As much as I hate to admit that there are faults with our generation, it would definitely be fair to say that we are an it’s not my fault generation. We think we’re entitled to everything and we want to blame everyone else when we don’t get what we want.
Chances are good that you will never achieve everything that you want to achieve in your life. In fact, I’ve suggest in my presentations and articles that if you do achieve everything, you’re doing something wrong. Failure is almost a certainty at some point. If you’re never failing, you’re not setting your sights high enough. Failure is ok. What is NOT ok is EXPECTING success without doing anything to make it happen.
How many times have you heard someone say something like, “I hate my life”; “My life is so unfair”, “My boss is such a jerk” etc etc? How many times has the person saying things like that, been you? The number of people who walk around complaining about how unfair life is seems to grow continuously, and yet it seems that those who really have something to complain about are rarely among them. And those who achieve the greatest success in life are never among them.
It can be easy to fall into the excuse trap; first you blame a lack of time for not getting an assignment done, then you’re excusing a poor performance on not feeling your best. Pretty soon nothing is ever your screw up.
What’s wrong with that? If you are content to always be a follower, always be mediocre, always be less than everything you can be, then nothing. But if you want to be the best that you can be, it’s essential that you take responsibility for your life. You have to be willing to own your successes and that means MAKING IT HAPPEN.
I see so many otherwise successful people prevent themselves from even greater success because they are constantly making excuses for themselves. They can’t achieve this goal because they don’t have the right education. They can’t achieve that objective because they don’t have enough money. Or they complain because this or that didn’t come their way even though they really “deserve it”.
The truth is the only reason that we don’t achieve any goal is that we aren’t willing to do what it takes. We just plain don’t want it bad enough. We aren’t willing to make the commitment to do “X” or “Y” or give up “A” or “B” in order to get it done. When you cut away all the crap, is that what it comes down to?
By: Mark Black
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