What feelings truly push people outside their comfort zone?
No one understands as I do the inherent
difficulty in changing old and persistent habits. But habits begin to
change when we begin to change our perceptions.
Most of us don’t experience a
cataclysmic transformation. No, for most of us change comes as an
evolutionary process of almost imperceptible changes. We just keep
nudging ourselves in the right direction, forming one or two better
habits.
But what really makes us sit up and take notice? What really causes us to shed our old habits and take action?
Disgust with ourselves.
Making a decision when our backs are to the wall.
Desire that won’t be extinguished.
Resolve to do or die.
Making a decision when our backs are to the wall.
Desire that won’t be extinguished.
Resolve to do or die.
Emotions are the most powerful forces
inside us. Under the power of emotions, human beings can perform the
most heroic (as well as barbaric) acts. To a great degree, civilization
itself can be defined as the intelligent channeling of human emotion.
Emotions are fuel and the mind is the pilot, which together propel the
ship of civilized progress.
In this excerpt from 7 Strategies for Wealth & Happiness,
Jim Rohn describes four basic emotions that can trigger the most
incredible activity. The day that you channel these emotions to fuel
your desire is the day you’ll turn your life around.
1. Disgust
One does not usually equate the word
“disgust” with positive action. And yet properly channeled, disgust can
change a person’s life. The person who feels disgusted has reached a
point of no return. He or she is ready to throw down the gauntlet at
life and say, “I’ve had it!” That’s what I said after many humiliating
experiences. At age 25, I said, “I don’t want to live like this anymore.
I’ve had it with being broke. I’ve had it with being embarrassed, and
I’ve had it with lying.”
Yes, productive feelings of disgust come when a person says, “Enough is enough.”
They’ve had it with mediocrity. They’ve
had it with those awful sick feelings of fear, pain and humiliation.
They decide they are not going to live like this anymore. Call it what
you will, the “I’ve had it” day, the “never again” day, the “enough’s
enough” day. Whatever you call it, it’s powerful! There is nothing so
life-changing as gut-wrenching disgust!
2. Decision
Most of us need to be pushed to the wall
to make decisions. And once we reach this point, we have to deal with
the conflicting emotions that come with making them. We have reached a
fork in the road. Now this fork can be a two-prong, three-prong or even a
four-prong fork. No wonder that decision-making can create knots in
stomachs, keep us awake in the middle of the night or make us break out
in a cold sweat.
Making life-changing decisions can be
likened to internal civil war. Conflicting armies of emotions, each with
its own arsenal of reasons, battle each other for supremacy of our
minds. And our resulting decisions, whether bold or timid, well thought
out or impulsive, can either set the course of action or blind it. I
don’t have much advice to give you about decision-making except this:
Whatever you do, don’t camp at the fork
in the road. Decide. It’s far better to make a wrong decision than to
not make one at all. Each of us must confront our emotional turmoil and
sort out our feelings.
3. Desire
How does one gain desire? I don’t think I
can answer this directly because there are many ways. But I do know two
things about desire:
a. It comes from the inside, not the outside.
b. It can be triggered by outside forces.
b. It can be triggered by outside forces.
Almost anything can trigger desire. It’s
a matter of timing as much as preparation. It might be a song that tugs
at the heart. It might be a memorable sermon. It might be a movie, a
conversation with a friend, a confrontation with the enemy or a bitter
experience. Even a book or an article such as this one can trigger the
inner mechanism that will make some people say, “I want it now!”
Therefore, while searching for your “hot
button” of pure, raw desire, welcome into your life each positive
experience. Don’t erect a wall to protect you from experiencing life.
The same wall that keeps out your disappointment also keeps out the
sunlight of enriching experiences. So let life touch you. The next touch could be the one that turns your life around.
4. Resolve
Resolve says, “I will.” These two words are among the most potent in the English language. I will.
Benjamin Disraeli, the great British statesman, once said, “Nothing can
resist a human will that will stake even its existence on the extent of
its purpose.” In other words, when someone resolves to “do or die,”
nothing can stop him.
The mountain climber says, “I will climb
the mountain. They’ve told me it’s too high, it’s too far, it’s too
steep, it’s too rocky, it’s too difficult. But it’s my mountain. I will
climb it. You’ll soon see me waving from the top or you’ll never see me,
because unless I reach the peak, I’m not coming back.” Who can argue
with such resolve?
When confronted with such iron-willed
determination, I can see Time, Fate and Circumstance calling a hasty
conference and deciding, “We might as well let him have his dream. He’s
said he’s going to get there or die trying.”
The best definition for “resolve” I’ve
ever heard came from a schoolgirl in Foster City, California. Many years
ago, I was lecturing about success to a group of bright kids at a
junior high school. I asked, “Who can tell me what ‘resolve’ means?”
Several hands went up, and I did get some pretty good definitions. But
the last was the best. A shy girl from the back of the room got up and
said with quiet intensity, “I think resolve means promising yourself you
will never give up.” That’s it! That’s the best definition I’ve ever
heard: Promise yourself you’ll never give up.
Think about it! How long should a baby
try to learn how to walk? How long would you give the average baby
before you say, “That’s it, you’ve had your chance”? You say that’s
crazy? Of course it is. Any mother would say, “My baby is going to keep
trying until he learns how to walk!” No wonder everyone walks.
There is a vital lesson in this. Ask
yourself, “How long am I going to work to make my dreams come true?” I
suggest you answer, “As long as it takes.” That’s what these four
emotions are all about.