Dear Why Team member,
I hope this message finds you well and acknowledging the path you’re on today.
Throughout my weekly writings, I have encouraged you to consider and practice discipline because, ultimately, discipline leads to success. And to be disciplined, we must have a defined path or goal. Lincoln is known to have said: “no man ever got lost on a straight road.” Then Why do so many of us look for a path, rather than make one?
Could what we seek reside within us?
I'm reminded of the story of the man who searched the world over for diamonds that were in his own backyard.
Consider......the power that resides within you to make a new path. By definition, leaders go first. Awake each morning with a creative mindset, not a mindset of being lost and overwhelmed in a big world, but rather a mindset of knowing you have gifts beyond comprehension to create from the inside out. Even though you had them yesterday, everything, material or not, you possess today is a new gift in itself. Chose to see it all as joy! Choosing one's own attitude, alone, can lift your spirits and the spirits of others; through collaboration, create new ways of thinking.
Consider your own outlook on life; the windshield is so much larger than the rear-view mirror, why do so many choose the smaller view?
Invest less time fearfully analyzing the past in an effort to predict and protect yourself from the unknown future. Get excited about life and all that it has in store for you! Live, have fun, and learn! Count it all as Joy - for within the coal is found the diamond. Wake up each new day and see it as a rebirth, because that is what it is, a reawakening of your consciousness. Each new day has endless possibilities often best approached with a spirit of love and a creative mindset.
When we Why Team members say, “Make it a great day!", rather than "Have a great day", we are reminding ourselves and others that we can create what we want, that life does not happen to us, we happen to life.
Thomas Edison said, "If we all did the things we are capable of doing we would literally astound ourselves".
So, the question for you is simply:
“Are you going to make it a great day?".
If not, why not?
No matter how difficult your current circumstance, you have the power to choose how you think about it.
We either create our limits or we create our limitless possibilities.
Consider no longer using the word failure, but rather see it all as gifts of insight, feedback to expand the window through which you view the world. Is there not experimentation in creation? Wilber & Orville Wright would have never taken flight if the countless feedback of what didn't fly was seen as failure rather than feedback. Thomas Edison, in his own words regarding what it took to invent the light bulb, said “I have not failed. I’ve just found 10,000 ways that won’t work.”
Are you determined to shine brighter and fly higher? Man first achieved controlled flight on December 17th, 1903, and just 66 years later walked on the moon.
Are you shooting for the moon? If not, why not?
Consider embracing more fully each New Day, creating, experimenting, trying new approaches, knowing that you can shift and change as circumstances necessitate. You can make today great - so get after it. Make each day great and you'll make the weeks, months, and the year great, your Best Year Ever!
Keep your Why before you, it will guide you and more effectively answer your "what's" and "how's."
Don't choose a Why to prove that you're enough, choose a Why from the knowing that you are enough, more than enough, for a time such as this - to serve and be served as you become all-the-more through concerted effort. Be on purpose to make a difference in the lives of others. Gifts received are enlarged when given to others. And know that your gifts flower best when you put yourself to the test. Create a better world for others and watch your world improve. Collaborate with like-minded people, reaping greater possibilities together. When your alarm awakes, embrace your day like it is your last - your BEST DAY EVER!!
Make it a great week!
Steve Luckenbach