HANG ON AND
ENJOY THE RIDE
On this journey called life, there are mountaintops, potholes,
and plateaus. Each has its own challenges. I think that
sometimes we get so focused on the goals we want to achieve that
we forget to enjoy the process.
For over twenty years I've been on this journey, the one that
has taken me through the ups and downs of a multifaceted
career...speaking, counseling, consulting, writing, being an
expert witness in court cases, working with the media. Whew! I
get tired just thinking about it. Yet I can say without
reservation that it continues to be an exhilarating trip, full
of adventure and deep satisfaction.
Recently, I was asked to write an article for Professional
Speaker about enjoying the journey, and it challenged me to
really think about the factors that have been most helpful to me
along the way. Looking back, I can identify three secrets that
have allowed me to stay energized as my career and life have
evolved.
1. Live on purpose.
For me, this is the single most important one because I believe
personal purpose is no less than a divine calling.
I was fascinated, but not surprised by the account of the role
that purpose played in the dramatic news story involving Ashley
Smith, held hostage by alleged Atlanta courthouse murderer Brian
Nichols. She was able to save her own life and probably others'
by staying calm and, among other things, reading to him from a
book about purpose and talking with him about his life purpose.
Many years ago, after months of soul-searching and prayer, I
defined my own purpose in life -- to bring out the best in
people. This is the compass that guides my decisions about what
projects to take on and how to respond in challenging
situations.
Fifteen-year-old Michael, a clinical client of mine, summed up
the power of living on purpose. Having just returned from a
trip to Mexico with his church youth group, he told me: "We
were clearing the land to build a school for poor Mexican
children. It was really, really hot. I was sweating and
chipping away, chipping away at the ground. It was the hardest
work I've ever done. I hated what I was doing...but I loved why
I was doing it!"
Let's face it. There are parts of anyone's career that are no
fun. When we are struggling with those, let's pull away for a
moment and focus on the "why." What impact do we want to have?
What difference will this work ultimately make in the lives of
others? Knowing that deeply and feeling it fully infuses the
joy that makes it all worth it.
2. Don't sit down when you have a setback.
So many times in my career and in my personal life,
circumstances and people have disappointed me and, worse, I've
disappointed myself. Unwise decisions, market down turns,
divorce, lost contracts, death of loved ones, lost
opportunities; each seemed like a catastrophe at the time. But
I'm still here, and life is good.
When (not if!) setbacks occur, I've learned to remember these
three things:
a) Acknowledge the loss, but focus on working with what you
have left.
b) Remember how you've dealt with past setbacks, and draw on
the best of those strategies and strengths.
c) Do something (even something small) that gets you out of
inertia and moving in a slightly more positive direction.
3. Learn to laugh at yourself.
From childhood, this one has saved my sanity and helped me put
things back in perspective. Here's an example. My struggle with
weight has been a lifetime battle. Quite a while ago I decided
that I needed to learn to laugh at myself in painful personal
situations like this one. I soon got a good opportunity.
Ninety-two-year-old Ms. Daisy was a new client in my clinical
practice. She had been brought by a family member for an
evaluation to see if she was competent to handle her own money.
There was a big family dispute about this, and it appeared that
some relatives might be motivated by getting control of her
money themselves. When I went to the waiting room to meet her,
Ms. Daisy looked at me suspiciously as I attempted to connect
with her.
"Well, hello, Ms. Daisy. It's a pleasure to meet you. I'm Dr.
Smallwood."
She looked me up and down and said flatly, "Well, you don't look
too small to me!"
Learn to laugh at yourself. You'll never run out of material!
Jerry Seinfeld in "Sein Language" summed it up: "Life is truly
a ride. We're all strapped in and no one can stop it. When the
doctor slaps your behind, he's ripping your ticket and away you
go. As you make each passage from youth to adulthood to
maturity, sometimes you just hang on to that bar in front of
you. But the ride is the thing. I think the most you can hope
for at the end of life is that your hair's messed, you're out of
breath, and you didn't throw up."
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