Leadership Development

Pursuing Your Personal Legend

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Are you currently on your way to realizing your personal Legend? Or have you been subtly subjected by numbing outside forces that allow you to perpetuate a lie. One that most of us tell ourselves, “this life is good, so many people have it worse than me, I’m lucky to be here, and should be grateful.” While those statements are true in a sense and you should be grateful for the things you have, but….there is a hidden lie in those statements. A lie that is nestled in our sub-conscious, and one that has been there since we became jaded from first experiencing some of life’s harshest realities at a young age. The lie that formed in the void where the tantalizing mysteries of our youth once dwelled. I’m referring to those thoughts you had when you were a child. Do you remember ever thinking, “I’m the star in a (sort of) real-life movie, and “I feel like the world is watching over me, they are entertained by my thoughts and actions, and rooting for me to become something great.” We all thought we were special until for some reason those fantasies died suddenly or over-time.

Does any of that sound like you? In order to understand the context of what I’m getting at here, let me ask you this: Has gratitude become a spiritual bypass to your personal truth? Have you settled into the condition that you should be content with the way things are because so many others have it so much worse; or that your life is simply not one destined for greatness? There is a difference between genuine gratitude and one that acts as a coping mechanism.

Here’s a tip to help get you started: Get into a calm state, eliminate some distractors going on at the current moment, and ask yourself; “What lies am I telling myself right now?” The lies may come in the form of, “This relationship is the best I can do and as long as I still get to keep doin ________, I’m good enough;” or “I’m in this field because I had no other options;” or finally, “Without my ________, I’d be floundering to make ends meet.”

Why does this line of thinking occur? We all have told lies like this to ourselves in one form or another; Psychologists refer to this as false narratives or cognitive distortions. These occur when something happens in our environment at a given time which exceeds our ability to process and handle it in a healthy way. The result of this is the development of a false attribution or cognitive distortion; we start to see the world differently. For example, if I child witnesses his father striking his mother, the child cannot hold two conflicting views of his father; seeing him as both good and bad. Therefor the child “splits” (referred to as “splitting”) the most painful aspect of their parent into their unconscious, and does not continue to process and mature thoughts related to that aspect. The result is, the child grows into adulthood and maintains behavioral relationship problems because his or her impression of adult conflict was distorted at a young age. Ultimately we witness, process, and respond to life’s challenges in a way that allows us the best chances for survival at the time. But this does not mean we usually process these events in a healthy way at a later time. We have developed all sorts of techniques and methods over the course of our lives to shut-down or even suppress our feeling “capacity;” this capacity or ability is the very thing that is needed in order to pursue our best selves and start our personal legend. This feeling capacity contains our ability to perceive and act on hunches, intuitive moments, and connect with our inner-most selves.

This brings me back to my main point. When we identify the lies we tell ourselves, we start to see the mold that’s shaped our circumstances. The mold has contorted us overtime to fit within the world’s view of who we are, not our own. I can’t remember who said it, but I love this line; “If we compromise ourselves at the beginning we compromise our whole way.” So, that being said, how do we get on the right path and start our personal journey to our best possible selves?

A Path of Truth

The first task in starting back on the path you deviated from when you were a starry-eye filled child, is to identify the current lie(s) in your life. It’s usually where you least allow yourself to look. Pioneering psychologists Carl Jung believed we all come born with a set of life-tasks, aspects about ourselves that dwell in our unconscious. Jung believed must face those challenges and overcome them in order to become our authentic selves. Whether Jung’s “life tasks” were prescribed at conception and became evident at moments of adversity (i.e. adolescent trauma), or manifested independently from those instances is irrelevant; what matters is we identify those moments and overcome them.

What is it that happened to you that stole your essence, vigor, faith, curiosity, or wonder? What thought or set of beliefs do you keep locked away in your deepest cave; the thought that lurks just below your conscious and causes you to pull back when you should pursue forward, or stand up for yourself when the world tells you you’re not good enough. Here’s a hint, the best way to find out what that thing is, is to see where you’re developing a resistance the moment you start looking. If that doesn’t work, try to complete these statements:

“I’m not a successful ___________, because I always find a way to ______________.”

“People don’t really listen to me because intuitively they know I am _______________.”

“I’m not a good person because deep down I know I _____________________.”

“If it weren’t for ___________________, I’d be ________________________.”

“I can’t really trust myself because ________________________.”

Perhaps answering these questions will help you put a microscope on the lie(s) you tell yourself. Look back at your past, what things have you had to give up, try to control, or avoided in order to keep the lie going? Here is the hard truth about that lie; anything you put in those blanks is simply a thought you developed because, at the time you first developed it, you didn’t allow yourself to fully face, process, or fail in a way that allowed you to learn and grow next time.

Now, you are looking with a purpose of healing and understanding. We are not perfect in any way, we all have wounds that have not healed, and we doubt ourselves in so many ways because of those painful wounds. But when we face those problems head on, something magical happens. Those difficult thoughts and memories start to take on a different meaning, they start to develop into a strength, and eventually blessings, which will start to shape you into your true authentic self.

In order for you to face the challenges the world will throw at you in pursuit of your personal legend (and there will be many), you first need to face the personal challenges that already exist inside you. Figuring out what your current life lesson is, is the key to unlocking the door that starts you on your personal legend; and when that happens, you will be ready.

Input, Output, Ebb and Flood

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Everyone’s life has a particular rhythm…


Whether the rhythm of your life is balanced can make the difference between suffering or peace. As the tides perpetually ebb and flood, so does the current information into your mind. Are you allowing too much or too little to flow in? Do you get flooded with information, formulate your own thoughts, but never take a moment to articulate that information with others? Or do you take in too little information, and flood those around you with a gambit of poorly organized and researched opinions? Or do your conversations with people hang by the skin of a grape because you haven’t thought about what you really need out of the conversation? The amount of information we take in, absorb, and release should be balanced, if it’s not, it can create anxiety, depression, brain fog, and endless loops of meaningless material.


There is little doubt we live in an age of bombardment, a constant stream of information is constantly flowing into our minds in the forms of social media, news, calls, texts, emails, and so on. Some bombardment can be constructive, for example, attending a thought-provoking lecture on a topic you're fascinated with. Ultimately, bombardment is the inflow or input of information beyond our capacity to absorb it, therefore, we do not have an input problem, we have both a retention and output problem.


How do we go about retaining what we’ve learned and articulating our thoughts in a way that makes sense and leaves a meaningful contribution to our audience?

Psychologist Jordan Peterson, has articulated —likely being very aware of this process— some great insights on how to best articulate your thoughts and beliefs; suggesting we speak on matters in which we know approximately three times as much as we share with others. Basically, our fund of information on topics of discussion should greatly exceed the content we release, in order for it to both be articulated well, and contain an element gravitas for our listeners.

Controlling our input in a manner that allows us to "steep" in what we’ve absorbed is a great way to build a clean and organized mental “fund" of information, one that will be more easily accessible to us when needed. So how do we retain what see/do/hear in a way that allows us form a mental compendium of useful information? We “uni-task” and reflect. We eliminate outside distractions, and focus on the subject at-hand.


Uni-tasking

We all know those people who claim they are excellent multi-takers, perhaps you are one of them. Let’s do a quick experiment, try this; count in your head from 1-10 as fast as you can without messing up, go… Next, go from A-L as fast as you can without messing up…. Ok, easy right? That’s because you uni-tasked. Now try this, combine the two in sequence as fast as you can in your head, A1, B2, C3, and so on… It’s much harder isn’t it, especially wen you start getting to about G. This is because your brain is not designed to do two executive functions simultaneously. Sure we can drive a car and talk on the phone at the same time, but as traffic collision reports would credit, we are not nearly as good as driving when our attention is divided. Multi-tasking is simply divided attention. Persons who are successful in conversations, relationships, vocations, (and vacations for that matter), are simply more gifted at eliminating distractions of things that don’t really matter; mind-clouding junk.

When you’re uni-tasking you’re at your best because you are simply being mindful of the moment. How can I get better at uni-tasking? Well, that’s easy, try this type of meditation (there are many other types), it only has three steps:


  1. Sit still and don’t move — adds blood flows the the motor regulation centers in your brain, those that are related to impulses (centered in our limbic system).

  2. Focus on Breath

  3. When your mind wanders (because it will) simply bring it back — this adds blood flow the left-prefrontal cortex, which is the area of your brain that helps regulate impulses.


These steps can be seen as mental pushups, and start to improve your life steadily when you want to concentrate on something, regulate emotions, or be more present in the moment. This form of meditation in particular is very helpful for mind-wandering, which is the kryptonite of uni-tasking.


Time to Reflect

Then —and this is really the missing ingredient for so many— we should allow for time to mentally process what we have learned. Our minds need time to marinate on topics as they come, before it moves on to the next. Here’s a great example, it is suggested that to learn we need to read as slowly as 100-200 words-per-minute (wpm), to comprehend 200-400 wpm, and to skim 400-700 wpm. This means in order to absorb, we have to marinate ourselves in the material, sometimes reading the same paragraph several times, highlighting it twice, or cutting it out and pasting it on our foreheads! So this begs the question, how long should I reflect? Suggesting a specific formula for absorption is difficult given the lack of context (personality type, IQ, EEG data, etc.) however, as a general rule of thumb, you should allow yourself, roughly the same amount of time dedicated to reading for mentally processing. For me, it’s helpful when reading something I really want to be able to articulate later, to allow myself twice the amount of time reading for absorbing; then I can put the into context of how I’d like to apply it to my life. Neurologically speaking, this is essential because it creates new neural pathways linked to creativity; taking precious resources away from the well-trodden pathways linked to addictions (we all have them - think t.v., cellphones, social media).

The next important step is to capture and apply. Ask yourself, "what does this information mean for me?” and “How can I apply it to my life?" I’ll capture it in my own words by writing it down and refreshing the material at a later time. It may sound like a lot, but it’s essential if you really want to know what you’re speaking or writing on, and if you want people to take you seriously or follow you. If a simple inquiry throws-off your entire position, then you really haven’t penetrated the surface of the lightly-treaded material you’re expressing yourself on. Mark Twain said, “get your facts first, then you can distort them as you please.” Lastly, when you marinate on what you’ve just learned, you’re doing mental pushups and don’t even know it. This is a form of meditation and get’s better with time.


Key Points:

  • Reflect

  • Capture

  • Apply


Time for Sharing with Others

We live in a social world riddled with many who express their strong opinions on a particular subject in which they have not explored in any depth further than the headline of an article contained within in the first line of an endless sea of search results. Their opinions turn quickly to anger and defensiveness at the mere hint of probing further, which usually is linked to the listeners sheer curiosity. Therefore, it would be prudent to place emphasis on exploring why you hold your current opinions and explore the facts on both sides of the argument, remember, every coin has not two, but three sides, the third being the hardest to see and encapsulates the others. Mark Twain (since he’s fresh on my mind here) said we should “have strong opinions, but held loosely.” Always be prepared on no matter how much you think you know, others may know more, or at least can guarantee another angle. Lastly, ask yourself this, "Is there something in which I believe strongly about, in which I actually know little about; have I been trying to convince others of that belief? Ultimately, a life filled with purpose stands on the twin pillars of Growth and Service to Others, we should therefore pay attention to the rhythm of information in our lives. One last thought, if you are ready to articulate what you’ve learned, be sure you have a receptive audience! Remember, people who want your advice, usually will ask for it.


Snapshots:

Effective multi-tasking is a myth for most everyone.

Speak on what you know at least three times as much.

Uni-tasking is a mindful way of reducing life’s junk.

Meditating by sitting still and focusing on breath can help you become less distracted.

Allow time to marinate on what you’ve learned (it’s like a bath for your brain).

After you capture what you’ve learned, think of how you want to apply it to your life?