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Posts Tagged: Motivation

Sprout Your Ideas by Watering Them With Confidence

Have you ever had an idea that you immediately pushed aside because you felt that you weren’t good enough to follow through with it?

Perhaps you thought you didn’t have the skills necessary to make the idea a reality or you felt that you’d end up producing something that you thought was crap.

Stop.

You’re better than that. You’re ten times more capable than you think.

Ideas are like seeds. Just as a seed needs water to grow, ideas need confidence to sprout. If you stop watering the idea before it has time to grow (or worse, not water it at all), how will you ever know its potential?

Just as a single seed can become an enormous tree, every idea has the potential to change the world and drop seeds of its own. If you don’t even give your ideas a chance, you’ve condemned them all to failure.

Would you rather give hope to your ideas or condemn them all to failure?

Be confident in your ability to make every idea a reality.

It’s OK to stop putting effort towards an idea when you’ve genuinely recognized that it’s not working, but don’t give up before you’ve even started watering it.

We need more people who are confident enough to take their ideas forward. The world needs you to give hope to your ideas and believe in yourself long enough to take at least take the first steps.

You have incredible potential. All those things you believe you’re not capable of doing are only true because you tell yourself so.

The next time you have an idea, give it a chance. Water it a little and see what happens.

Live Each Day To The Fullest

The following is a guest post by David Turner. He emailed this amazing story to me after watching my latest video, Contemplating Contentedness. David’s story touched me in many ways, so I asked if he would allow me to share it with my readers here on the blog.

“We have but limited time in this life and we need to do everything in our power to make the most of it.” ~ Raam Dev

Ain’t that the truth.

Made a few posts here and there about an RIP to a co-worker. But never really shared.

We had a 76 year old guy cleaning our cars at the dealership. He started about 11 years ago after 30+ years at the local foundry. He came to Indiana from West Virginia (from the hills). His dad worked in coal mines. Denver was unique. Had and kept his true hillbilly accent. “You gots sumthin I can tak this tar of with?” Now cleaning cars, one would think black tar… but he was of course talking about tires.

The guys back in the shop loved to tease him. And he gave it right back at them. He’d walk the dealership singing songs, not words but noises followed sometimes by a “yeah man, yeah buddy”. Someone would say something interesting to him and he would make a lil hand gun out of his fingers and make the gunshot noise followed by “yeah” or “yep” or “you can say that again”.

He was a true friend to everyone he met. Never met a stranger that didn’t become his friend in seconds. Of course he didn’t remember half their names, but the folks he befriended remembered him for life. Continue reading →

The Entire World Is Knocking At My Door

As I flip through one of the four airplane magazines from the seat pocket in front of me, I catch myself staring at a tropical beach photo — you know, the one’s you see in travel magazines that have a dozen or so straw umbrellas hovering over lounge chairs, nestled on a beautiful sandy beach overlooking a blue-green ocean.

Suddenly, I realize that I now have the freedom to go to those places. I no longer have to dream about them like everybody else.

It was an exhilarating feeling of absolute adventure — sort of like what you feel on day one of a two-week vacation, only amplified to encompass an entire lifetime.

I’m writing this post from a WiFi lounge in London’s Heathrow airport, waiting for my connecting flight to Bangalore, India. A few short months ago, I never could have imagined myself being here in London.

Now here I am, sitting among dozens of fellow travelers — some traveling for work, some for pleasure, and perhaps even some nomadic travelers like myself, headed to an unfamiliar place on a mission to rediscover themselves.

The twenty-three hour journey to India is giving me plenty of time to think about the impact this lifestyle change is going to have on my life. Every time I look around the airport and realize that I’m not traveling for work or vacation like most of the people around me, I get this twisted feeling in my stomach when I realize that this freedom is my life now.

The entire world is knocking at my door and nothing can stop me from greeting it.

I’m living the dream I’ve had since I was thirteen.

I’m a world traveling, nomadic explorer!

When you’ve got a calling — when every ounce of your existence is telling you to do something — there comes a point where you can no longer ignore it. I reached that point where I simply couldn’t put this off any longer. Holding it back — holding it all inside — was beginning to destroy me. It felt as though my entire life was being slowly extinguished.

But the transition up to this point wasn’t easy.

I left a secure job with great coworkers, got rid of my only means of transportation, and reduced my physical possessions further than I thought possible. With no travel experience outside the United States, I’m now on my way to the opposite side of the planet toting just a single backpack and the clothes on my back.

The most difficult part of this transition, however, has been the emotional impact its had on those I love. Nobody likes to intentionally inflict pain on others — even if it’s indirect and will result in your own eventual happiness. It still feels wrong.

When I have tough decisions to make — when I’m feeling certain conflicts inside — I don’t resort to emotional decisions. I rely on what my morals and my instincts tell me is right and wrong. Sometimes things work out for the better. Sometimes they don’t. But whatever happens, I always know that my actions were based on decisions that were made by being true to myself; by being honest with myself.

Being honest and true to myself is very important to me.

What good are we as human beings if we cannot even be honest and true to ourselves? If we cannot even trust our own instinct or listen to our inner calling, what right do we have to exist?

There’s only one person who’s going to change your life for the better. There’s only one person who is really going to make you happy. There’s only one person who will make you free.

That person is you.

You cannot rely or depend on anyone but yourself. You have to trust yourself to handle any situation that gets thrown at you. You will handle it. You might make the wrong choices and you might fail miserably, but you’ll handle it. And when you come out the other side, you will have learned something. You will have grown. You will have improved.

You have to be ready to accept failure. You have to accept that you don’t know a damn thing.

The only way you’re going to learn is by failing. Over and over and over. Accept that and suddenly you have no limits. Suddenly there is nothing stopping you from doing what you love. Suddenly the impossible seems doable. Suddenly life has more meaning. Suddenly you are the owner of your happiness.

Travel Update: Be sure to check out The Plan: 6 Months, 3 Countries, and $3,000.

Find the Courage to Be Yourself

Be yourself.

It’s not impossible, but it takes courage. It takes courage to be and to think differently. But the act of being and thinking differently is only different to those looking at you from the outside.

If you make up your mind that you’re fully in control of your destiny — if you decide to choose what you want to believe in — then you’re not being different. You’re being you.

Recognize that those who say you’re crazy, or those who try to stop you from being or thinking differently, are only confronting their own daemons; they’re trying to reaffirm their own beliefs.

If others give you advice, listen. If they tell you what you should or should not do, listen. But decide for yourself. Believe in yourself. Be yourself. Continue reading →

10 Ways to Nudge Yourself Into Action

I recently took action on a big decision. This “taking action” literally came down to pressing a button on my keyboard (I was sending an email). Pressing that one button turned out to be a lot more difficult, and much more interesting, than I had expected.

As time ticked on, I watched my subconscious surface with unseen doubts, alternative outcomes, and a bunch of stuff that I hadn’t anticipated getting in my way. I had literally planned and thought about this event for months and decided earlier in the week that it was time to take action.

It’s funny how we can psych ourselves up to do something, only to turn back with our tail between our legs the moment we’re face-to-face with actually having to do something about it. Taking action can be scary, and for good reason: Wielding the power to control or influence the future is a daunting task.

If you need to take action on something and you’ve made up your mind that you won’t back down without a fight, try some of these tips to help nudge yourself into action. I used all of them the night I sent that email.

  1. Get your blood moving. Get up and walk around. Go for a run. Workout. Fresh blood running through your veins gives you new energy and helps you see your thoughts, and the situation, from a new perspective.
  2. Move to a different location. Physically moving to a different location helps change the context and let’s you see things from a different angle.
  3. Ask yourself, how bad is the alternative? If the decision is big enough to warrant as much attention as you’ve already given it, doing nothing will most likely do more harm than good.
  4. Does your happiness depend on it? If the thing you’re having trouble taking action on has any chance of improving your happiness, then taking action is damn well worth the risk!
  5. Remind yourself why. What made you want to take action? Why are you doing this? Simply remembering what motivated you to take action in the first place can nudge you to take that next step.
  6. Time is limited, your opportunities are not. There will always be a greater opportunity out there. There will always be a better time. You can choose to do nothing now and let time run on, or you can choose to take action and move yourself forward, thereby placing yourself into a position of receiving those opportunities.
  7. Without action, nothing happens. It sounds obvious, but we often want and expect things to change without doing anything to make them happen. If you want air, you breathe. If you want to eat, you feed yourself. If you want to get somewhere in life, you need to do something about it.
  8. You will always make mistakes. And that’s good! Mistakes make us better — it’s a basic function built into nature. The more mistakes you make, the more likely you are to grow and learn. Most of us don’t make enough mistakes!
  9. Envision what comes next. What will your world be like after taking action? What things can you be absolutely certain of? The clearer your understanding of how the world will be after taking action, the easier it will be to nudge yourself into action.
  10. Realize how you’ll feel if you don’t take action. If you’re feeling antsy now, how will you feel if you don’t take action? Will those feelings continue to build up? You’ll feel so much better after this “taking action” step is behind you.

What things have helped you nudge yourself into action?

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