One of the most necessary attitudes of a groundbreaker is
being able to view problems as opportunities and setbacks as temporary
annoyances. This positive attitude also welcomes change as helpful and is not
upset by surprises, even negative ones. How we approach challenges and problems
is a critical part of our decision-making process, whether in our professional
or our personal lives. In environments in which criticism, pessimism, cynicism,
and motivation by fear prevail, an attitude develops that leads to avoiding
failure at all costs. The trouble with failure avoidance is that at the same
time it creates avoidance of success, which depends on big risks.
Improvement and creativity are impossible when people are in
fear of being punished for failure. Early experiences often imprint on us that
failure is to be avoided at all costs. This began in early childhood, when we
ran into our first "No!!" It grows like a wild plant when we are
criticized by our parents, other family members, our teachers, and our peers.
It leads to connecting ourselves with our mistakes, and to a self-image of
clumsiness and awkwardness. Therefore, as adults, not wanting to be criticized
or rejected, we seek security rather than risk looking foolish or giving the
impression being awkward. They quietly ride with the system, not rocking the
boat.
All lasting success in life is tied up with problems,
hardship and disasters which require imagination and improvement. Winners turn
stumbling blocks into stepping stones.
In the 1920s, when Ernest Hemingway was working hard to
perfect his craft, he lost a suitcase containing all his manuscripts. The
devastated Hemingway couldn't conceive of re-doing his work. He could think
only of the months he'd devoted to his arduous writing—and for nothing. But
when he lamented his loss to poet Ezra Pound, Pound called it a stroke of luck.
Pound assured Hemingway that when he rewrote the stories, he would forget the
weak parts and only the best material would reappear. Instead of framing the
event in disappointment, Pound cast it in the light of opportunity. Hemingway
did rewrite the stories, and the rest, as they say, is history.
As this New Year unfolds before you, focus on framing your
challenges as "opportunities to grow" rather than
"disappointments and problems." Learn from the past, but don’t
lament, there is a reason it rhymes with cement. Step into 2013 knowing that
God is with you, in the present, but He has also been in your future. He knows
what is down the turnpike of life and has already made arrangements for you to
“Make It Through.” An attitude touched by Faith in a God of today and tomorrow
is like carrying around a Jack-Hammer nothing can stop you, things may slow you
down, but you will smash through! Pray through! Get through anything. In Jesus
Name!
2 comments:
Seems you wrote this just for me, just when I needed it. thank you
After reading this and looking at that old guy in the picture busting up that rock, it reminds me that sometimes we focus just on the rock itself and the impossibility of moving it ourselves, instead of the tools we've been given. That old guy is going to town with that jackhammer. God has provided everything we need to break through every impossible situation we face. Remember God moves mountains with mustard seeds.
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