I found this amazing motivational article on Google, which I think everybody should read.
Telmo Ferreira | TF Traduções
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What success is to us? What success is to you? Is it more money? Maybe it’s a healthy family. Maybe it’s a happy marriage. Maybe it’s to help others, to be famous, to be spiritually sound, leave the world a little bit better place than you found it. Whatever your answer is, don’t choose anything that will jeopardize yourself.
I’m gonna talk to you about some things I’ve learned in my journey, most from experience, some of them I heard in passing, many of them I’m still practicing, but all of them I do believe are true.
Life is not easy. It is not. Don’t try to make it that way. Life’s not fair. It never was, it isn’t now, and it won’t ever be.
Do not fall into the trap, the entitlement trap. A feeling like you’re a victim. You are not. Get over it and get on with it.
So, the question that we’ve got to ask ourselves is: What is success is to us? What is success is to you? Is it more money? That’s fine. I got nothing against money. Maybe it’s a healthy family. Maybe it’s a happy marriage. Maybe it’s to help others, to be famous, to be spiritually sound, leave the world a little bit better place than you found it.
Continue to ask yourself that question. Now, your answer may change overtime, and that’s fine, but do yourself this favor. Whatever your answer is, don’t choose anything that will jeopardize yourself. Prioritize who you are, who you want to be, and don’t spend time with anything that antagonizes your character.
Be brave, take the hill. But first answer that question: “What’s my hill?” But first we have to define success for ourselves, and then we have to put-in the work to maintain.
Take that daily talent, tend to our garden, keep the things that are important to us in good shape.
Where you are not is as important as where you are. It is just as important where we are not as it is where we are. But the first step that leads to our identity life is usually not “I know who I am, I know who I am”. That’s not the first step. The first step is usually “I know who I am not”.
Process of elimination.
Defining ourselves by what we are not is the first step that leads us to really knowing who we are.
You know that group of friends that you hang out with that really might not bring out the best in you. You know they gossip too much or they’re kind of shady. They really aren’t going to be there for you in a pinch. Or how about that bar we keep going to, that we seem to have the worst hangover from? Or that computer screen, right? That computer screen that keeps giving us an excuse not to get out of the house and engage with the world and get some real human interaction.
How about the food that we eat? The stuff that tastes so good going down. It makes us feel like crap. Next week we feel lethargic. We keep putting on weight.
Well… those people, those places, those things, stop giving them your time and energy. Just don’t go there. I mean, put them down.
And when you do this, when you do put it down, you could go there and you couldn’t give it a new time and inadvertently find yourself spending more time and in more places that are healthy for you, that bring you more joy. Why? Because you just eliminated the who’s, the where’s, the what’s, and the when’s that were keeping you away from your identity. Like, trust me, too many options… I promise you… too many options will make a tyrant of us all.
Alright, so get rid of the excess, the wasted time… decrease your options. If you do this, you will have accidentally, almost innocently, put in front of you what is according to you, by process of elimination.
Knowing who we are is hard. It’s hard. Give yourself a break, eliminate who you are not, first, and you’re going to find yourself where you need to be.
Instead of creating outcomes that take from us, let’s create more outcomes that pay us back, fill us up, keep your fire lit, turn you on for the most amount of time, in your future.
We don’t always try our best, we don’t always do our best. Architecture is a verb as well, and since we are the architects of our own lives, let’s study the habits, the practices, the routines that we have that lead to and feed our success, our joy, our honest pain, our laughter, our earned tears. Let’s dissect that and give thanks for those things. And when we do that, guess what happens? We get better at them and… and we have more to dissect.
Be discerning. Choose it because you want it. Do it because you want to. We’re going to make mistakes. We got to own them. Then you got to make amends, then you got to move on.
Guilt and regret kill many a man, before their time. So, turn the page, get off the ride.
You are the author of the book of your life.