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Motivation

Sweet, Sweet Solitude

December 12, 2019 by Jon Salmen

“The only place one should find solace is within oneself” -Siddhartha Gautama Buddha

I am not a long practicing stoic, nor a perfect solo act out in the world, but if there is one thing I know for sure, it is that the ability to strongly stand alone is the key to a well-lived and well-loved life. There is, by far, no greater fulfillment than the power we find within ourselves through accomplishing our goals. No greater feeling experienced in the human condition than the flow we tap into while engaged, challenged, and motivated by the obstacles we decide to face and overcome. ‘Goals’, in my opinion, are a modern fancy word substitute for ‘living proper’. 

Goals, though. Geez. What a terribly worn out word. ‘Goal-setting’ is the flat squirrel on the road to purpose and I assume, in this analogy, the white dashed lines would be ‘time-management’. Goals are no mystery. “An aim or desired result”, as Webster’s would put it. 

“If you are lonely when you are alone, you are in bad company.”- Jean-Paul Sartre 

Let’s emphasize one thing: We can’t lose sight of the purpose of our goals, they are for us. That vast array of things we want to accomplish, people we want to meet, jobs we wish to have, legacy we hope to set– void of a personal meaning, become mere emptiness. We have to be mindful of what we want. 

However, is withdrawing into yourself selfish? 

Self-improvement is NOT selfish. In a way, you are setting yourself up to help as many people as possible. Refer to the key pillar of life-guarding. It goes something like, “If someone is drowning, make sure that you have a flotation device before jumping in”. Now, why is that important? So you don’t drown too! It would also be nice if you knew how to swim. Point being, can’t help too many people stay above water in this world if you don’t know how to swim. 

“True humility is not thinking less of yourself, it is thinking of yourself less.” -C.S. Lewis

Now, it would undercut my message today not to hit on narcissism or a total lack of humility. I think we often view a focus on the self as narcissistic. It is not. Although it can be sometimes. Narcissism would be empty goal achievement, a mere self admiration for checking a box. A purposeless, unintentional and immoral striving for things that do not matter.

Goal achievement, however, is an individual journey that multiplies on itself as we use what we learn to teach others. Starting with the discipline that arises from practicing solitude and self-sufficiency. Oddly enough, the discipline and resulting wisdom that follows can impact the world infinitely outside of ourselves. It is inherently selfless, not selfish. Even if we don’t interact directly with people, we can serve as an example of exemplary effort. A man trying their best. 
So go accomplish your goals, focus on yourself, achieve those things for you and for your reasons and your purposes, and perhaps you may inspire others to find theirs along the way.

Filed Under: Connection, Motivation, Self Discipline Tagged With: FocalPointKY, Goal Achievement, Goal Setting, Goals, Motivation, Sel-efficacy, Self-esteem, Solitude

Freedom Of Discipline Pt.3 — Fear

November 27, 2019 by Jon Salmen

The biggest obstacles to success are those we believe we can’t get over. Rarely are they the most difficult or the most demanding. They are merely the ones we think about. Our challenge is a predominantly internal thing. Stress and fear bounce around inside our heads until we feel hopeless and slowly begin to question our capabilities. So a key practice is to mindfully acknowledge why we are stressed out, where our fears still remain. It is only then that we continue towards a healthy lifestyle, an unhalting pursuit of our goals.

Today though, I don’t want to talk about the fluffy clouds of dreams and goal-setting. No, perhaps we shift focus from the ideal and into the real for a moment. Reality is that we will fail a lot more than we will succeed. But the failure, as you know, lies after the fact. True failure is giving up or not learning from past mistakes. Success lies in being vigilant not to overstay your welcome in some insane rabbit hole or depression.

So today we will focus on failure, discouragement, apathy, and any obstacles that may result in shortcomings. Along with the art of being unwavering in your values and persevering beyond your comfort zone. 

I think I would leave you at a disadvantage to strictly spew words of encouragement when discouragement is much more abundant. It would be like learning how to swim before your trip out to the desert. So we will focus on the barren parts of the cultural environment in which we live. Much like a desert, there is an infinite dryness and accompanying thirst caused by the hot flame of mediocrity that burns all around us. If we don’t prepare ourselves to deal with an environment like that, we are at a total loss for overcoming the many trials that live there. 

How do you deal with failure? I mean really. What does it do to you? Does it drive you to a dark place of self deprivation and regret? Do things like alcohol, drugs, sex, and music transform from pleasurable indulgences into emotional crutches? Is failure a motivator or a deterrent? Are the fears that you carry given the justice they deserve or are you too insecure to admit and address their influence on your behavior?

Our inability to address the things that hold us back do nothing except leave us unprepared. Living without fear is a terrible way to live. Live with courage. But this myth that one can live “fearlessly” is an ironically scared way to live in my opinion. A life afraid of fear. If it were possible, I would give that prescribed brand of living the time of day. But the truth is that any of the people living “fearlessly” have just learned how to win more of their battles in the face of fear. They didn’t learn how to side step fear when it presented itself, they learned how to beat its ass mercilessly whenever it reared up to derail their aspirations. They accepted fear.

These muted fears are the discouragement I am talking about. Arguably, all of our discouragement is chaperoned by these decrepit and shadowy doubts. We even have a built in fear machine in our brains called the amygdala. Although my neuroscience colleagues would have more to say, this brain area simply helps us recognize things that could hurt us or make us uncomfortable. A useful tool no doubt. The kicker is that physical and mental discomfort register the same way. A hot stove and a hard conversation are not all that distinguishable in this part of our psychology. But we can’t get a third degree burn from courage. Maybe if we are fighting fires. But asking for a raise, hiring a coach, paying for a gym membership, reading a few more books, going back to get another degree at school… these initially register as fears, but they present no harm by themselves. They are just unfamiliar to us right now. 

The issue comes when we delay the time between intention and action. This problem space is fertile grounds for fear as well as faith. If faith is the thing you want to grow, fear is the weeds that would happily grow in its place. Our brain waters the seed of fear first, if you let it. Our amygdala, our negative cognitive bias. The idea that we psychologically register bad more efficiently than we do for good. It is our job to retrain ourselves to water that seed of faith every time instead of the doubts. Without that important intervention, we succumb to a negative victimized view of our lives. 

So be unyielding in your optimism. Nurture a persistent positive perspective. People will fight you, people close to you, even those you thought were loyal friends. There will often be some sort of push back, but my advice? Hold the pillow down until they stop kicking. Don’t kill anyone, but cut their waste of air out of your life. Suffocate their negativity. Stifle that energy because if that’s the garden they tend inside themselves, it’s only a matter of time before those locusts spread to your field and infringe on your mind. Affect your life. Countless aspects of society will try to cut you down for no apparent good reasoning. And even your brain will fight to get you to surrender to comfort by any means. Out-think, outperform, out-optimism all of it. 

Lastly, don’t be overwhelmed by this pressure to be average or to fulfill a stereotypical identity you could pick up at the drugstore. Setting goals can seem like a fool’s errand sometimes, especially around helpless folks that want to bring you down. Don’t be discouraged to make “unbelievable” goals and end up goalless. Don’t let perfectionism drive you away from making goals either. Strike a balance between emptiness and cliche. And force positive thoughts. Scream them like a crazy person to yourself on the treadmill. Pray on it. Meditate around your intentions. Remind yourself where you are, what you’ve overcome and where you plan on going all the time. That is the key to sticking to a goal. The action that follows a positive, clear, determined mind surely bring nothing short of fulfillment.

Filed Under: Self Discipline Tagged With: Coaching, Faith, Fear, FocalPointKY, Goal Setting, Motivation

Im-Perfectionism

November 13, 2019 by Jon Salmen

Perfectionists struggle because they overthink, over evaluate, and constantly find themselves in a state of analysis paralysis. Perfectionists that don’t try? They find themselves perfectly mediocre. Perfect at being conservative, certain, and safe. Perfect at being just barely enough, stable, and empty. Perfect at avoiding obstacles, perfect at avoiding fear, and ultimately perfect at avoiding growth.

“Problems are the gifts to which we grow”- Tony Robbins

What is perfect? It doesn’t exist. The concept it represents is ideal, not real. You can not be an ideal. We can merely be close. That is true. But, in the end, we determine what is fulfilling. Your idea of perfect is a social construct, and so is mine and they don’t match up. It is just the channel you have likely subscribed to in your life for many just reasons. However this is not the agora, so I digress.

It is said that our greatest fear is rejection. Rejection as an absence or exclusion from someone or something in one way or another. Rejected and absent from a life of love. Excluded from society. Rejected in the eyes of a creator/ God. We fear that our lives will be absent of this approval. You fear that you will be rejected for who you are so, in defense, you strive to be perfect. 

But what we really fear is not being enough. Enough to be loved, to be accepted, to be adored, looked up to, smiled back on. That we matter enough to leave a legacy. I say it is because we feel rejected for the things we didn’t do, perhaps the things that we have not yet finished. We don’t feel like we are good enough to earn this approval from others. We believe we are not worthy of some ideal standard. 

We aren’t. You aren’t. I am not. But guess what? Neither is anyone else. Nobody leads a perfect life and you are not going to be the first. But you can strive to mitigate imperfections by tackling obstacles. Acquaint yourself with the enemies within and around you. You can only run so far with weights around your ankles and maybe your weights are a constant unrealistic desire to become a you that you can really never become.

“If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles…” -SunTzu
The answer? Try things. Get out and do. Go out and be. As Taco Bell says, “Live mas”. 

Know your doubts and know your faith to overcome them. If you don’t have the perfect plan, you still try. Trying is fundamental to achieving. Trying is the best approach to any problem you have. Trying is perfect. Faith is perfect. Neither guarantee success, but the resilience to keep on trying and keep faith even when it seems impossible? That is as perfect as it gets. If we don’t try because we are afraid our effort won’t be perfect, we would surely find ourselves in a very imperfect place. Lazy, apathetic, and disheartened more often than not.

If we played a game we always knew we would win, we would certainly stop enjoying it. Perfectionism is not a virtue. It is a myth. One that has likely been discouraging you from living, so stop trying to be perfect and start trying to be better.

 Life is ambiguous and uncertain. It’s a gamble and you can take your chances. But I promise if you try your very best and you courageous enough to execute even the smallest imperfect plan when others won’t. That is momentum, inspiration, achievement… perhaps even perfect.

Filed Under: Motivation Tagged With: Achievement, Balance, Fear, FocalPointKY, Goal Setting, Motivation, Perfectionism, Self-help, Success

The Freedom of Discipline Pt.2– Time

November 6, 2019 by Jon Salmen

Last post we talked about the importance of honesty and self awareness as it relates to “managing” your life. I say “managing” because it is really just living. Living purposefully. The next step after weighing the pros and cons of the old you? Develop a plan! A plan of action that hopefully proves to be of significant value to any metric we use for the harmony and balance in our lives.

The T in SMART goals stands for “time-bound”. The project planning on an engineers or architect’s desk for a project is organized by a project flow chart, indicating completion and start times for certain tasks. A classroom, your job, a restaurant, a retail store… all run on time oriented goals. Hell, it’s even a legendary Pink Floyd song with a catchy intro. From when a store opens to when a new marketing strategy kicks in for the upcoming season– We are all slaves to time and its admirably brutal consistency.

The common denominator that earmarks our lives and determines where we will ultimately allocate our resources: time. Time is the underlying framework that we use to organize and prioritize our lives. So if there is a solution to be found, it most certainly lies within the deep dark mysterious realm of time.

Of no mystery to me… In my time mentoring young people, the most crucial skill and hindrance on performance has been time-management. Although most of these young men have entirely different goals and capabilities, all have said that time-management as well as the ability to meditate consistently were their top focus. These skills seemed to make or break performance as a whole in their minds, and they are sure of it. Not parties, not social drama, not even a lack of prefrontal cortex brain development or the monstrous debt looming over them in college. Nope, just time. How they chose to spend it. 

The answers to the problems you have are on your wrist, your microwave, the top of your phone and ringing from bells in that one town with the roundabout and the courthouse. Effective time management is fundamental to any strategy. Ding Dong, ding dong.

We know this though. We know what we ought to do, and we do not do it. Often.

When we set a plan of action, we have to gauge time. So we really look at two things: (1) How much time do we spend doing anything at all and (2) How much time we NEED to spend on the those things. I find my guitar time could cut into my studying, my work could overlap with my gym time. Almost always, my obligations run into one another.

You don’t have to stop doing the things that you love to do or live like a Navy SEAL just to perform better or become more structured. No. But you need to at least get comfortable examining your life a little deeper. (make a schedule, buy a planner, use a calendar)

We fight against bad health, poor relationships, unfulfilling careers, pushy bosses, that guy in traffic that doesn’t understand the critically symbiotic relationship of merging. Kidding, don’t road rage. In reality, we only really fight one thing at the root of it all. Time is the only battle we have. The only boulder we must push up our metaphorical hills. Where we find ourselves in this constant battle is all about how prepared we are. Are we managing our time the best?

Time management is the first step to the momentum shift you want to see in your life. It is very hard to take a first step if you don’t make time to take it. Now it would be a shame if old, feeble, father time kept you from enjoying anything. So just check in on him from time to time so he doesn’t take all of it away from you.

Filed Under: Self Discipline Tagged With: Business, Coaching, Discipline, FocalPointKY, Motivation, Preparation, Strategy, Time-Management, Training

The Freedom of Discipline Pt.1– Goals

October 23, 2019 by Jon Salmen

We have the freedom to do just about anything. Right now our ability as humans to wield and manipulate nature is more advanced than anytime in history. We have unlimited free will to mold and reshape the world around us with every decision. So how do we regain control in our worlds? Time management, prioritization, goal setting, strategic planning. Just to name a few. Why is it so important that we architect our lives this way?

Maybe the magnificent lies among the mundane.

Primarily, the things we do are just as important as the things we don’t. What we choose to spend time doing is just as important and vital as the things we avoid. So the question for you is: What do you spend time doing that you think adds the most value, and what do you avoid doing that keeps you from enjoying success?

If the root of all of our stress comes from our to-do lists, I would say it is of the utmost importance as to what we decide to write down. 

Every part of our life has some sort of measurement we employ to keep track of progress. For relationships, it is love. For our careers, money. In our mind, there’s peace. For our body, energy. Spiritually, you have faith.

How are you measuring up to where you want to be in your life? (Love, peace, energy, faith)

Next, it is important to equate all of these measurements and see how they interact. Think: Is the focus on money drawing from your inner peace? On the other hand, a revamping of love could be supplementing your inner peace or energy. Perhaps your time in the gym or on the trails allows you to stay more driven or positive in your relationships.

Whichever the case may be, it is key that we determine the relationships between these different facets of our lives.

How does this relate to discipline? Discipline is defined as “training oneself to do something in a controlled or habitual way”. So one habit is simply to keep track of these metrics in your life. A current-state self check-up. A doctor or a therapist can only guess how you’re doing in these areas, only YOU can tell you how you’re really doing.

Ask yourself how you’re doing because the discipline to be honest with yourself is the first step to change.

Filed Under: Self Discipline Tagged With: Business, Coaching, Discipline, FocalPointKY, Goals, Motivation, Training

Motivation

October 15, 2019 by Jon Salmen

Resilience is defined as “the capacity to recover quickly from difficulties”. Also known as toughness, flexibility or adaptability. 

The root of resilience is adapting, keep on going despite what life offers. That level of perseverance takes action. Action: takes motivation. 

The APA (American Psychological Association) defines motivation as “‘inducing behavior’—stimuli that motivate us to take action are those that transform potential energy into kinetic energy. This transformation is literal and figurative. In the absence of motivation, ability or potential cannot be transformed into products or performance.”

“In the absence of motivation, ability or potential cannot be transformed…”

When there are unwanted circumstances, we adapt to them. When there are problems arising, we try to solve them. In any case though, our resilience has to outweigh our resistance to change. It is only when our vision, our beliefs, and our willingness to act outweigh our insecurities that we can lead resilient lives. 

Motivation has a formula to it and there are many different types. However, we can divide them into two main categories: intrinsic and extrinsic. Extrinsic motivation stems from other people’s expectations and desires. Intrinsic is motivation comes from inside of us. We are intrinsically motivated when the actions we are taking are fueling meaning and purpose. 

Meaning and purpose typically arise from things that grant us a sense of autonomy, competence, and connection. If one can satisfy those three things, the work typically turns indifference to inherently meaningful. When something means that much to us, the excuses don’t fly anymore. “I’m tired”, “It can wait”, “I don’t feel like it”… are all insufficient replies to a woman whose son is stuck under a car. Where did she find the strength? 

“When something means that much to us, the excuses don’t fly anymore.”

Point is, if you can find a mission that supports your vision, challenges you, and keeps you in flow– you’ll have no problem finding the strength to lift the cars in your life. 

Whether it is going to the gym and finally losing the weight, being more involved in your work or school because it would help your performance, improving the relationships you’ve been taking for granted, finally getting your finances and diet in check… whatever it is, you have to see that resilience overcomes resistance. 
So my personal call to action is to imagine prolonging all of it. 

Close your eyes. And think about how good you feel still being out of shape, unhealthy, uneducated, underperforming, lonely, poor.

Draw it out 5-10 more years. 

All of the consequences affect your life. Change later? And any of those things, all of those things, could affect your life.

Change now? And 10-years-from-now-you will thank you.

Filed Under: Motivation Tagged With: Coaching, development, FocalPointKY, Motivation, resilience, Training

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