By Steve Pavlina
This is the last of 6 articles on Self-Discipline that I came across on Steve Pavlina's
website. As he has generously made them available to the public domain I
am taking the opportunity to share them with you. The first five can be
found here, here, here, here and here.
Nothing in the world can take the place of Persistence. Talent
will not; nothing is more common than unsuccessful men with talent.
Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education will
not; the world is full of educated derelicts. Persistence and
determination alone are omnipotent. The slogan “Press On” has solved and
always will solve the problems of the human race. - Calvin Coolidge
Persistence is the fifth and final pillar of self-discipline.
What Is Persistence?
Persistence is the ability to maintain action regardless of your feelings. You press on even when you feel like quitting.
When you work on any big goal, your motivation will wax and wane like
waves hitting the shore. Sometimes you’ll feel motivated; sometimes you
won’t. But it’s not your motivation that will produce results — it’s
your action. Persistence allows you to keep taking action even when you
don’t feel motivated to do so, and therefore you keep accumulating
results.
Persistence will ultimately provide its own motivation. If you simply
keep taking action, you’ll eventually get results, and results can be
very motivating. For example, you may become a lot more enthusiastic
about dieting and exercising once you’ve lost those first 10 pounds and
feel your clothes fitting more loosely.
When to Give Up
Should you always persist and never give up? Certainly not. Sometimes giving up is clearly the best option.
Have you ever heard of a company called Traf-O-Data? What about
Microsoft? Both companies were started by Bill Gates and Paul Allen.
Traf-O-Data was the first company they started, back in 1972. You can
read the story of Traf-O-Data here.
Gates and Allen ran it for several years before throwing in the towel.
They gave up. Of course they did a little better with Microsoft.
If they hadn’t given up on Traf-O-Data, then we wouldn’t have such rich collections of Microsoft and Bill Gates jokes today.
So how do you know when to press on vs. when to give up?
Is your plan still correct? If not, update the plan. Is your goal
still correct? If not, update or abandon your goal. There’s no honor in
clinging to a goal that no longer inspires you. Persistence is not
stubbornness.
This was a particularly difficult lesson for me to learn. I had
always believed one should never give up, that once you set a goal, you
should hang on to the bitter end. The captain goes down with the ship
and all that. If I ever failed to finish a project I started, I’d feel
very guilty about it.
Eventually I figured out that this is just nonsense.
If you’re growing at all as a human being, then you’re going to be a
different person each year than you were the previous year. And if you
consciously pursue personal development, then the changes will often be
dramatic and rapid. You can’t guarantee that the goals you set today
will still be ones you’ll want to achieve a year from now.
My first business was Dexterity Software. I started it in 1994, fresh
out of college. But after running it for more than a decade, I was
ready for something new. I still run Dexterity on the side, but it’s not
my full-time focus anymore. It takes me only about an hour or two a
week to maintain it, partly because I designed it to be as automated as
possible and to provide me with a passive income. It was successful to
the extent I wanted it to be. I could have continued to grow it much
larger, but I knew I didn’t want to spend the rest of my life making
computer games. Creating my own game company was my dream at age 22, and
after publishing a couple dozen games, I feel I accomplished that goal.
22-year old Steve is very satisfied. But today I have different dreams.
Did I give up on Dexterity? You could say that, but it would be more
accurate to say that I was infected by a new vision of something that
was far more important to me. Had I stubbornly persisted with Dexterity,
this site would never have existed. I’d be working on a new game
instead of my first book.
In order to make room for new goals, we have to delete or complete
old ones. And sometimes new goals are so compelling and inspiring that
there’s no time to complete old ones — they have to be abandoned
half-finished. I’ve always found it uncomfortable to do this, but I know
it’s necessary. The hard part is consciously deciding to delete an old
project, knowing it will never be finished. I have a file full of game
ideas and some prototypes for new games that will never see the light of
day. Consciously deciding that those projects had to be abandoned was
really hard for me. It took me a long time to come to grips with it. But
it was necessary for my own growth to be able to do this.
I still had to solve the problem of setting goals that might become
obsolete in a year due to my own personal growth. How did I solve this
problem? I cheated. I figured out the only way I could set long-term
goals that would stick would be if they were aligned with my own process
of growth. The pursuit of personal growth has long been a stable
constant for me, even though it’s paradoxically in flux at the same
time. So instead of trying to set fixed goals as I did with my games
business, I began setting broader more dynamic goals that were aligned
with my own growth. This new business allows me to pursue my personal
growth full-out and to share what I learn with others. So growth itself
is the goal, both for myself and others. This creates a symbiotic
relationship, whereby helping others feeds back into my own growth,
which in turn generates new ideas for helping others. Anyone who’s been
reading this site since last year has probably seen that effect in
action.
The direct and conscious pursuit of personal growth is the only type
of mission that would work for me. If I made it my mission to master
real estate investing, for example, I’d probably become bored with it
after a few years. Since I want to keep growing indefinitely, I have to
maintain a certain level of challenge and keep raising the bar ever
higher. I can’t let things get too dull and risk falling into a pattern
of complacency.
The value of persistence comes not from stubbornly clinging to the
past. It comes from a vision of the future that’s so compelling you
would give almost anything to make it real. The vision I have of my
future now is far greater than the one I had for Dexterity. To be able
to help people grow and to solve their most difficult problems is far
more inspiring to me than entertaining people. These values started
oozing out of me as I ran Dexterity because I favored logic puzzle games
that challenged people to think, often passing up the opportunity to
publish games I felt would make money but which wouldn’t provide much
real value to people.
Persistence of action comes from persistence of vision. When you’re
super-clear about what you want in such a way that your vision doesn’t
change much, you’ll be more consistent — and persistent — in your
actions. And that consistency of action will produce consistency of
results.
Can you identify a part of your life where you’ve demonstrated a
pattern of long-term persistence? I think if you can identify such an
area, it may provide a clue to your mission — something you can work
towards where passion and self-discipline function synergistically.
http://www.stevepavlina.com
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