So take a moment and look at your challenges, your roadblocks, your barriers, your–well, everything you face on a daily basis–and see them for what they really are: blessings.
While some people are successful because they’re given special opportunities, usually the difference in long-term success and failure lies in what we do when we’re faced with adversity, misfortune, and seemingly insurmountable challenges.
Everyone faces the following difficulties; successful people find ways to stay positive, keep working, and eventually overcome what to others seems insurmountable.
And you can too. Today, start changing your perspective on:
1. Failures
For
most of us, failure isn’t the end of the world. Failure is just the end
of an idea or a possibility or a dream. When we fail, we can move on to
something else, with luck a little wiser and a lot more likely to
succeed.
For some, though, failure means going without–or worse, possibly forcing their children to go without.
Failure sucks, but never being able to take a chance on your skills, your experience, and your vision is much, much worse.
Be thankful you have the opportunity to fail on terms you at least partly set. Many people do not.
2. Criticism
People
criticize only when they care. While people still care about you or
your business, you have the opportunity to do something better, to do
something differently, to change their minds–or to just meet in the
middle.
Apathy is much, much worse.
3. Unhappiness
When you’re sad, that means you care, and caring is the mother of changing things for the better.
Apathy is much, much worse.
Don’t dwell in unhappiness. Use it as fuel to make your life better.
4. Envy
Think of people you admire. Think of people who have earned your trust and esteem.
Be thankful those people are a part of your life. In fact, don’t just be privately thankful. Tell them how you feel.
That will make them grateful for people like you.
5. Decisions
You might have so many options and potential choices, both business and personal, that you feel stressed and even overwhelmed.
Flip
it around: Imagine how it would feel to have few, if any, options.
Imagine how it would feel to have few, if any, viable choices.
Be thankful you have options–the more, the better.
6. Struggle
Not
unintentional struggle. Intentional struggle: like choosing to work
incredibly hard or to push through a mental or physical barrier or to
make sacrifices for the good of the people who rely on you.
When
you struggle and fight and endure, you not only stretch the limits of
what you believe you are capable of, but you also sometimes enter a
state of grace that you find only when you strip away what is truly
nonessential (which turns out to be most of what you worry about).
Struggling helps you learn who you really are–and who you really want to be.
7. Delays
Remaining patient is rarely fun, but having to wait can be a good thing.
For
example, research shows that where vacations are concerned, the biggest
boost in happiness comes from planning to get away. And this vacation
anticipation boosts happiness for an average of eight weeks.
After
the vacation, though, happiness levels quickly drop to baseline
levels–usually within days. Soon the people who went on a vacation are
no happier than the people who didn’t.
Be thankful you need to wait–especially for something you really want. The anticipation alone is worth it.
Besides, waiting for what you want–not what you need, but what you want–is a luxury only those who are already blessed can afford.
8. Regrets
Think
about something you wish you had done better. Or handled differently.
Or think about something you wish you had done, but for whatever reason,
you didn’t.
Painful? Sure. And motivating.
Use
that motivation today. Call a friend you’ve lost touch with. Mend
fences with a family member. Be the bigger person and say you’re sorry.
Do something you wish you had done.
You’ll be thankful you did.
9. Time
Because you have the time and resources to do something like reading this post, that means you have time:
to improve yourself, to consider new ideas, to try to be a better
person, to build better relationships with family and friends.
Time is your most important asset and what you should be most thankful for.
Time makes everything else possible. Stop doing things that don’t matter and spend your time making your dreams a reality.
Source: Inc
No comments:
Post a Comment