You ultimately become what you repeatedly do. If your habits arenât helping you, theyâre hurting you. Here are some fairly common and widespread examples of the latter that will drain all your joy and inner peace, if you let them:
1. Focusing on how life âshouldâ be every step of the way.
Try to use frustration and inconvenience to motivate you rather than annoy you. You are in control of the way you look at life. Instead of getting angry, find the lesson. In place of envy, feel admiration. In place of worry, take action. In place of doubt, have faith. Remember that your response is always more powerful than your present circumstance. A small part of your life is decided by completely uncontrollable circumstances, while the vast majority of your life is decided by your responses. Where you ultimately end up is heavily dependent on how you play the hands youâve been dealt.
2. Wanting to control the uncontrollable.
Be selective with your energy today. If you can fix a problem, fix it. If you canât, then accept it and change your thoughts about it. Whatever you do, donât attempt to invest more energy than you have, tripping over something behind you or something that only exists inside your head. Truth be told, some of the most powerful moments in life happen when you find the courage to let go of what canât be changed. Because when you are no longer able to change a situation, you are challenged to change yourself â to grow beyond the unchangeable. And that changes everything.
3. Holding tightly to the way things once were.
Youâre not the same person you were a year ago, a month ago, or even a week ago. Youâre always learning and growing, and life is always evolving. Again, even though you canât control everything that happens, you can control your attitude about what happens. And in doing so, you will gradually master change rather than allowing it to master you. So be humble today. Be teachable. The world is often bigger than your view of the world. Thereâs always room for a fresh idea or a next step. But first you must accept the fact that things may never go back to how they used to be, and that this ending is really a new beginning.
4. Refusing to practice self-forgiveness.
Forgive yourself for the bad decisions youâve made in the past, for the times you lacked understanding, for the choices that accidentally hurt others and yourself. Forgive yourself, for being young and reckless. These are all vital lessons. And what matters most right now is your willingness to grow from them. (Note: Angel and I discuss this further in the Adversity chapter of â1,000 Little Things Happy, Successful People Do Differentlyâ.)
5. Endlessly settling for the default settings.
There are thousands of people who live their entire lives on the default settings, never acknowledging the fact that they can customize everything. Donât be one of them â donât settle for the default settings on a daily basis. Donât hide behind indecision or laziness either. And forget popularity! Just do your thing with passion, humility, and honesty. Do what you do, not for an applause, but because itâs whatâs right. Pursue it a little bit each day, no matter what anyone else thinks. Thatâs how dreams are achieved.
6. Resisting new ideas and lessons.
To make real progress in the long run you must let go of the assumption that you already have all the answers. So donât stop learning! Donât stop investing in yourself. Research. Read. Devour books. Engage with people, including those who think differently. Ask questions. Listen closely. And donât just grow in knowledge. Be a person who gives back. Use what youâre learning to make a real and lasting difference. (Note: âThe Good Morning Journalâ is a great tool for noticing and keeping track of all your lessons learned.)
7. Constantly seeking fleeting contentment.
There are two variations of contentment in life â fleeting and enduring. The fleeting type is derived from instants of material comfort, while the enduring type is attained through the gradual growth and progress on matters that are truly important to you. At a quick glimpse it might be difficult to decipher one from the other, but as time rolls on it becomes vividly obvious that the latter is far superior. So just remember, if it entertains you now but will hurt or bore you someday, itâs a distraction. Donât settle. Donât exchange what you want most for what you kinda want at the moment. Study your routines. Figure out where your time goes, and remove distractions. Itâs time to focus more on what matters in the long run.
8. Always worrying about everyone elseâs story.
Donât be so satisfied with the success stories of others and how things have gone for them, that you forget to write your own. Unfold your own tale and bring it to life on a daily basis. You have everything you need to become what you are capable of becoming. Incredible change happens when you decide to make yourself a priority. And remember, you wonât always be a priority to others, and thatâs why you have to be a priority to yourself. Learn to respect yourself, take care of yourself, and become a daily part of your own support system. This means consuming less and creating more. It means refusing to let others do your thinking, talking, and deciding for you. It means learning to embrace and use your ideas and instincts to write your passage, one day at a time.
9. Fearing little (necessary) failures.
Sometimes we literally have to fail dozens of times to succeed. And no matter how many mistakes you make or how slow you progress, you are still way ahead of everyone who isnât trying. So donât get so hung up on a few failed attempts that you miss the opening for a hundred more opportunities. All of your ideas that donât work are simply stepping stones to the one idea that does. And remember, failure is not falling down; failure is staying down when you have the choice to get back up. Always get back up! Oftentimes good things fall apart in the near term so better things can fall together in the end. (Read âStumbling on Happinessâ.)
10. Waiting for the âperfectâ moment to take the next step.
Donât buy into the myth of the perfect moment. Moments arenât perfect, theyâre what you make of them. So many people wait around for the stars to align to do what theyâre here to do. The perfect moment, the perfect opportunity, the perfect state of being, etc. Wake up! Donât âwaitâ away the vast majority of your life! Remind yourself that too many people wait all day for 5pm, all week for Friday, all year for the holidays, all their lives for happiness. And you donât be one of them. Ultimately, you will come to succeed not by finding a perfect moment, but by learning to see and use lifeâs imperfections as stepping stones.
An Exercise for Building Better Habits Starting Today
If you feel a like youâve wasted too much time and joy on one or more of the points above, this quick actionable closing exercise is for YOU.
Choose any area in your life that you want to improve, and then:
- Write down the specific details about your current circumstances. (Whatâs bothering you? Where are you stuck? What do you want to change?)
- Write down your answer to this question: What are the daily habits that have contributed to your current circumstances? (Be honest with yourself. What are you doing regularly that actually contributes to the situation youâre in?)
- Write down a few specific details about the âbetter circumstancesâ youâd like to create for yourself. (What would make you happy? What does an improved situation look like for you?)
- Write down your answer to this question: What are the daily habits that will get you from where you are to where you want to be? (Think about it. What small, daily steps will help you gradually move forward from point A to point B?)
Now itâs your turnâŠ
Yes, itâs your turn to not fall back into your old patterns of living today simply because theyâre more comfortable and easier to access. Itâs your turn to remember that youâre leaving certain habits and situations behind for a reason: to improve your life â because you canât move forward if you keep going back. And itâs undoubtedly your turn to reclaim your joy and make your time count going forward!
But before you go, please leave Angel and me a comment below and let us know what you think of this essay. Your feedback is important to us. đ
Which one of the points above resonated the most today?
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Photo by: Georges Petrequin