When you’re faced with an insane challenge, pause and consider talking to someone who might be able to help – or at least make you feel like you’re not at it alone.
When you’re stuck in a rut or in the tiny – nearly unmeaningful – details of a project, pause and consider talking to someone that can help pull you out.
When you wonder how the heck your going to accomplish your goal or ship that project, remember all the people waiting for you to do it.
Whether you’re lost or found, winning or losing, up or down, worried or determined, find a way to tie it back to the people.
The people are everything.
Stay Positive & If You Can’t Find That Person, Be It For Someone
The story you thought of telling, but decided against is of no benefit to those for whom it may have resonated with.
We have a lot of stories, but when we filter them, we prevent people from connecting with us, learning from them, escaping in them and appreciating them.
Just because you don’t like the story, doesn’t mean someone won’t get something out of it.
So go ahead and share. Share all the stories. The highs. The lows. The stories that feel insignificant and the ones that make you proud.
Could you imagine if half of the stories we’ve heard and read and been part of throughout the years never happened because someone else thought it wasn’t good enough to share?
What you see is people enjoying themselves, taking vacations, buying shiny objects and new toys. You see them having babies, building homes and winning free tickets to baseball games from work.
You’re working your ass off and seeing people living their lives to the fullest.
They see you doing the same, though, when you stop in for a coffee or when you show up with buddies on a holiday weekend and they serve you a few beers, apps, a main meal and dessert. They see you enjoying the hell out of your life planning your next trip and getting to the front of a crowd at a concert. They’re working and they see you …not.
Both parties often forget about the work each put in to take vacation from work or the time spent swinging a hammer to build that bench swing. Yet, we don’t argue that work wasn’t done. We know it was.
Perhaps instead of jealousy, we might be able to appreciate the effort we know others put in to reward themselves. If anything, because we know that we would feel a lot happier when someone says “I’m proud of the work you’ve done. You deserve this!” than when they say “You lucky duck.”
We can’t think differently and all the sudden our worldview changes, especially when we’ve been thinking about a certain way for as long as we can remember.
Action is what it takes to change your worldview.
If you want to believe that you get out what you put in, then you need to act in a way that’s selfless and give a little of yourself each day.
If you want to believe that most people are good, then you need to treat them as if they are.
Doing.
That’s all it takes to change your worldview, your outcome, your way of living.
Stay Positive & Fake It If You Need To Get Started
No matter the title, role or responsibility next to a name, there’s a person behind it.
A person as human as you or me. A person who enjoys the idea of getting some sun with an effervescent drink in hand. A person with others looking up to him or her. A person with dreams that we may not be chasing in this exact moment.
You’re going to be in a position where they do the questioning and you’re there to answer and to sell in an idea or yourself or a product.
In the moment, you’re feeling human, too and it’s great to do the talking.
But it’s worth remembering you can also ask questions.
“Where did you grow up?”
“Do you ride motorcycles, too?”
“What do you try to do in your free time?”
When we open the door to connect on a level other than what we met to connect on, everything gets easier and more enjoyable for both parties.
Ask as many questions as you answer.
Offer up moments to connect on something other than the agenda items.
Don’t stop yourself from having an interaction that could end with a hug rather than a handshake.
Stay Positive & You’re In This Journey Together The Moment You Connect
When you step back from a project for awhile, you give yourself the opportunity to gain fresh perspectives that can make the work stronger.
If it’s work worth doing, you’ll also be missed. Your readers or family or colleagues or friends will be happy when you return. You’ll sense it and be fueled by it.
The work you’re doing is stressful and exhausting, I’m sure. A hiatus is a great way to let your body and mind recover and re-energize.
But, ultimately, what makes any hiatus worth it (or not worth it) is whether or not you make the commitment of returning to your work with more gusto than you left with.
There has to be that commitment pre-hiatus. The if, then statement must be bought into if the hiatus is going to be effective.