Showing posts with label motivation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label motivation. Show all posts

Monday, 20 March 2017

Winning the War Against Complacency

When I sat down with our cover guy, Jocko Willink, to interview him for the SUCCESS Talks podcast, I started with an icebreaker. He had just finished a photo shoot managed by our art director, Amy McMurry, and I asked how it went. I told him that I hoped he enjoyed it and that, most importantly, I hoped he was able to stay on Amy’s good side, because she’s a brawler.
Now Amy is decidedly not a brawler. She’s about 5-foot-2 and tiny, a mother of two kids and the sweetest person you’ll ever meet. The irony was obvious. Jocko—a physical beast who would be the world’s greatest bouncer were it not for a higher calling—got the irony. But he didn’t have time for courtesy laughter. He didn’t even respond. It was obvious he didn’t care for games and formalities. Not being a brawler myself, I quickly got started with the interview.

Lessons on willpower, grit, self-motivation and leadership run throughout this, The Toughness Issue of SUCCESS.


This guy is different, I thought. He’s not just some author or speaker, although he’s both of those things. He’s so much more, though. He actually lives the lessons he teaches. Serving in the Navy SEALs for more than 20 years, Willink justifiably could be called one of the greatest warriors to ever live, and he brings the same unbreakable determination needed on the battlefield to his everyday life. He fights to be his best self. He’s not battling the mujahedeen or Iraqi insurgents anymore. Today his opponents are things like shortcuts, temptation and complacency.
And he’s pretty clearly winning the war. It’s such a massacre, in fact, that we wanted to share his personal methods and mindset to help in your own war against the obstacles to the life you want. Lessons on willpower, grit, self-motivation and leadership run throughout this, The Toughness Issue of SUCCESS.
Alongside Jocko we profile one of the world’s most rugged athletes, the boldest cowboy in professional bull riding. We sent Associate Editor Jamie Friedlander to the streets of Chicago to meet people living amid the worst violence in our country and making it their daily purpose to stop the shootings. There are guides for maximizing your mental toughness so you can crush any challenge that comes along, and for getting the most out of your team, even when it means you have to be a firm leader. And be sure to read the story of Managing Editor Jesus Jimenez tackling the most ambitious goal of his life, only to realize it’s not the goal that propelled him but the propulsion itself.
We always encourage you to be thankful for what you have and to enjoy each moment. Spring is a time of renewal—of stopping and smelling the flowers. But this month we’re challenging you to take a hard look at the whole garden. To put in the sweaty, aching work of pulling the weeds. And to plant more flowers.
A lot of hard work went into this month’s magazine. But that has only made us better and more energized for the next one. When you finish this issue and turn your attention to the battles to come, we think you’ll feel the same way.

Friday, 3 February 2017

Quiz: Are You Tough Enough?

Can you handle the stress, freedom, lack of structure, uncertainty and opportunity that awaits if you decide to start your own business? This really can't be stressed enough. Although there is no doubt that being in business for yourself can be great, but if you aren’t temperamentally cut out for it, it’s going to be a tough road. There is no shame in this. Some people are artists and others are lawyers; some are vagabonds while others are homebodies; some are entrepreneurs and others are not.
Take the following quiz to help you evaluate your qualifications. The important thing to remember as you take the quiz is to be perfectly honest with yourself. Not only should this quiz help you understand your entrepreneurship IQ, but it should equally give you some insight into the traits and characteristics of the prototypical entrepreneur. Just remember, the path to success isn’t a straight line; it’s whichever line is best for you.