You’re Not Good Enough to Be Disappointed
James Clear | September 22, 2015 | Inspiring, Living, WorkingAnyway, I recently heard Dan John say,
I often tell my new athletes: “Sorry, you just are not good enough to be disappointed.”In other words, in the beginning you need to get comfortable with feeling stupid, uncertain, and unskilled. You’re not allowed to be disappointed by your amateur performance because you haven’t developed the skills of a professional yet. It’s only the professionals that are allowed to be disappointed because they have put in the work to be better.
- J.K Rowling is allowed to be disappointed if she writes a bad book because she put in twenty years of work to get good.
- Kobe Bryant is allowed to be disappointed if he plays a bad game because he put in twenty years of work to become amazing.
- When he was alive, Jack LaLanne was allowed to be disappointed with a bad workout because he trained for sixty years to stay fit.
Bad Enough to Get to Work
In the beginning, you’re still learning. You’re still developing. You’re still building. You haven’t developed enough competency to feel disappointed by your performance. You’re supposed to feel stupid and unskilled.Of course, it’s easy to forget to give yourself some slack when you’re starting a journey that is important to you. Usually, the people who have the least right to feel disappointed are the ones who get down on themselves the most.
- We feel disappointed when we start a new job and don’t do it as well as we would like.
- We feel disappointed when we set fitness goals for ourselves and don’t reach them.
- We feel disappointed when we finally work up the courage to start our first business and it fails.
- We feel disappointed when we write our first book and nobody reads it.
- We feel disappointed when we pitch someone on our great idea and they don’t care.
And if that’s the way that the best in the world approach their craft, then that’s how you and I should approach our goals as well.
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