we try, causes much pain. Pain that is unavoidable. We have a choice in our locus of control.
External Locus: The world and other people “happen to me”
Internal Locus: The world and other people “happen for me”
A dirty example of external locus of control is the shame grab. A shame grab is an effort to control others through a shaming ultimatum.
“You are the reason for my misery. The anxiety that comes up in me is caused by being around you. I can’t be the person God wants me to be while I’m in a relationship with you. So goodbye.” (based on a true story)
The Struggle
People who have sustained “success” are different than those who have sustained “struggle.”
Both have struggles.
The wide spectrum of struggles comes with a wide spectrum of responses. If you find yourself in perpetual struggle, perhaps the best move is to evaluate your response pattern. The struggle is your teacher, not your enemy.
Detailed Sales Guy
The persona that is great at selling usually has:
High social ability
Knows how to influence
Optimistic outlook
Thinks and moves fast
The persona that is not great at selling usually has:
Single task focus
Detailed orientation
Ability to create systems
Awareness of negative reality
If you’re trying to get the sales guy to pay attention to detail, you are making a big mistake. Let him do what only he can… sell.
It’s worth noting that all the money in your bank account can be traced to someone, someone who made a sale.
And…if you’re a detail guy…the sales guy will never succeed without you.
Bored Yet?
We spend a lot of effort avoiding boredom. The feeling of malaise is scary for momentum seekers. To the bigger, better, faster types, standing still feels like a death wish.
A possible growth move for this persona is to allow space. Allow space for nothing. No checking, no tasking, no solving, no moving.
Just stillness in the moment… and then what?
Breathe.
No Motivation?
It turns out we have all the motivation we need.
If this is true, where is it hiding? Why is it so hard to motivate ourselves?
Here’s a cool trick to consider…
Ask yourself: Why might I do x?
Why are these reasons important to me?
What is the 1st step, if any?
If you decide to do this with intention you will uncover your own reasons for moving forward. It’s worth noting that other people’s reasons can keep you stuck.