How to Stay Focused When You Get Bored Working Toward Your Goals
How to Stay Focused When You Get Bored Working Toward Your Goals
by James Clear
Read this post on JamesClear.com
by James Clear
Read this post on JamesClear.com
We all have goals and dreams, but it can be
difficult to stick with them.
Each week, I hear from people who say things like,
“I start with good intentions, but I can’t seem to maintain my consistency for
a long period of time.”
Or, they will say, “I struggle with mental
endurance. I get started but I can’t seem to follow through and stay focused
for very long.”
Don’t worry. I’m just as guilty of this as anyone
else.
For example, I’ll start one project, work on it for
a little bit, then lose focus and try something else. And then I’ll lose focus
on my new goal and try something else. And on and on. When everything is said
and done, I’ve stopped and started so many times that I never really made much
progress.
Maybe you have felt this way too.
This problem reminds me of a lesson I learned while
working out one day…
The Myth of
Passion and Motivation
On this particular day in the gym, there was a
coach visiting who had worked with thousands of athletes over the years,
including some nationally-ranked athletes and Olympians.
I had just finished my workout when I asked him,
“What’s the difference between the best athletes and everyone else. What do the
really successful people do that most people don’t?”
He briefly mentioned the things that you might
expect. Genetics. Luck. Talent.
But then he said something I wasn’t expecting.
“At some point,” he said, “it comes down to who can
handle the boredom of training every day and doing the same lifts over and over
and over again.”
That piece of advice surprised me because it’s a
different way of thinking about work ethic.
Most of the time people talk about getting
motivated and “amped up” to work on their goals. Whether it’s business or
sports or art, you will commonly hear people say things like, “it all comes
down to having enough passion.”
As a result, I think many people get depressed when
they lose focus or motivation because they think that successful people have
some unstoppable passion and willpower that they seem to be missing. But that’s
exactly the opposite of what this coach was saying.
Instead, he was saying that really successful
people feel the same boredom and the same lack of motivation that everyone else
feels. They don’t have some magic pill that makes them feel ready and inspired
every day. But the difference is that the people who stick with their goals
don’t let their emotions determine their actions. Top performers still find a
way to show up, to work through the boredom, and to embrace the daily practice
that is required to achieve their goals.
According to him, it’s this ability to do the work
when it’s not easy that separates the top performers from everyone else. That’s
the difference between professionals and
amateurs.
Working When
Work Isn’t Easy
Anyone can work hard when they feel motivated.
When I was an athlete, I loved going to practice
the week after a big win. Who wouldn’t? Your coach is happy, your teammates are
pumped up, and you feel like you can beat anyone. As an entrepreneur, I love
working when customers are rolling in and things are going well. Getting
results has a way of propelling you forward.
But what about when you’re bored? What about when
the work isn’t easy? What about when it feels like nobody is paying attention
or you’re not getting the results you want?
It’s the ability to work when work isn’t easy that
makes the difference.
It’s Not the
Event, It’s the Process
All too often, we think our goals are all about the
result. We see success as an event that can be achieved and completed.
Here are some common examples…
- Many people see health as an event: “If I just lose 20 pounds,
then I’ll be in shape.”
- Many people see entrepreneurship as an event: “If we could get our
business featured in the New York Times, then we’d be set.”
- Many people see art as an event: “If I could just get my work
featured in a bigger gallery, then I’d have the credibility I need.”
Those are just a few of the many ways that we
categorize success as a single event.
But if you look at the people who are consistently
achieving their goals, you start to realize that it’s not the events or the
results that make them different. It’s their commitment to the process. They
fall in love with the daily practice, not the individual event.
What’s funny, of course, is that this focus on the
process is what will allow you to enjoy the results anyway…
If you want
to be a great writer, then having
a best-selling book is wonderful. But the only way to reach that result is to
fall in love with the process of writing.
If you want
the world to know about your business, then it would be great to be featured in Forbes magazine.
But the only way to reach that result is to fall in love with the process of
marketing.
If you want
to be in the best shape of your life, then losing 20 pounds might be necessary. But the only way to reach
that result is to fall in love with the process of eating healthy and exercising
consistently.
If you want
to become significantly better at anything, you have to fall in love with the process of doing it. You have to fall
in love with building the identity of someone who does the work, rather than merely dreaming about the results that you want.
In other words…
Fall in love with boredom. Fall in love with
repetition and practice. Fall in love with the process of what you do and let
the results take care of themselves.
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