An
insight by itself doesn’t change how your life goes though. It has to manifest
itself as a change in behavior for life to change, and that doesn’t happen
automatically. For me this amounts to reducing an insight to a mantra or
aphorism that triggers you to act differently in those certain moments when you
were about to make your usual mistake.
The
revelation was this:
It’s
not who you are, but what you do.
That’s
what has been coming into my head whenever I notice I’m taking something
personally. Success and failure speak only to the validity of actions, not
personalities. This will make some people yawn — they’ve been reading something
like it on inspirational posters and in fortune cookies forever. So have I, but
I didn’t get what it meant.
Whenever
I failed, I couldn’t help but interpret it as a consequence of who I was.
Somehow, I believed all my successes were direct consequences of my innate
qualities and not my day-to-day behavior, so my failures had to be, too. If I
screwed something up, it couldn’t just be that I decided to do something that
didn’t work very well, it had to be a personal fault.
I
was never responsible for any of them, successes or failures, only the world at
large could deliver either to me. The world at large decided to kick my ass.
If
I didn’t get a job, it’s because I was inadequate, not because they just didn’t
hear what they wanted to hear from me.
If
I got rejected by a girl, it was because there was something wrong with me, and
not because that time I chose an approach that didn’t intrigue her for whatever
reason.
If
I always lived in drab, boring apartments, it’s because I’m an uninteresting
person, and not because I never made a point of making a home I wanted in a
neighborhood I wanted to be in.
The
difference between people who suffer from that kind of “personality
determinism” is understanding that you can switch out your approach the next
time, and that’s all the adjustment that’s ever necessary.
“Who
you are” is always fine. You know you’ll get it right next time or the time
after that because you can try something else. I always assumed that if I
failed at something, I needed to be someone else in order to succeed.
What
an unbelievably huge miscalculation! It’s what you do, not who you are! And I’d
been doing wrong it my whole life. Maybe you haven’t, but if this does sound
familiar to you, things could be about to change in a big way.
I
had life backwards. I figured who I am determined what I was going to do, what
I could do. Because of who I was, I couldn’t do X, so I always had to do Y.
That’s who I was. Turns out that what I do can change at any time, and that has
a direct effect in changing who I am. I never danced because I was never a
“person who danced.” Now it’s obvious to me that as soon as I dance in spite of
the person I think I am, I quickly become someone who dances. That’s how people
who dance become people who dance. They dance.
In
other words, it’s behavior that makes the personality, not the personality that
makes the behavior, and that revelation is priceless to me.
This
means the personality is extraordinarily malleable as long as you don’t forget
than not only can you do what’s out of character, doing what’s out-of-character
is the only way to grow.
Still,
all of us gravitate towards that which is comfortable, which is tantamount to
gravitating towards that which does not help you grow.
Anyway,
things are blown wide open for me now. Long-neglected goals look fresh again.
They’re going to happen. My personality can’t limit me any more, because I’m
going to ignore it. I will do what’s out of character, I will surprise those
who know me best. I will surprise myself.
Again,
I know there are some people who never had this problem. They take on goals
with confidence, knowing that who they are won’t limit them, and failure only
means what they did wasn’t the thing that’s going to work.
Still,
I know something has clicked here for some of you. I suspect that many, even
most of us think our personalities really are pretty rigid blueprints and don’t
allow for a lot of things we want. So I hope you do something out of character
today and see what I mean.
No comments:
Post a Comment