Author: Paul Joo

Paul Joo, Decision Architect and devotee of Human Potential & Performance. My passion is identifying & unleashing personal potential.

a “recipe” for making the most of yourself

Ever since I can remember, my singular objective has been to Make The Most Of Myself. And so it remains.

Naturally, during the past forty years of conscious effort directed towards this goal I’ve created and employed a variety of insights & ideas to guide my efforts, naturally meeting with mixed success.

At any rate, what follows is my latest effort at clarifying my own personal “recipe” for Making The Most Of Myself:

Simply focus all my efforts on building BOTH a Better Man AND a Better Life. How? Specifically…

  • Build a Better Man Þ Be a Superior Man as per my own personal parameters & definition.
  • Build a Better Life Þ Be a Superior Player in the Game that is living in human society.

Sounds simple, but the big change for me is that until now I’ve been focusing more or less solely on making myself into a Better Man, which while valuable has nevertheless proven a somewhat antediluvian outlook.

In hindsight I suppose it was either incredibly optimistic or incredibly naïve (or both) to believe that putting my efforts into becoming a Better Man would automatically generate a Better Life. In point of fact, alone it is simply insufficient to meet the demands of succeeding within our present society. Hence the need to focus on building both a Better man and a Better Life, which for me are two distinctly separate lines of effort.

Perhaps this will prove a useful framework for Making the Most of Myself, and in doing so guide me in living a great Life that is worth all the effort.

“Fingers crossed”? Nah, as the venerable Yoda says: Do or not do, there is no “Try”. 🙂

so, you pride yourself on your determination eh…?

Many people pride themselves on their “determination”. But what exactly is it, and where does it comes from?

In my estimation, genuine determination refers to a willing commitment to make intelligent, effective choices. It’s about engaging the self-discipline to make choices based on reason & intellect rather than emotion. And then following through on those choices with self-disciplined activities based also on reason & intellect rather than emotion.

A challenge for many people is that “being determined” in practice ends up only reinforcing their willingness to accept their own stubborn & defiant behaviour patterns. All too often, what many people pride themselves on ends up being not true determination at all, but rather their willingness to stubbornly cling to their immediate emotional drivers. As an example, real determination does not refer to a willingness to shore up one’s flagging confidence with emotion – that’s simply a form of defiance called bravado.

So, want to check yourself? Take a look at when & how you apply your determination.

For example, does your “determination” often assume the form of, say, defiance? If so, just be aware that this is a trap you can fall into quite easily whenever you’re trying to bolster or substitute a shaky confidence.

So then how can you tell if you are engaging true determination, and not some nasty, self-defeating form of emotionality? Well, you’ll see soon enough because if you’re just being emotional you probably won’t get the complete or positive outcomes you are expecting.

In fact, generally speaking, when you apply your determination to driving through with any emotional reaction instead of confidence, you are likely to get a negative outcome. Conversely, when you apply your determination to confidently making choices based on reason & intellect rather than emotion, you are very likely to get a positive outcome.

The takeaway? Whenever you find yourself a little shy on confidence, try to avoid reacting emotionally or with defiance. Instead, try thinking your way systematically through your challenge; you can get it done with determination.

Keep in mind that genuine determination – properly allocated & sourced – is an extension of your confidence, not a replacement for it. Just look at what happens every time you just confidently focus on the task at hand and follow through until it is completed? You make choices based on reason & intellect rather than emotion – and you once again succeed through determination! 🙂

6 simple stages to track your progress

A natural progression of likely objectives, from youth through old age…

First Stage of Life: Grow Up!

Early Stage of Life: Live!

Early Middle Stage of Life: Grow Up!

Middle Stage of Life: Live!

Later Stage of Life: Live Healthy!

Last Stage of Life: Die Healthy!

Where are you? 🙂

are you guilty of wilful insanity?

“We fear our highest possibilities. We are generally afraid to become that which we can glimpse in our most perfect moments, under the perfect conditions, under conditions of greatest courage. We enjoy and even thrill to the Godlike possibilities we see in ourselves in such peak moments. And yet we simultaneously shiver with weakness, awe and fear before these very same possibilities.” – Abraham Maslow

WTF? What’s going on here?

One likely reason for this phenomenon is what I see as a common form of WIlful Insanity: Clinging to your “right” to keep open “the option to feel helpless whenever I feel like it.”

Ok, so maybe not all of us are super-mindful or ultra-self-aware. Nonetheless, we all probably entertain at least some idea of what may potentially move us forward towards the things we want & our ideal selves. So what’s the problem then? What stands in our way?

Just the completely ridiculous emotional habit of struggling against our own ambitions, drives, principals & even common sense! All in order to “keep open” emotional “options” that we know have no real value for us anymore!

Yep, while we are clinging to “keep open options” that we often consciously disdain, we are at the same time avoiding & fearful of the options that have the potential to move us toward achieving the things & self we actually want. Crazy, eh? 🙂

to be or not to be…. selfish?

When it comes to the idea of “selfish”, there are two basic camps: those who preach that you should NOT be selfish, and those who preach that you SHOULD be selfish. Naturally, both camps believe that their own respective positions favor the betterment of society.

Who’s right? Well, it depends on definitions – which you may notice are seldom if ever forthcoming from people who preach to you about anything.

Nevertheless, one could potentially see the merit of either side, again depending on if & how they would particularly define “selfish”. However, instead of trying to explain for them, I shall simply explain my own definitions & distinctions as follows.

For me, it’s pretty simple, really, as it comes down to two key definitions, between which one can and must make a clear distinction:

Self-centred – Self-centred people see themselves as the centre of their own universe. As such, they take full responsibility for anything that happens in it, knowing that everything they experience is at least partially a product of their own thoughts, words or deeds. In point of fact, I personally subscribe to this mentality as being a mature, responsible and noble one.

Selfish – Selfish people see themselves as the centre of the universe. As such, they take little if any responsibility for anything that happens in it. While they feel that they deserve control, they won’t accept any of the responsibility for anything they experience as a result of either exercising or failing to exercise that control. So you can see that selfish people are very often immature & cowardly as well.

Well, there you have it. My perspective on two alternatives. Either pick the one that suits you or create yet another to suit yourself, as you will.

Regardless of your choice, though, I suggest you consider the words of Antoine de Saint-Exupery:  “If you are to be, you must begin by assuming responsibility.  You alone are responsible for every moment of your life, for every one of your acts.

Indeed.

 

a simple truth about choices

Powerful emotions. We are all susceptible to them. And when we experience one, it feels like being stranded in the path of an oncoming avalanche, as though we were a victim of an unavoidable force of nature. We even commonly refer to it as “being caught up in emotion” – like we are in no position to do anything about it.

While “being caught up in emotion” may be a nice metaphor, it is 100% inaccurate. In fact, the truth is more like the opposite of “being caught up”.

Experiencing a tide of powerful emotion may feel like being swept up in an avalanche – as it whooshes along it simply sweeps you along with it, giving you no chance to hide or escape. But this is a completely inaccurate and self-serving perception.

Sure, a powerful emotion may feel like an avalanche, but it actually operates like a speeding locomotive. As it whooshes past you, if you really don’t want to be swept along with it, all you need to do is step clear of its track! Yes, you may feel the wind from it tug at you as it passes, but you need not be moved from where you stand. Maybe not so easy, but simple nonetheless.

So the reality is that when we find ourselves being “sucked into or along with” a powerful emotion, it is because we are actually grabbing onto it! And once we grab on, we immediately find ourselves going so fast that the last thing we want to do is let go; I mean, who wants to be pitched into a ditch at 100 miles an hour? And so it is that if we don’t choose at the outset to step aside and let it whip by – but instead grab onto it – we soon find ourselves very far from anywhere we really want to be: mired in an emotion that is controlling us.

Such are the obvious power and danger of failing to choose to step off the track and refuse the “pull” of powerful emotions. But the greater damage caused by allowing ourselves to buy the story that we are actually “caught up in an emotion” is that it helps us justify or excuse our own emotional self-indulgence. “Buying our own BS” helps us convince ourselves that we are not responsible for whatever outcomes transpire, no matter how immature our self-indulgence or behaviour may be.

But there is a way to avoid being controlled by powerful emotion. If you are willing to forego such emotional self-indulgence, you have two options to prevent you from falling victim to an immediate strong emotion: you can choose to simply let the locomotive go by without touching it. Or failing that, if you find yourself clinging to it, you need not fear that you will be dashed to the ground at speed if you let go! Because once you let go of it you’ll realize that you were never moving at all – it just felt like you were racing along.

The bottom line: You always have a choice. Granted, it may seldom be an easy one, but it is always your choice to make.

Every single time you experience the tug of a powerful emotion, you can choose to either concede to the very powerful illusion that it creates within your own mind, and so fall “victim” to it – and then defend or justify your victimization. Or you can stand firm, clear the tracks, watch it rush by, and feel truly proud of yourself for winning – again.

You always have a choice.

 

why thinking about possibilities matters

“We’ve unrestricted access to an infinite variety of Possibilities.”

Unless you genuinely believe it, you won’t look for Possibilities throughout your life.

And if you don’t look for them, you won’t see them.

If you don’t see them, you can’t possibly use them.

And if you can’t use them, they may as well not even exist.

Yep, your genuine belief in ever-present Possibilities really does matter.

 

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