Live BIG: How Can You Move from Dead-End Discouragement to Success?
July 7, 2010 by Roger K. Allen
Filed under Power of Choice
He was lost.
Hal drove on tonight, gripped by the same desperation. The road narrowed, blacktop to dirt, then ended deep in a canyon. The sun had set, and the canyon was deep in shadow. He got out of the pickup and watched the patterns of light changing, twilight into moonless night. The blackest night he could recall. Devoid of hope.
With a suddenness, something broke inside. He gasped as the pain of his loss flooded his awareness, and he let out an animal cry of anguish. It echoed back at him as he sank to his knees in despair.
The Hero’s Choice
As humans, we all hope that our lives will be one of fulfillment, joy and success. Does that describe your life right now? Or, like Hal, are you in the midst in of despair, losing hope that you’ll ever change your life?
If you find yourself trying again and again to make a life change with no real success, it’s time to learn how to be a success and live BIG.
First, let’s take a look at the word success. Are you a success or a failure? Let’s take a short quiz to find out. Answer each of the following questions “yes” or “no.”
- Are you an internationally renowned brain surgeon?
- Are you the president of the United States?
- Are you a multi-millionaire?
- Are all of your relationships positive and affirming in all directions?
- Have you written a best-selling novel?
- Have you found the cure for Type I diabetes?
- Are you a super model?
- Did you rear your children to adulthood and have them turn out exactly as you’d hoped?
- Did you pay off all of your household debt, including your house, and accumulate a huge nest egg?
- Do you spend each of your days exactly as you choose?
- Have you walked the Appalachian Trail?
Did you answer “yes” to all of these questions?
Let me take a wild guess and say, No. Since I don’t know of any US presidents who were also super models who cured Type I diabetes, I’m pretty sure no one could answer “yes” to all of them. Few of us could answer “yes” to three or more.
Does that means that you are a failure?
It all comes down to your definition of success.
Any one of those questions above could be the definition of success for you.
If your definition of success is “getting the kids through college and still having enough money to retire in comfort,” then you could walk the Appalachian Trail and still not be a success. If you define success as, “being the kind of parent I always wished I’d had and launching my kids into the world with the knowledge and resources they need to build happy, healthy lives,” then you could be a multi-millionaire and still be a failure.
In the book The Hero’s Choice, Hal’s definition of success was completely intertwined with his success in his business. It’s only later in the story that his definition is broadened to include the his marriage and parenting skills. If you do what Hal did – bring your definition of success in line with your values – you’ll change your life.
The very words “success” and “failure” strike right at the core for many of us, resonating with some of our deepest fears or aspirations. But they are meaningless sources of stress until you define your terms. If you don’t meet some defined objective or goal, that is failure. You can avoid failing by refusing to create a goal or objective in the first place, but you will also avoid succeeding. You alone can define the words “success” and “failure” as they apply to you. If your passion is to teach high school science but your mother wanted you to be a successful stockbroker, then if you are a stockbroker earning six figures, you’ve failed. The definition of success is deeply personal.
In the upcoming blogs, I’m going to introduce you to the major key to change your life and achieve success — and it’s not what you may think. But before we go on, I’d like you to give some thought to what exactly success and failure mean for you. Take a long look inward, noting your passions, your talents and your values. Is your life where it “should” be? Are you doing what you were born to do, and doing it well?











Patricia Eslava Vessey on Mon, 26th Apr 2010 8:39 am
I love the way you break down this process and make it easily useable in creating what you want in your life.
Lauren on Sat, 26th Jun 2010 1:05 pm
This is like the Lefkoe Process developed by Morty Lefkoe in that there could be several, equally valid reasons, for the abrupt end to the phone call. This validates all the work I did through the Process to rid myself of limiting beliefs. And pausing for a moment before getting angry and upset and telling yourself stories that only exacerbate the situation. Love and Light