If
I want to get an idea of a person’s desire to grow and develop, I
ask a simple question: “Are you satisfied with your life right
now?” If the answer is, “I’m very satisfied, very content with
where I am,” I come to the conclusion that there is very little
potential for future growth. Being content is only part of life’s
equation
for happiness.
But when contentment is used as a tool to “cap off” growth, it
becomes detrimental. Desire is the first key to personal growth.
Whenever
you learn, feel or know something, desire
was already there waiting. It’s the vehicle that carries you where
you need to go. I would love to light a fire under some people, but I
soon discover that I’ve run out of matches! They aren’t going
anywhere, and that’s OK. It’s their choice and not my
responsibility. I’m not responsible for something over which I have
no control. It’s OK, and I’ll love them where they are.
For
me personally, I still have passion. I have desires. I’m not all
that I want to be nor have I accomplished all that I want to
accomplish. That
fire within you
and me is called desire. The philosophers call it existential
angst, the
desire to make our lives count by making a difference.
I
had the privilege of interviewing
Coach John Wooden
on his 96th birthday. I asked him this question: “Coach, you are 96
today. How do you stay so enthusiastic and passionate about life?”
His answer: “Mick, the day your past becomes more exciting than
your future is the day you start to die.” That thought has stuck
like a piece of shrapnel in my brain.
So
keep the engines stoked. This is what I call a healthy
dissatisfaction¹, as we enjoy the present and live each day to the
fullest. Your desire will get you out of the comfort zone where
no growth takes place.
Contentment and satisfaction are good things, but they were never
intended to be synonyms for petrified,
fossilized or
calcified.
At
times, our desire
lights
on the dashboard of our lives grow dim. Those are the times when you
keep the engine running. Eventually you will see your desire meter
rev up and you are on your way!
Napoleon Hill said, “The
starting point of all achievement is desire.” Weak desires bring
weak results. Just as weak fires leave us a little cold. And they’re
not much to look at either.
One
other tip: Avoid the flame
busters.
This is the crowd that doesn’t have a desire to get out of their
“comfort
zone”
and wonder why you’re pushing yourself forward. If your desire is
low, check the company you’re keeping.
“A ship in the harbor is safe, but that’s not what ships are built for.” —William Shedd
As
children, we had lots of ideas about what we wanted to do when we
grew up. A
child’s imagination
isn’t restricted by the boundaries of age, inexperience, education
and parental control. They just imagine the future they want, and
it’s fueled by desire. But it’s easy to let the restrictions of
adulthood get in the way of doing what we desire. So we douse the
desire or the dream. Many of our boundaries are self-imposed.
So
here’s the bottom line up front: While you’re thinking, think
big!
You can always act small later. The real danger starts by putting
limitations on your thinking.
In
our attempt to be practical, we often play it too safe. Use the
following questions to help break
the imagination
gridlock:
What are the things you would
like to do well?
What are the experiences you would like to have?
What do you want to start doing right now?
What are five nonnegotiable values in your life?
What things, events or activities make you feel fully alive?
What have you let slide? Why? What can you do now to reverse that?
What are the experiences you would like to have?
What do you want to start doing right now?
What are five nonnegotiable values in your life?
What things, events or activities make you feel fully alive?
What have you let slide? Why? What can you do now to reverse that?
Healthy
Dissatisfaction:
Starting each day with thanksgiving
for what you are and have,
knowing your life is better than you deserve, yet realizing your life
is not all you want it to be. It’s a combination of contentment and
desire. Here’s the formula: Healthy
Dissatisfaction
= Contentment
+ Desire
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