what are you doing with your risk?
our fear of taking risks is a killer. it kills dreams. it kills hopes. it kills expectations. and, ultimately, it kills true happiness. so here’s another post on why you should learn to love to take risks, right? wrong. the answer does not lie in learning to love risk but rather in changing what we do with the identified risks instead. what do i mean? our typical thought process probably goes something like this:
- step 1: dream/imagine/hope/believe
- step 2: contemplate the risk associated with those dreams
- step 3: eliminate the dream because it’s too risky
in this case, “what we do” with risk is use it as a reason not to pursue our dreams (find true love, start your own company, write a book, etc). but what if you do something different with the risk you uncover? what if, instead of using risk to eliminate the dream, you eliminate risk in order to accomplish the dream. our revised process would look something like this:
- step 1: dream
- step 2: contemplate the risk associated with those dreams
- step 3: eliminate the major risks that will prevent the dream from becoming a reality
what does eliminating risk while keeping the dream look like? it’s the philosophy behind most entrepreneurs; it’s what they focus on everyday when they go into the office. it’s what phillipe petit did when he perfected his craft over the course of decades before he chose to walk a tight rope from one twin tower to the other. it’s what tiger woods, michael jordon, lebron james and any other superstar athlete you can name does when they practice the same shot over and over again until it becomes automatic.
the truth is, very few people love risk and you don’t have to be one of the few. the secret is in focusing on ways to eliminate risk that could stand in your way. what things are you doing today to eliminate potential risk involved with pursuing your dreams? are you getting that degree? are you meeting with the right people? are you saving money so that you can survive for a year without pay? leave your comment below…
- by detavio
- posted at 7:51 pm
- October 25, 2009