Get your life in motion

August 1, 2012 — 3 Comments

1373437_43152598

Newton’s First Law of Motion states that an object in motion will stay in motion and an object at rest will stay at rest, unless acted on by an outside force. That’s true about objects and people.

If your life is paused while you wait for whatever is next, it will remain paused unless an external force is applied. In our lives, this might be called motivation. Without it, we will keep reliving the present. With it, we can accomplish things we never thought possible. The choice is ours.

Why would anyone resist the motivation to pursue the best possible path toward the future? Fear. Complacency. Laziness. When we predetermine a course of action, we will create a rationale that supports it. Even the most ridiculous excuses begin to make sense.

The first step toward pursuing your why is mustering up the motivation to go for it. Some will doubt you. Some will discourage you. Some will try to convince you that a lesser goal is more attainable, and therefore, preferred.

In a society in which everyone gets a trophy, the goals are often lowered and mediocrity becomes the norm. You might have been in a class where the teacher graded on a curve. That system rewards mediocrity and pressures those who are excellent to aim low.

We’ve carried the grading on a curve mentality into other aspects of life. Excellence has been redefined in terms that used to refer to average. Those who dare to pursue true excellence will face self-inflicted objections as well as resistance from the outside.

We can’t allow ourselves to accept average as excellent. We must reclaim a vision for our lives and see our potential from the viewpoint of our Creator. We were created to leave a mark on the world, but not a pencil mark that is easily erased. Think about it!

What mark do you want your life to make? What are you doing to pursue your why?

Live Your Why is now available from the Live Your Why store. This 160-page book (including the Discovery Guide) will walk you through a process that will help you identify your purpose in life and then set out to live it. If you are tired of mediocrity, Live Your Why is the place to start! Click here for more information.

  • Dwayne

    Excellent post this morning! Thanks for giving me such much needed motivation to keep pursuing the prize!

    • http://www.liveyourwhy.net/ Terry Hadaway

       Thanks, Dwayne. I’m glad these posts are helpful. They certainly speak to me as I’m writing them!

  • http://www.facebook.com/meg.renicker Meg Renicker

    Hye Terry,
    I’m sorry I haven’t written for a few days, I see that I have won a book.  Thank you very much.  I can’t open any comments, can’t see any of your replies to me.  There is a new format in this comments part that is very difficult to read and I get confused, not to mention the frustration.  I don’t know if you can see my email address: WordsLetters@ymail.com if there is anything you need or want to send me a reply to a comment I leave.  I really do enjoy your column and know that its just that there are “technical difficulties” (don’tcha hate that term??) going on that are complicating things.  What am I doing to pursue my why?  (it won’t let me make new paragraphs, sorry) I am really focusing on how to learn to finish projects, ha! even dishes some days for that matter.  I used to do things differently, but since having a breakdown and being on that road to recovery, I now seem to struggle with taking most things to completion, finding no reason to move on in life. So, I guess my hunt for the ways to take things to completion is what I do to pursue my Why at this time.