“Fall seven, Rise eight” - Japanese Saying
The world considers me successful. College degree, good
paying job, engineer, author, married, own home, nice cars, savings, not much
debt, tall, play volleyball, run, and only ~5 lbs. over ideal weight. But the
world does not see how I got here.
Terrible C student: Flunked German and semester of English
in high school. Bunch of D’s in Spanish, English, Math & Science. Flunked
an engineering course and took an incomplete Junior year of college. Cum was
1.5 that year (2.0 is C). MBA dropout, life got in way. Yet one of 220
engineers to graduate out of 662 freshmen.
Very shy: In school, college and starting out in business. Gave
an Engineering Week presentation this week. Told group am leading, I was bad at
relationships growing up. Did not get married till 46. Don’t you think I was
bullied, had break ups, horrible dates, dating wrong people, and
lonely times? Am close with family,
have great friends, and good relationships at work.
Business: Worked for companies that closed, laid off half
their workforce, and been fired / outplacement. Invested in real estate and went
bankrupt. Started and closed my own businesses. Most of my wealth is in the last 8 years, plus buying a house at
the bottom of the market. Manage projects with teams of very smart people
including senior management. Mentor people on careers and business.
Fitness: 2 painful knees starting at 16. Use to go out randomly
in 20s and I would fall down. Swam breaststroke in high school and college. Allergies
started around 22. First shoulder injury at 26, and 4 more since including last
year. Changed sports. In 40s developed sleep apnea, Insomnia, leg twitches and
wonder what a good nights sleep is. Ranked as ‘A’ or ‘BBB’ level in volleyball
in 40s (AAA is pro beach player). Lost 15 pounds and kept it off. Given ~90
pints of blood. Ran a mile this morning, and back playing volleyball after
months of rehab.
In every area of life have
failed, learned, tried again, experimented and overcome. Angela Duckworth
calls this process “Grit”. Olympic
athletes competing now have overcome injuries, loses, and public failures.
You have to get past negative attitudes. Try hard new things. Find out what
works for you. Be uncomfortable. Struggle.
Fail. Sometimes it takes years. Find people to teach, and support your
efforts. Look for examples and mentors. They are out there.
Talent does not take you very far. Hard work and
perseverance does. Support anyone who is trying. Help them persevere and become resilient.
"Fate gave to man the courage of endurance." - Ludwig van
Beethoven
No comments:
Post a Comment