Monday, May 31, 2010

Are You Limiting Your Potential?

Do you have a clear vision for your professional success? A vision is a thing or idea perceived vividly in the imagination. It answers the question, “What would it look like if I achieved my purpose and my specific goals?”

It’s not unusual to limit our personal vision with negative thoughts or scarcity thinking. To see if you have this tendency, see how many of the following thoughts you find yourself holding from time to time.
• I can’t have what I want.
• I want what someone else wants.
• It doesn’t matter what I want; I can’t have it.
• I’m not smart enough (or educated enough).
• I don’t have enough money (or time).
• I’m too old (or too young).
• I’m not tall enough, thin enough, good-looking enough, talented enough…
• My spouse (partner, boss, kids, parents, etc.) won’t let me.
• I am afraid of what I want.
• I don’t know what I want.
• I know what I want, but I can’t have it at work.
• I have what I want, so what?

Did you see yourself in any of these statements? Perhaps you hold a limiting belief not listed here. Whatever the thought may be, take a moment now to examine it. Let’s assume your “limitation” is a fact, such as age. What if you’re over 60? Can you think of anyone over the age of 60 who achieved a vision? Of course! The very first hit of a Google search listed the following achievers over the age of 60: Ronald Reagan, Sam Snead, Gandhi, William Jennings Bryan, Benjamin Franklin, Frank McCourt, Leonardo da Vinci, Leo Tolstoy, Michelangelo, and Winston Churchill. How about not having enough money or time? When you really think about it, I’m sure you’ll be able to think of at least one person who overcame similar circumstances.

A number of the limiting thoughts are attitudes, not unchangeable facts. You could face your fears, risk disappointing your spouse, determine what would make your heart soar, and even change jobs, if you wanted to badly enough. In truth, most people let seeming limitations hold them back because it’s safer that way. If we don’t try, we don’t fail. As Confucius put it, “Our greatest glory is not in never falling, but in rising every time we fall.”

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