Tuesday, November 19, 2019
10 Smart Moves to Make When Nothings Going Right in Your Life
10 Smart Moves to Make When Nothings Going Right in Your Life 10 Smart Moves to Make When Nothings Going Right in Your Life In the Army, I taught an introductory course on what to do if you became a prisoner of war. Iâd start by saying that I hoped this would be the least relevant course the students ever took. Thatâs my hope here too- although the truth is, things fall apart in peopleâs lives all the time. Maybe itâs a relationship, a job, a business- something that makes up the bedrock youâre accustomed to standing on. Tuesday, itâs there; Wednesday itâs gone. Thursday, you still have to function. All of which leads us to todayâs lesson. When things arenât going right, how do you keep moving forward? Here are 10 ideas. 1. Nose Down, Do Your Job The top federal prosecutor in Manhattan is named Preet Bhrara (Disclosure: His brother is the CEO of my company). In a speech a couple of years ago, Preet suggested success involves emulating a line from the movie The Departed: Be the guy who does his job. When you donât know what else to do, thatâs a pretty good plan: Strive to be the Steady Eddie that everyone else can count on while you figure out your next step. 2. Look Out for Chances to Be Happy for Other People Admission time: I get pitched all the time by people who are younger than I am and who are making tons of money. Sometimes I canât help but wonder: Why wasnât I the one with an internet startup at age 14? OK, the strict answer to that is that when I was 14, internet access cost a dollar a minute. The broader point is that youâll be happier and learn more if you make an effort simply to be happy for othersâ successes- and maybe be willing to learn from them as well. 3. Make Connections for Others An old friend of mine from school is looking for work. It turned out, another friend of mine from a completely different social circle has a connection at a company that my school friend might be perfect for. Will it work out? I donât know, but making the connection made me feel great. I think itâs important to take these kinds of steps without looking for any kind of quid pro quo. Personally, I canât predict the future, but I think itâs unlikely Iâll ever be looking for another full-time job again, so thatâs not my motivation here. But helping others in any way helps you take your mind off your own problems. 4. Say Thank You Chances are you see someone every day who has a thankless job- literally thankless, as in, nobody ever thanks him or her for doing what they do. Maybe itâs the doorman or the bus conductor. If you canât think of someone who fits the bill, imagine a traffic cop giving parking tickets. Think about how much it means to that person on the rare occasion when someone actually says, thanks for what you do. Imagine how heâll feel about you when youâre that person! 5. Prune Your Belongings I have the zeal of a convert on this one. If a physical thing- clothes, books, papers- doesnât give you joy, the best thing to do is to give it away. 90% of Americans have 2,000% more stuff than they need- or even want. (Hat tip, obviously, to the book The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up, by Marie Kondo) 6. Share Your Knowledge Nothing makes you feel better or more useful than simply sharing what you know with other people. Much like looking for the North Star when youâre lost, look for chances to teach others when youâre not sure what else to do with yourself. What do I know? Well, if you want to write a book, write an internet column with a million readers a month, or learn how to run a super-effective marketing campaign on Facebook, email me. (Also, I can teach someone to drive a stick shift and parallel park on a hill like nobodyâs business.) 7. Visit Someone The scarcest commodity any of us has isnât money; itâs time. That means sharing your time with others is also your greatest gift. The truth is there are people for whom that gift is more precious than you can ever imagine. We named my baby daughter after my wifeâs 90-something grandmother, and one of the most joyous moments weâve had was bringing her to meet her namesake in the nursing home. 8. Say âIâm Sorryâ You donât need to go through life guilt-ridden, but there are things weâve all done to hurt others- intentional or not- that we never got around to apologizing for. Taking that step is always a positive move. I woke up recently remembering a class in junior high. We had to write stories each week, and I turned a classmate into a recurring character long after it was clear she was not comfortable with the attention. I donât want to call her out here- even after all these years- but on the off chance she might read it, maybe sheâll remember. If so, Iâm sorry! 9. Say âI Forgive Youâ Related to the last one, of course, we all have people we need to forgive. Maybe itâs a family member, or a colleague, a friend- or even someone who doesnât know you well or even know what they did wrong. In my case, at that same school I was picked on by a group of bigger kids. Decades later, Iâm not sure if theyâd even remember, but I forgive them. (Caveat: Thatâs not the same thing as forgetting. You can forgive someone but still never trust them again.) 10. Show Up (A.k.a., Go to the Funeral) There are moments when other people need you there, and while Iâm fortunate not to have had many occasions that fit the bill for this example, showing up at the funeral of someoneâs loved ones is at the top of the list. My friend Griff taught me this lesson, when I went to his fatherâs wake a decade ago. To my mind- of course I would go. Thatâs what friends do, no matter what other ways their lives are tangled at the time. Still, to his credit, Griff has never forgotten, and Iâm glad it demonstrated how much I valued our friendship. More From Inc. 5 Ways to Navigate When Stuff Goes Painfully Wrong Even the Worst Mistake Can Be Forgiven- If You Do This 10 Mistakes Smart People Never Make Twice Photo of man looking frustrated courtesy of Shutterstock.
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