Feel Like Giving Up?

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“When you feel like giving up, remember why you held on for so long in the first place.”

We all face obstacles in pursuing our goals, whether they’re professional or personal.We think we’re on the right track but realize we have chosen the wrong approach. We’re enthusiastic and hard-working, but our support system disintegrates when we need them the most. We’re just about to make significant progress when we run out of time or funding.

Tenacious as we may be, we all have our breaking points—that moment when the potential rewards stop justifying the effort. Usually that’s the hump that separates your best shot and your best reality. 

Before you throw in the towel and go back to something safe and far less taxing, ask yourself the following questions:

Why did you want to pursue this goal to begin with—and has anything changed?

You had a good reason for committing to this plan. Maybe you visualized a financially free future once you started this new business, or you realized you’d live longer and healthier if you lost 20kilos.

Odds are you still want those things as much as you did before; you just stopped believing you could have them because your attempts have yet to yield results. Now you have to ask yourself: if you push through the discomfort will it be worth it in the end?

What’s the worst that will happen if you keep going and don’t reach your goal?

Often when I want to turn around it’s because I’m afraid of failing—afraid other people will be disappointed in me or judge me, or afraid I’ll have wasted my time. In all reality, no one ever judges us like we judge ourselves. and we always grow and learn through the process of striving, regardless of what we attain.

If you don’t keep going, you’ll never know how far you could have gone, and you’ll miss out on being the person you’d become through the effort itself. If you do keep going, well, it’s like this quote: “Shoot for the moon, for even if you miss you’ll land among the stars.” 

Are you afraid of succeeding?

One of my biggest problems is that I don’t like responsibility. There are things I’d like to do, but I resist because I don’t want the power to impact, hurt, or disappoint other people. That doesn’t mean that I don’t have dreams—it’s just that I’m just scared of what achieving them will entail.

If you can relate to this feeling, perhaps you’ll respond well to the mantra I’ve been repeating: great power comes with great responsibility, but it also brings great rewards. If you play it safe, you won’t hurt or disappoint anyone, but you also won’t help or inspire anyone. And equally important, you won’t help or inspire yourself.

Would you enjoy giving a loved one the honest explanation for why you gave up?

And I mean honest. Would you like telling your daughter, I stopped trying to quit smoking because cigarettes are more important to me than having more golden years to spend with you? Would it be fun to tell your mother I decided not to go to school because I’d rather spend time with my boyfriend of three months then prepare for a career that will ensure I won’t end up jobless and homeless

If you lay out it out like this, odds are you’ll realize you had a really good reason for doing this difficult thing, and no matter how challenging the process is, it’s worth ploughing ahead. 

What would you tell someone else if they were in your shoes?

Would you tell your best friend to throw in the towel because she can’t possibly reach her goal? Or would you practice your finest motivational speech and help her see what you see in her potential? Unless you’re secretly a ‘frienenemy’ who hopes she fails in life odds are you’d push her to be her best—so why not push yourself? It may sound cheesy, but you need to be your own best friend. You, more than anyone in this world, deserve your belief and motivation.

If you’ve gone through all these questions and still feel resolute about the decision to give up, you have my blessing to abandon your goal. (Bet you feel so relieved!)

If you don’t—if there’s some lingering doubt—keep working toward that dream that fills you with passion. Take a different approach if you need to. Enlist new assistance. Scale back your time commitment to something you can more easily maintain. But whatever you do, don’t give yourself a reason to one day utter the words, I quit because I was scared.”

“Between you and every goal that you wish to achieve, there is a series of obstacles and the bigger the goal, the bigger the obstacles. Your decision to be, have and do something out of the ordinary entails facing difficulties and challenges that are out of the ordinary as well. Sometimes your greatest asset is simply your ability to stay with it longer than anyone else.”

 Brian Tracy

 

 

 

 


10 thoughts on “Feel Like Giving Up?

      1. “when potential reward doesn’t justify the effort”- really struck me. I am a real hardcore at work and i always make sure that I do my very best at anything. A month ago i was promised a promotion, which I feel is too-far from happening, now that situations have slightly changed; i know it is something i should look forward to, but thinking about of it unlikeness to being true, i sometimes feel that my momentum at work is being affected. I know this should not happen, because judging from the way i have been doing my work, I was a real workaholic even without potential rewards. I am actually close to giving up until i stumbled upon your blog.. thanks

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  2. Hello there! This blog post couldn’t be written much better! Looking at this article reminds me of my previous roommate! He continually kept talking about this. I’ll send this article to him.
    Pretty sure he’ll have a good read. Thanks for sharing!

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