@Trumonz on Twitter

Powered by Twitter Tools

The work is the achievement

People always say “Congratulations!” too early or too late. Rarely are we on time.

We often congratulate people who have taken the first step. They graduated from high school, made the football team, or launched a business. This is too early; they haven’t done anything yet.

On the other hand, we wait around and hesitate to congratulate people until we know for sure that what they did worked. They won an award and we’re first in line to let them know that everyone else is recognizing their accomplishment. This is too late; they don’t need our support now.

We should focus our praise on the moment where the person completes the actual work: the moment when you finish the novel, after you learned how to write, but before we know if it’s a flop or a hit.

The work is the achievement, not the self-improvement required to produce it nor the awards it garners.

More resistance than support

Waiting around for a group of people to tell you that your idea is great is a waste of time.

Any project worth doing will meet more resistance than support. If you believe in what you are doing, you have to ignore what other people say and go forward with the work.

Most people believe that the challenge in life is getting enough people to agree with them. In fact, the challenge in life is learning that you don’t need any agreement at all to do great things.

You’ll find plenty of people to agree with you after you’ve already succeeded.

Make the call

You know that call you’ve been avoiding?

Make it. Right now.

No, don’t tell me you’re going to do it later. Do it right now.

You’ve put it off long enough.

When did you start?

Ask anyone who has completed a project when they started. The answer will surprise you.

It’s likely that it took twice as long as they planned. Things that were supposed to be easy became difficult; things that were supposed to be difficult became impossible.

In addition, it probably wasn’t their first try. I opened three businesses before one finally made enough money to stay open.

Luckily, our past failures inform our future successes. My first three businesses taught me what I needed to make the fourth one work.

It never works out at the start. That’s why you have to start right now.