Excellence vs. Survival By Garrett Davis
It seems that life can
divide people into two contrasting groups: Those
who are excelling, and those who are surviving. If
you're not excelling, you're surviving.
Excelling entails growth and requires
ambition. In a way, survival requires some ambition
as well, but only the least potent kind. If you're
surviving, you're motivated enough to feed and shelter
yourself. The survivor keeps his or her health good
enough as to stay ambulant and working, most of the time
that is. The survivor does what it takes to bring
in a paycheck each month, but the prospect of wealth is
kept as a mere fantasy.
If the requirements are lowered, the survivor
does less.
The survivor finds comfort in the familiarity
that stagnation offers.
The person who excels in life is a much, much
different being. Personal growth is a priority for
such a person, and any sign of stagnation is quickly
recognized and dealt with. The way this person sees
things, it’s either growth or a spiritual death of
sorts.
It’s possible to experience both modes in life,
but not at the same time. These are states of being that
are mutually exclusive. It’s either one or the
other.
Each mode requires its own unique mindset. This
mindset will tend to govern everything that comes into
your life. The specifics of life will be dealt with
according to this mindset.
It is, however, possible to jump from one mode
to the other in a lifetime.
I've lived in both states at different times in
my life. I know what it's like to be in survival
mode. I've been there before. I've lived a
life in which I went to work, putting in my nine hours
each day only to come home, watch TV, eat a pizza and go
to bed. Everything in my life was mediocre.
On the surface everything seemed to be going fine, and in
a sense it was. I paid my bills, attended family events,
and even managed to read a book here and there, but
excellence was not my forte. I was, well,
surviving.
This period in my life was definitely a strange
one for me, because it seemed to come rather abruptly
after a period marked by years of excelling. In
college, I excelled. Things just seemed to get
better for me all the time. My grades were better
every single semester, and my overall personal
development seemed to be moving at the speed of
light. I saw the world as interesting and
overflowing with opportunity, and in fact it
was.
So what happened? How did I fall into
survival mode? The key here is that I didn’t fall into survival mode. I
chose it. It’s always a matter of choice. You may choose
survival mode, but you will never be forced into
it.
As for my situation, I settled for a job that
didn’t stimulate me and didn’t pay well. Instead of using
that job as a stepping-stone to something better, I
settled. To cement myself into full-blown survival
mode, I made certain that my expenses would be roughly
105% of my pay. At the end of each day I was
exhausted. Not even exhausted so much by the day's
work, but more so by the mere prospect of having to do it
again the next day with no foreseeable reward in
sight.
The only solace I found was in mindlessly
staring at sitcom reruns on Nick At Night that I'd
seemingly seen hundreds of time. They were
comforting. The problems on those shows were light
hearted, and the character's silly antics were easy to
chuckle at.
Days, weeks, and months went by with no
noticeable changes in my situation.
My life was rife with
redundancy.
Survival mode can really be defined by
redundancy. If you're doing the same things day in
and day out without making any notable progress, chances
are you're in survival mode.
Now when I use the word "redundancy", I'm not
referring to dogged persistence, which is
often a requirement of great achievement.
Building a business, for example, often requires
dogged persistence. There's likely to be some
redundancy in such an endeavor, but this is redundancy
that is a means to a hopefully well-defined end.
There’s an important distinction here: If you're
noticing redundancies in your life that aren't clearly
directed at achieving a well defined end that you’ve
decided you will achieve, then you have a problem that
ought to be addressed.
My workout schedule involves quite a bit of
redundancy. I go to the gym on the same days at the
same times every week, week in and week out, and I do
mostly the same style of exercise. This is all for
the purpose of achieving a certain body
composition. My goal is specific, and the
repetitive nature of the whole process is what
facilitates its accomplishment.
If you're not using at least a decent portion of
your free time to move yourself towards accomplishing a
specific goal, then you're likely to slip into a
repetitive pattern that won't get you anywhere. For
those working the typical 9-5, this is a common
trap. Go to work, go home / eat / watch TV /
relax / go to bed, repeat. This is
survival.
Survival is getting by. It's doing just
fine. It's paying bills, showing up for work,
taking care of responsibilities, but it's far from
excelling.
Excelling involves well-defined and lofty goals. It
requires foresight. It requires a vision, and a
plan of action for realizing its
achievement.
If you want to excel, what you
will not need is a lot
of stress in your
life. A common trap that the ambitious often
fall into is a stress filled life. You'll
want to avoid stress. Stress is not a requirement of goal
achievement.
It's possible to excel in life in a calm and
relaxed manner. When the goal is clear, and
the plan is clear, doing so becomes possible.
The key is to break the plan down into small and
incremental steps. Stressful feelings come
from being faced with too many possible actions
step choices at once. The more you can break
down your plan into small and clearly defined steps,
the better off you'll be. You'll want to be able to
accomplish one small thing at a time
without the repetitiveness of having to think about
each step over and over again.
The more you can break your plan down
into clear steps, the more you'll accomplish
with less stress.
If your goal seems to be stressing
you out no matter how
well you've broken down a clear plan
into accomplishable steps, consider the
possibility that you may be on the wrong path
all together. Your goal should stimulate
you and challenge you, but any related stress
should not steam-roll you.
Pursuing your goals should afford you
a rather calm sense of diligent conquering.
You should feel like you're in the zone when you're
working. This is the way I feel when I'm writing for
this site.
When you're perusing a goal that is lofty, but
you don't feel stressed by it, this is a clue that
you are on the right path. If this is the case for
you, then just keep doing what you're doing.
If not, then you may need to make revisions. Your
goal, or lack there of may
need revision. Or, the goal may be right,
but the plan may be insufficient. Don’t
hesitate to review, revise, and
recalibrate.
Also, goal achievement need not
be perused just as a means to a better life.
This is key. When you're really on the right path, the
action steps you take in order to accomplish
your goals will bring you a sense of fulfillment
in and of themselves. You'll need not wait for
the fulfillment to come once the goal is accomplished,
but rather you’ll feel fulfilled all the way
through.
If you feel this way now, then you're
on the right path. If you don't, then consider
changing the goal itself, or your attitude towards
it. Remind yourself that your goals are not holding
your happiness for ransom until you achieve them.
You can feel fulfilled before, during, and after goal
achievement.
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