Posts tagged with goals

The other night, while I was working on my e-book (details coming soon), I asked myself why I was doing this. Why go through so much pain for one e-book when I can spend my vacation basking in the sun or getting paid the traditional way?

Let’s sit on this idea for a second. It’s summer. There are jobs that I could’ve easily applied for and gotten hired to do. I know plenty of people who could recommend me for very good positions.

So, why am I busting my butt trying to get this e-book done instead of selling out and getting employed like the greater portion of college kids my age do? Why am I doing such hard work that’s so far been yielding me no payment?

I’m not going to get any sort of medal. Maybe a few thousand people will get to see the result of my hard labor. Even fewer will decide to purchase it.

It’s funny that when I’m in the thick of difficult work that I ask myself this. And then the answer came to me, as if I was struck by neural lightning:

Because I enjoyed doing it.

But in an instant, I had another conundrum. I already knew that I enjoyed it. But why is it so difficult? I thought doing what you love was supposed to be easy?

Then another answer came to me in my somewhat enlightened state:

For anything to be a success, hard work is necessary. Hard work is what separates the winners from the losers; the expendable from the indispensable.

A wake-up call already woken up to

Somewhere along the line, we’ve seem to have forgotten the adjective that goes in front of the word “work”.

All the time I hear the gurus say we should be doing “work that matters”. Instead we should be telling ourselves to do “hard work” that matters. I don’t know about you, but I get the notion that most of us think doing what we love is going to be easy.

That the four-hour work week is acquired by working for four hours of week from the get-go.

That doing what you love is all fun in the sun while you get to work from anywhere.

Unfortunately, when you actually test that theory, it’s proven that only the opposite is true.

Whether you’re pushing pencils, or striving to increase awareness about the impact humanity is having on the world. Whether you’re a famous actor on the stages of Broadway, or sitting at the desk in another one of those gray cubicles. Whether you’re doing what you love or doing what you hate.

It all takes hard work.

Hard work and passion go hand in hand

“When you live for a strong purpose, then hard work isn’t an option. It’s a necessity.” – Steve Pavlina

When you really care about something (maybe you want to start a movement and bring change) you can’t mull around expecting someone else to take the first step. Or rather, you won’t let yourself do that.

You already know, as if instinctually, that intention backed up by action makes things happen. As Steve says, hard work is a necessary element in order for your goals to be realized.

There are no shortcuts

“There is no substitute for hard work.” – Thomas Edison

There are no lottery tickets in life that will dramatically increase your odds of success. Hard work has existed all these years for a reason. It’s the only tried and true way to successfully doing what you love.

The only shortcut to hard work is less work, which in the end leads to a higher chance of you not succeeding.

Greatness is not obtained through a slack work ethic

“Unless you are willing to drench yourself in your work beyond the capacity of the average man, you are just not cut out for positions at the top.” – J.C. Penney

Alright, we know hard work matters and that it is necessary, but how much of it are we supposed to do? The answer is however much it takes to get where we want to be.

Anybody can do hard work for a few hours. Take a look at how many people work part-time. But less can remain dedicated for a few months. Even less so can stay hard workers for years.

This is why there are so few at the top. Not because they took shortcuts or free-rode on the backs of the more dedicated. But because they understood that hard work is what rules all.

The truth behind doing what you love

The truth is that doing what you love requires you to work much longer and harder than your employed counterparts for no pay whatsoever (at least in the beginning). The paycheck you seek is not coming at the end of every bi-weekly period.

But what matters much more than the time invested, the money lost, and the sweat put in is that you are doing what makes you happy and what others can enjoy.

Is this not what life is about? The pursuit of happiness? I can hear the naysayers already, telling me that this pursuit is imaginary and the “American Dream” was lost long ago.

I beg to differ.

Creative Commons License photo credit: Pink Sherbet Photography

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Sometimes I think there are a few people who expect the world to just give them what they want. From time to time, I get emails simply asking me:

“Can you write a post about [completely unrelated product]? It would be great for your readers.”

“I have an idea for your blog.”

“You should tell your readers about [another unrelated topic]. Oh and [request for link exchange]?”

When I get messages like this, from actual people, I think to myself, “I know that you want everybody to know about your product or listen to your message, but why are you coming to me expecting me to do it for you?”

Now, I’m all for helping out

I’m not someone who instantly shuts down requests for link exchanges or product reviews, but if it’s blatantly obvious that you’re only out for yourself, don’t expect me to do your bidding.

Enter a fundamental lesson for society

Long ago, people used to do things for other people simply because they themselves were going to get something in return. And for a while, this worked out smashingly. People would exchange resumes for jobs, hours of their lives for cash, and completed work for grades.

This system created a lot of jobs and helped a lot of people.

But somewhere along the line, the human race got creative enough to think of the Internet; a place where nearly any piece of information is there for the taking, provided you searched long enough.

What’s more is that on the web, there are literally billions of people at our fingertips. We can connect with anyone and spread gossip as fast as wild fire. It was at this point that jobs started to get a little harder to come by.

Instead of hiring more door-to-door salesman, employers fire the ones they already have and are employing highly qualified advertisers to saturate the Internet with ads. It’s no longer profitable to offer services that cost next to nothing to obtain. In other words, you can’t get a good job anymore for having little skill. The door-to-door guys learned that the hard way.

What do you bring to the table?

If you have nothing to offer in a world filled to the brim with free stuff, expect very little compensation. No longer can you fool people with cookie-cutter advice and cheap tricks; we’ve gotten much smarter.

Gone are the days when you spam the web with useless ads and expect people to buy into your message (unless you’re a soulless pay-per-click jockey, you’re out of luck).

This holds true with everything else in life. What is becoming increasingly more obvious is that you must bring something to the table. No one will pay attention to you if you’re just like everybody else. If you want to succeed in life and really achieve your dreams, you must prove yourself worthy.

Times have changed; the ball is in your court

The invention of the Internet has turned living a good life into a whole new ball game. It’s no longer required of you to work for the rest of your life to get paid by the hour, on the hour. It doesn’t take years to establish a business living freely off of your passion.

No one can stand in your way.

In order to get the life you desire, it’s important that you zero in on the value you can provide to others. Keep this in mind as you follow these three steps:

1. You must become the mover

You must be the spark that lights the fire, the momentum that starts the avalanche, the march that begins the movement. You alone are ultimately responsible for where your life ends up. Stop expecting people to do things for you. In school, teachers gave you guidelines for how to do well in class. At your job, the boss gives you assignments that could potentially earn you more money.

But when you want to build the life you’ve always dreamed of, you’re on your own. You have to be the mover.

2. Become really good at one thing

What is one skill you are incredibly good at? Writing, painting, drawing, singing, acting, knitting, coloring, talking? Find it yet? Awesome.

Perfect it. Become one of the top one thousand people in your field of expertise. Let your work speak for itself and you’ll be getting plenty of opportunities to showcase yourself in no time.

3. Give away your best work

The works of art that you put the most time in are the ones that you should give away for free (from time to time). People will be more invested in your cause if you’re so willing to spread value that others would keep under wraps.

In truth, your best work at the time may not be your best work tomorrow. Our thoughts and ideas are constantly evolving. So don’t be afraid to give away too much value – there’s always a brighter idea on the horizon.

4. Charge for your better work

Need I say more?

Live a life made by value

Taking command of your life is not something everyone can do. It requires an immense amount of time, work, and connecting. But if you accept this and pursue your passion with everything you’ve got, the life you’re dreaming of will be waiting for you.

This is what the high life is all about.
Creative Commons License photo credit: Jesse757

Why is everyone marching in the streets, clean cut, walking steadily, briefcase or purse in hand, walking in a straight line? Why do the buildings all seem to be of the same structure and style – of a dingy grayish brown or maybe a black? Suits and ties abound, I am trapped in one line of people of many lines. I snap out of the trance I’ve found myself in. I think myself to have been trapped in a dream, and now I’m awake, my body moving on its own.

I too am marching. My hair is combed, as dark as the coffee I’m holding in my left hand, and as clean as the the briefcase in my right.  I’m in similar wear as my unofficial comrades. My body is still under the control of some suppressive force. I turn my head as we cross the streets downtown, and I look in the reflection of the windows across the buildings. I see a bewildered, confused face among several thousand forward facing bodies. I decide that enough is enough; I have to get out of here. I try to move. I can’t. Such will it takes to regain control! It feels like I’m trying to lift a bus, but all I’m really trying to do is tell my mind to jump out of line.

Suddenly, after 5 minutes of intense focus behind a sweaty brow, I move. I’m on the ground, breathing heavily. I’m unaware as to how I got here; how everyone got here. Where did we come from? Where are we going? I look up at the marching bodies, watching them remain entranced by whatever it is they are following. I find a lamppost and climb as high as I can. I try to get a glimpse at the beginning of the line. I cannot see it.

I ask myself again, “Where is this place?” Judging by the surroundings, I know that we are in the middle of some downtown metropolis. There are no street signs; somehow everyone just knows where they’re headed. I feel lost. My mind begins to resume hypnosis. I think to myself that maybe I should follow them and see where it takes me. What could be the harm in that? I run up to one of the drones and ask if he knows where he’s going. He looks at me like I’m crazy and tells me its obvious. He points ahead. I tell him that I don’t see anything but more bodies marching. He ignores me and keeps marching.

I ask a young lady where everybody is going. She tells me that’s a stupid question and says it’s obvious. I ask her why it’s obvious and she retorts that she doesn’t know, it just is. I ignore her.

I take a seat on the sidewalk and contemplate how I’m going to get home. Suddenly, I have a flashback. It’s of a time before I got here, I’m sure. I’m walking out of a building. I’m saying to myself that when I get to my next destination everything will make sense. I’m walking out of another building. I’m again saying that everything will make sense, after I finish this step.

The flashback moves to just yesterday. I’m putting on my suit and tie. I look in the mirror. The wrinkles of age are starting to form. My hair is combed, my suit is pressed. I again tell myself that I am almost there. The flashback ends.

“Almost where?” I say to myself as I’m sitting on the sidewalk. I look up at the sky, past the incessant marching and past the skyscrapers that tower above us. The cloud are shifting across a very light blue canvas. I feel myself smiling up at it. As I rise to stand, I look back the marchers and stare at their faces. They don’t notice me, not even the sky. Their faces are stoic, undeterred. They won’t even look at the sky. A tear almost comes to my eye. In an instant I’m filled with rage. With a great fury I’ve never felt before, I rip off my tie and grab my shoes off. I messy up my hair and yell at the top of my lungs. I shout at them, “What is wrong with you people?!”

They don’t answer; they just stare. Some snicker, some point, some stick their noses up. They believe myself to be below them. I almost start laughing myself. Me? Inferior to you? Without thinking, I rush into the crowd. Chaos ensues. I do not try and fight them, for I am no fool. I only wish to see what is spearheading this movement. Who is leading this progression of sheep? And where is this journey leading them to? Bodies went everywhere. Women screamed at me, thinking their chances of getting ahead were ruined. Men roared at me, thinking my stunt was done solely to disrupt the order. They grabbed at me, trying to get me to stop. I did not care, nor did I look back as I progressed forward. The truth lay onwards. That’s where I was headed.

Their cries got louder as I neared to what I thought was the front. I was knocked down several times; maybe kicked. I can’t say that I didn’t feel their blows, but I was imperturbable. I was almost there. I would go to the leader of this mob and force him to tell me why I was here. At the front stood the final line of savages, both men and women. I stood, awaiting their response. I know what they saw. A young man of a minority, hair disheveled, clothes torn, tie and briefcase missing. I may have been bruised and carried with me a few bloodstains, but nothing else mattered anymore. I told myself that I will see the truth of this world.

They saw the determination in my eyes. The suited gatekeepers knew what would come if they denied me entry. To my surprise, they stepped aside. At this, the chaos behind me grew to levels unimaginable. There was no time to question the change of heart of the gatekeepers. I leapt pass them, leaving for them the mob whose new goal was to see me suffer.

All of a sudden, there was darkness; save for one strip of light on the ground leading forward into nothingness. I walked on it for what seemed like hours. Enraged, I bolted to get to the end. Then I stopped and realized…. maybe there wasn’t an end. I stepped off of the path of light, into the darkness. I took a few steps. Through the darkness, I saw an old man holding a tattered book. My heart raced. This man wasn’t wearing a suit, but he was in rags. He turned and looked at me. Our eyes met. I gulped. He smiled. I asked him why he was doing this to everyone.

“I have done nothing”, said the old man. “You came here yourself. Remember?”

“Everyone else…we all came here…why?”

“You and everybody else…you all see the same vision. You all came for and desire the same thing. Happiness. A beautiful family. Material objects of momentary value. You may think you are different, but you’re the same as the rest.”

“That’s not true…at least not anymore. I know what I want. Happiness…a family…material possessions…they will come when they are ready, but I know that they are not the end. My success, that is the end!” I yelled.

“You still do not understand, boy”, the old man said. “There is NO end. There will never be an end. It is all merely a cycle that this book has denoted for those who accept it.”

“We…accept a cycle?”

He shrugged and slowly handed me the tattered book. I took it and held it up within the darkness. My eyes adjusted. The title was “History”.

“We are all living in history. Even now…we accept and internalize our own cycle. What happens earlier in the cycle we cannot change. Who we are born to, where we are from, what is in our past; we cannot alter that part of the cycle. But what has not yet occurred…that is what we can change. You and everyone else out there, will eventually die, but will be reborn in someone else: your offspring. It is a perpetual cycle and all individuals must exist within that cycle. Those who do not are already dead.”

“So, I’m dead since I stepped off of that path of light over there?”

“No! – sigh – Everyone out there, that mob you fought your way through, they are all on the same path. You have been on that path as well. Your entire life: primary school, elementary school, middle school, high school, college, graduate school, and now wherever you were heading before; you’ve been going in the same direction. The moment you leapt of off the path, you created a new cycle for yourself. A new path, so to speak.”, said the old man.

“I…understand now.”

“Good!”

“But, but, you! Who are you? How did I -”

“Our conversation ends here. It’s time we went our separate ways”, replied the old man.

“BUT-”, I start to say, but it’s too late. Darkness once again consumes everything: the old man, the light path, myself. But out of the corner of my eye I see a something coming out beneath my feet and starting forward. It’s a blue streak jutting out in front of me; a different path.

Deep darkness…

I open my eyes. I’m on my bed, in my family’s old apartment building. The place we used to stay at before we moved. I remembered my old friends…I still smile when I think about them.

Then I remember what just happened. I rush to the bathroom to check myself out. I look in the mirror and see a man with curly dark hair, a white t-shirt, dark blue jeans, and four-o’clock shadow on my face. I think to myself that I am on a different path.

Back in the living room, I see my laptop on the old computer table. Then I remember my passion. I sit down thinking of the possibilities. I get to work.
Creative Commons License photo credit: the bbp

1. Suppress fear (or at least act in spite of it)

2. Start a business (I have the name down so far)

3. Become an apprentice to a well-known entrepreneur (time to start the emails) Done.

4. Make more money as a freelance writer (Did I mention I get paid to write now? Sweet.) Not a fan of writing on a schedule. No surprise there.

5. Wake up earlier and get right to work. That was easy.

6. Travel overseas by alone using money I’ve earned myself (one of my many pipe dreams)

7. Get into a relationship and I mean a REAL one (I’ve never had REAL relationships. It could be exciting.)

8. Learn to speak Spanish somewhat fluently

9. Reactivate my limited knowledge of the Japanese language

10. Get rid of my one glaring insecurity (not man enough to share here, but it gets easier to deal with day by day)

11. Learn how to play the guitar (I favor those of the electric variety)

12. Learn how to swim (which will eventually lead to surfing)

13. Write and sell my first ebook

14. Get over 1000 subscribers

15. Get back into drawing (did it for years as a kid, stopped in the middle of high school)

16. Learn how to use Photoshop (I’m not paying for anymore web design) Unecessary goal. I’ll soon have Pages for Macbook.

17. Grow another inch (I haven’t stopped yet. Will be six feet in due time)

18. Have my own epiphany moment Done.

19. Write my first book review on the blog (I’m getting a free copy to review from this guy right here) Finished!

20. Read all the books I have been meaning to read (I’m sick of reading about the philosophy of power for class)

21. Get more clothes (Vintage tees/hoodies that  fit FTW -for the win-)

22. Finish the entrepreneurial objectives sent to me by my mentor at the UChicago Booth School of Business I should tell him I’m finished now.

23. Do 100 pushups without stopping (okay, I’ve been slacking a bit on this one)

24. Get my driver’s license (I’ve put it off long enough)

25. Buy more video games for the long summer ahead (I can only do so much in three months before I get bored) Don’t care much for video games anymore. Or at least not as much as I used to.

26. Write a story Just published it

27. Move into an apartment Can you say, done?

28. Turn 20 years old How is this even a goal? I’m going to do it anyway…

29. Guest post for Zen Habits (ha ha, only in my wildest dreams)

30. Stop complaining forever

31. Listen more to that voice in the back of my head that whispers “psst…take action”

32. Realize that happiness is something you give yourself Learned this a long time ago

33. Discover something I’m truly passionate about (I may have already found it) Found it.

34. Understand that there is ALWAYS a bright side

35. Believe that anything I put my mind to, I can achieve (I forget this sometimes)

36. Get my yellow belt in Tung-Su-Doe (Korean martial arts)

37. Go on a road trip

38. Get a new battery for my laptop (not feeling a new laptop just yet) Rest in peace Gateway…hello, MacBook Pro.

39. Do a handstand without using the wall as a safety net

40. Stop waiting for something to happen and make things happen for myself

41. Learn to become a good story teller

42. Eat more vegetables (Not just the ones served with burgers)

43. Listen to more genres of music (rock and j-rock is awesome)

44. Comment on at least one blog every other day Not worth my time.

45. Buy posters to hang in my room (I’ve had a blank canvas for years)

46. See my old grade/high school teachers so I can inflate my ego (“Yeah…I’m kind of a big deal compared to the person you used to know”)

47. Go to the National Entrepreneurial Bootcamp in April (Probably won’t happen though) Didn’t happen

48. Rewatch Randy Pausch’s “Last Lecture” Just saw it yesterday (3/22/10)

49. Kiss an attractive stranger upon first encounter (Actually easier than it sounds if you go to college parties – so, to clarify – during the day)

50.  Live well.
Creative Commons License photo credit: Raymond Brown