Success is not extrinsic… It’s not measurable.
“Success” can only truly occur internally, because it is
based on emotion. At the most basic level, success is your relationship with
yourself. Most people are living a lie. They purposefully ignore and distract
themselves from what they deep down want for themselves.
Many people want something more for themselves. They have
dreams and ambitions. Yet, few of these people ever get what they intended.
Being ambitious isn’t enough. Far more important than
ambition is commitment.
When you’re committed to something, you will be and do what
is required for the attainment of that thing. You’ll stop wondering and start
building. You’ll stop being distracted and start learning. You’ll start
connecting. You’ll start failing. You’ll get what you want, rather than have a
long list of “ambitions.” You’ll have actual accomplishments that reflect your
inner goals and values. Your external environment will reflect your deepest
internal views and aims.
If you’re committed to a marriage, you’ll change in whatever
ways are necessary for your marriage to thrive. You’ll become what is required
to make it work. If you’re committed to your craft, you’ll change and become
what is required to do work at the level of your desire. You won’t point to your
limitations with a victim mentality. You’ll change your limitations so they
stop stopping you.
Only those who are truly committed will become a new and
different person in order to live their commitment.
If you’re not willing to change, then you aren’t committed
to anything beyond what you currently have. If you don’t believe you can
change, then you can’t commit to anything beyond what life randomly throws at
you.
The Myth Of The
“Unchanging” Self
Your life is a reflection of you. If you want to change your
life, you have to change yourself. If you want to change the world, you have to
be that change.
If you want to become a millionaire, you need to become the
kind of person that can do that. If you want healthy relationships, you need to
become the kind of person that has healthy relationships.
Interestingly, in our Western Culture, we falsely emphasize
fixed traits and “personality” types. We believe very strongly in an
unalterable “nature” which is uninfluenced and untouched by the environments in
which we reside.
We believe something about us is self-contained, and exists
outside of space and time. This is individualism at it’s finest, and it leads
us to believe in some theoretical and “true” version of ourselves, which cannot
and does not change.
The truth is that you are always changing. Your brain and
even biology are highly malleable. Your worldview is continually integrating
new information. When you change a part of any system, you change the whole.
Thus, overtime, as you have new experiences, surround yourself with new people,
and learn new things, you emerge as a new person. Yet, these changes occur
gradually and in real-time, and thus are almost impossible for you to notice.
Yet, as you learn new things overtime, your brain literally
creates new connections and is reshaped. The brain you will have in a year from
now will literally be a different brain than the one you have now. Especially
if you consciously reshape how you see and live in the world.
Consequently, when you become fully committed to something,
you throw the individualistic myths away. You are part of a dynamic system that
is constantly changing.
When you’re committed, you stop justifying mediocrity in the
name of authenticity.
You stop lying to yourself about what you want and what you
believe in.
You create an environment that facilitates your commitment,
because you know that as a person, you take on the form of your environment.
The only agency you truly have is to choose the influences that shape you, both
internally and externally.
If you’re not committed, you rely on willpower. You remain
indecisive. You leave things up to chance.
You leave yourself outs. You never fully decide.
When you’re not committed, you live in a continual state of
self-hatred and internal-conflict. Over and over and over, you watch yourself
consciously behave in ways that oppose your highest ambitions.
Only Those Who Are
Committed Succeed
Being ambitious isn’t honorable. Wanting more for your life
is a common desire.
But being completely committed to something is not common.
It’s rare. It’s rare because commitment requires, in the words of T.S. Eliot,
“nothing short of everything.”
The hardest thing you will give up is the false idea of what
you think you are. You have no clue what you are. More importantly, there is no
“you” that is fixed and permanent, only the individualistic idea you have of
yourself.
This “authentic” self is your worst enemy. It’s the excuse
you have for not evolving. It’s your justification for not committing to
something bigger and better. It’s the chain around your neck, stopping you from
putting yourself into situations that will demand you become a better version
of you.
As researcher and professor, Adam Grant, has said, “But if
authenticity is the value you prize most in life, there’s a danger that you’ll
stunt your own development… Be true to yourself, but not so much that your true
self never evolves.”
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