原文:Being an Achiever

2021-03-02 曉飛翻譯

You become an achiever by achieving your goals. If you achieve your goals, you’re an achiever. If you don’t achieve your goals, you’re not an achiever.

This is a simple, binary way to think about achievement. To achieve means to reach, attain, or accomplish. What you choose to reach, attain, or accomplish is up to you.

The difference between an achiever and a non-achiever is largely a matter of attention. Non-achievers give their goals little attention, if they bother to set goals at all. Achievers give their goals sufficient attention so as to reach, attain, or accomplish those goals.

Non-achievers reach, attain, and accomplish something other than their goals. Quite often they will reach, attain, and accomplish someone else’s goals, without consciously making those goals their own.

To be an achiever, you must give your goals sufficient attention to reach, attain, or accomplish them. This means you must withdraw much of your attention from activities that are not directly leading to the accomplishment of your goals.

In a given week, where is your attention going? If you aren’t habitually obsessing over your goals, then what are you obsessing over instead?

What do you normally put ahead of your goals?

Do you manage to watch some TV or movies?

Do you keep up with email, social media, and text messages?

Do you attend to the social obligations that your family, friends, and co-workers expect from you?

What exactly are you reaching, attaining, or accomplishing in a typical week? Are you making progress on your goals by giving them many hours of attention, or are you putting your attention elsewhere?

Achievers accept that in order to achieve their goals, they must withdraw attention from non-goal activities. Achievers also accept that these competing interests may resist being put on the back burner. The cable company may try to talk you out of canceling. Starbucks may send you a reminder email if you don’t show up for too long. Your mother may nag you about something trivial. Achievers learn to decline these invitations for their attention by default. They keep putting their attention back upon their goals.

You must especially be on guard for new invitations and opportunities that come up while you’re working on your goals. These hidden distractions can easily sidetrack you. If an opportunity aligns solidly with your goals, wonderful… take full advantage of it. But if it seems off-course with respect to your current goals, then stick to your path, and say no to the diversion. Generally speaking, it’s wise to be less opportunistic, so you can be more of a conscious creator. You』ll often make faster progress by creating your own opportunities instead of haphazardly chasing the random opportunities that others bring you.

The Scarcity of Attention

Attention is a limited resource. The ability to consciously direct your attention with good energy and focus is even scarcer than the time you have available each day.

In any given week, there may be many interests competing for your attention: friends, family, co-workers, random strangers, corporations, organizations, government agencies, media, and more. And these days they have many different ways to reach you.

Internally you have some competition as well: your physiological needs, your emotional needs, your cravings, your habitual behaviors, etc. You need to eat, sleep, eliminate waste, bathe, and so on. These activities require some attention too.

Somewhere among those competing interests is another voice seeking your attention. This is your goal-oriented nature, your greater intelligence, your desire to live a life rich in meaning and purpose. This part of you craves achievement, and it won’t be satisfied by anything less. It wants you to set you own goals and to reach, attain, and accomplish them.

How much of your attention are you giving to your achievement-oriented self?

If you starve this part of yourself for attention, it will punish you with low motivation, low self-worth, and a general scarcity of resources. But if you give it the attention it craves, you』ll be rewarded with high energy, drive, passion, abundance, and sense of purpose and contribution.

Directing Your Attention

Fortunately you have the power to consciously direct your attention. You can let your attention float around aimlessly. You can focus your attention on something other than your goals, such as the goals other people have for you. Or you can focus your attention on your own goals.

To really move your life forward requires a major commitment of attention. If you want to improve your finances, you must put your attention on creating value for people, sharing that value, and intelligently monetizing that value. If you want to positively transform your relationships, then give that part of your life some intense and prolonged attention.

Unfortunately we have the tendency to remove attention from those areas of our lives that aren’t doing so well. In the short term, it’s wise to shift focus when we feel overwhelmed because temporary diversions can help relieve stress. But for deeper transformation to occur, we need to put lots of attention squarely on those areas that scream for improvement.

Setting goals requires focused attention. Planning out the action steps to achieve our goals requires even more attention. Executing those action steps takes more attention still. Achievers make such activities a priority in their lives. Non-achievers don’t.

As you get older, keep raising your standards for what deserves your attention. Keep deleting and declining unnecessary fluff and obligations that might otherwise distract you from your magnificent goals. This will free up more attention to focus on your goals.

Have you noticed that when you put your full attention on a goal and obsess about it, you can really move it forward quickly, and you do eventually achieve it? But when you let your attention become diluted by too many competing interests, then progress on your goal slows to a crawl, and you eventually lose your connection to the goal altogether. Goals require significant and prolonged nurturing until they’re achieved; otherwise they die.

Say No to Almost Everything

The difference between successful people and really successful people is that really successful people say no to almost everything. – Warren Buffet

What does it mean to say no to almost everything?

For me this means being able to work full-time on my goals, without letting anything get in the way. It means keeping my schedule free of distracting entanglements. It means that even when I work on goals that seem to be put on my plate by someone else, I must either make those goals my own (and say yes to them), or I must reject them and not give them any attention. If I cannot make a goal my own in some way, it doesn’t deserve my attention.

Even a goal like doing your taxes, you can make your own. You can commit to keeping your finances up to date and in good order. You can choose to pay the tax contribution for whatever reasons appeal to you. But if you can’t make a goal your own, and you try to work on it anyway, then you’re fighting yourself, and your progress will be stunted and inconsistent, which is an enormous waste of precious attention.

Don’t dwell in the land of half-commitments. Put your full attention on your own goals, including goals you』ve made your own. If you have a job, then either make the commitment to do your very best at that job, or vacate the position and let someone else do it better.

Put Your Goals First

Many achievers have jobs. Many achievers have families. Many achievers have competing commitments of various kinds. But achievers don’t use their job, kids, and other commitments as excuses for not giving sufficient attention to their goals. For everyone who uses these to excuse their inability to set and achieve goals, there’s a real achiever who started from a more challenging position and used those same elements to help motivate them to achieve their goals. Where non-achievers see excuses, achievers find drive.

A good way to put your goals first is to set high-quality, holistic goals to begin with. Don’t squander your attention on shallow pursuits like making money for its own sake. Set goals that will help you grow, build your skills, create value for others, and do some good in the world. Ask yourself: Does the goal seem meaningful and intelligent when you imagine yourself 20 years past its achievement?

Deliberately put your attention on your goals. When you catch yourself standing in line, dwell upon your goals. Visualize yourself taking the action steps. Make this your default behavior instead of pulling out your phone to attend to something trivial.

Carefully plan out the action steps to achieve your goals. If you received my latestnewsletter, you』ll find an extensive how-to article about planning the achievement of your goals.

Clear time to work on your goals, and make this time sacred and inviolable. If you can only clear a small slice out of each week to work on your goals, then consider setting a goal to reach the point where you have the freedom to devote as many hours to your goals as your energy allows. What specific goals would you need to set and achieve to make that a reality? Imagine being able to devote most of your time every week to working on your most important goals, without anything getting in the way. Many people live this way, and they love it. Why not you?

The Goal of Freedom

One of my past goals was to remove financial scarcity as a potential source of distraction, so I could spend most of my time each week working on my goals, whether they were income-generating or not. I want to center my life around personal growth pursuits and share what I learn as a legacy for others. I devoted a significant amount of attention to that goal over a period of years until it was achieved, and after that I could continue to maintain such a lifestyle with relative ease. I know that some people think it’s unusual to have the freedom to immerse oneself in setting and achieving goals that may have nothing to do with making money or having a job, like traveling around Europe for a month or going vegan or exploring open relationships, but this kind of freedom is important enough to me that I made achieving this goal my top priority for years, sticking with it until it was achieved. It was challenging but definitely worthwhile.

I know many people who』ve achieved similar goals. Generally speaking, they tend to be the happiest people I know. Instead of taking orders from someone else as their daily routine, they put their attention on their goals, desires, and interests. They make it a priority to maintain this freedom. They don’t use a job, kids, or the lack of money as excuses — just the opposite in fact. From these people I commonly hear stories of setbacks recalled with laughter and good cheer, not with fear or regret… like the time a couple of friends had to sleep in a park because they had no money for a place to stay. What non-achievers fear as roadblocks are merely stepping stones (and entertaining future stories!) for achievers.

If lifestyle freedom is important to you, then make that your primary aim. Put the attainment of your goal first in your life. Working to achieve this goal must become more important to you than keeping up with social media, pleasing your parents, watching your favorite TV shows, and other distractions. If anything else is truly getting in the way, then either drop it from your life, or find a way to turn it into an advantage that increases your drive and motivation.

It’s easy for me to tell the difference between people who are committed to achieving lifestyle freedom vs. those who aren’t committed. The ones who are committed are obsessed with the goal; they think of little else. I can’t get them to shut up about it! They’re constantly trying to figure out how to make it a reality. They work hard at it. They stumble and keep right on going. Usually the goal takes longer than they』d like. They often want it to take less than a year. It usually takes 2-5 years to reach the point of financial sustainability. The achievers make it obvious that they』ll get there no matter how long it takes. For them the goal is mandatory, not optional.

The non-achievers talk about the goal as a distant fantasy. It’s a wish, a dream, a possibility… something that would be nice to have if and when the planets align properly. Their action plan consists mainly of reading books about the Law of Attraction and listening to Abraham-Hicks recordings. They treat the goal as a casual desire but not a serious commitment. They disrespect the tremendous force of will that’s required to achieve it. They virtually never get there.

If the goal of lifestyle freedom matters to you, then drop, cut, and burn whatever distracts you from it. Put your attention squarely on that goal, and obsess about it until you achieve it. If you need more time, cancel cable TV, close your social media accounts, and keep your phone powered off during daylight hours. Take breaks as you need them, but keep putting your attention back on this goal. If you do that, it’s a safe bet that you』ll achieve it.

You』ll set yourself on the path to achieving lifestyle freedom when you stop putting other distractions ahead of that commitment.

Steve Pavlina

2015.08.06

www.stevepavlina.com

If you've found Steve's work helpful, please click "閱讀原文", and donate to show your support.

相關焦點

  • What Is 'Wellbeing'? Bill Walton Born!
    This is especially true in the case of good mental wellbeing. It is important to grow one's wellbeing so to live life enjoyably.
  • there being 和there to be(一般人不知道的兩種特殊用法)
    there be的動名詞形式there be的動名詞形式為there being,依然表示「有」的意思,多用於介詞之後。請看例句:He spoke of there being danger.▲因為有介詞of,所以該用動名詞形式,即there being。
  • it's TERRIBLE being Chinese-American in China
    That being said, it all depends on what you do.F#ck being respectful and speak Chinese, because not the same respect will be returned by most locals.
  • 科比親口詮釋曼巴精神——focused on being in the moment
    曼巴精神  focused on being
  • 中國在西方哲學研究中的十大誤解——從Being的意義談起
    這些翻譯以「有」或「存在」的譯法為依據,用後來的哲學觀念代替了原文的意義。《舊約》是以當時的希伯萊的日常語言寫成。耶和華(Jehovah)的希伯萊文的發音是Yahweb,即「雅威」,指YHWH,即「我是」的意思。耶和華說「I am who am」,不過是說他的名字就是耶和華,並無哲學上深奧的意義。
  • Couriers being driven to despair
    The agents also draft their own draconian regulations to manage the employees, which has led to delivery workers being fined if they asked for leave, according to several people with experience of the
  • 閱讀理解,精準對應原文段,對應選項細分析
    導讀:閱讀理解,精準對應原文段,對應選項細分析各位同學大家下午好。閱讀在六級試卷中所佔分值較高,難度係數較大,且題量多耗時長,同學們這部分準確率不高,對六級通過率影響較大,今天我們一起來看一道例題。英語閱讀理解六級原文:英語閱讀理解六級題目:我們來看一下,題目問了什麼:NO.1.我們從第一段中學到什麼?
  • 看小說【資源】分享原文全本全集
    嶽風因為某些原因,給人當了贅婿,端茶倒水被人瞧不起,隱忍度日,直到有一天…如果二維奧碼識別不了,可點擊文未」閱讀原文「戰龍無雙護國神帥棄婿歸來豪門戰神天降小妻霸道寵花似煙情柳似心超級王者天驕戰王The Marines of Charlie Company, Seely immediately understood, had been mistaken for the enemy and were being attacked by the U.S. Air Force.
  • 黃之可兒【免費】看小說|閱讀|共享原文
    嶽風因為某些原因,給人當了贅婿,端茶倒水被人瞧不起,隱忍度日,直到有一天…如果二維奧碼識別不了,可點擊文未」閱讀原文「戰龍無雙護國神帥棄婿歸來豪門戰神天降小妻霸道寵花似煙情柳似心超級王者天驕戰王古術醫修
  • 不會希臘文、希伯來文也能深度研讀聖經原文?這個網站幫助你!
    原文功能說明 您可以登陸網站wd.bible,點擊「原文」,即可看見以下界面: 其中,左邊是譯文和原文的對照閱讀。上方是譯文-原文逐字對照(Reverse-Interlinear),即譯文在上、原文在下,按譯文詞序排列。
  • 泰戈爾經典《生如夏花》,原文中文都美,你更喜歡哪一版?
    一I heard the echo, from the valleys and the heart我聽見回聲,來自山谷和心間Open to the lonely soul of sickle harvesting以寂寞的鐮刀收割空曠的靈魂Repeat outrightly, but also repeat the well-being
  • 《劍經》原文釋義:棍法總論篇(原文總訣歌四)
    第一篇:棍法總論篇俞大猷著 李良根註解原文總訣歌四原文(148)此「當①」字,如曲中之拍位②,妙不可言《劍經》原文釋義:棍法總論篇(原文總訣歌一)《劍經》原文釋義:棍法總論篇(原文總訣歌-總步目)《劍經》原文釋義:棍法總論篇(原文總訣歌三)
  • 劍橋雅思14test1閱讀passage1原文譯文
    以下是小編為大家整理的劍橋雅思14真題教材中,閱讀Test1Passage1原文譯文。希望能夠作為參考資料,幫助大家練習雅思閱讀喲!劍橋雅思14test1閱讀passage1原文譯文兒童嬉戲玩耍的重要性THE IMPORTANCE OF
  • 最新發布 | 第十七屆「上譯」杯翻譯競賽原文
    本屆為英語、西班牙語翻譯競賽,在此登出英語組與西語組競賽原文全文。原文由《外國文藝》編輯部與競賽評委老師搜尋篩選近兩個月後最終敲定,可謂慎之又慎,力求兼顧文章的可讀性與翻譯的一定挑戰性,相信選出來的這兩篇是能夠吸引你讀到最後並有興趣提筆試手的。截稿在2020年8月10日24點,我們在此等你來譯。
  • 劍橋14Test3雅思聽力原文:Section 3
    新東方網給大家整理了劍橋14Test3雅思聽力原文:Section 3,希望能都幫助大家更好的備考,更多內容,歡迎隨時關注新東方網。   [01:01.39LIZZIE: So how are you getting on with your teaching practice at the High School, Joe?
  • 劍橋14Test3雅思閱讀原文:Passage 1
    新東方網給大家整理了劍橋14Test3雅思閱讀原文:Passage 1,希望能都幫助大家更好的備考,更多內容,歡迎隨時關注新東方網。   READING PASSAGE 1   You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on Reading Passage 1 below.
  • 劍橋14Test3雅思閱讀原文:Passage 3
    新東方網給大家整理了劍橋14Test3雅思閱讀原文:Passage 3,希望能都幫助大家更好的備考,更多內容,歡迎隨時關注新東方網。   READING PASSAGE 3   You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.