Only seeing the waves and not the Ocean.
I'm
back. I've have been on a writing hiatus since the start of the Open.
There's been a bunch of stuff lately that has been pushing me to start
writing about perspective. About avoiding the tendency to always looking
to the road ahead, and never looking how far you've come. It's so easy
to look at your goals and your expectations and become frustrated. Maybe
because you're not reaching them fast enough or you're not reaching
your expectations of yourself.
Like
I said this subject kept popping up as if I needed to talk about it.
This started with a conversation I had with Little. We were talking
about how long she has been doing CrossFit for and when she started.
Funny enough she started 5 years ago right around the Open. Little
recalled watching people doing the Open work outs and she thought to
herself "I'll never be that strong." Fast forward 5 years to present
day, I dare to say Little is stronger, faster and more powerful then she
ever thought she could be.
It's
so easy to get humbled in life, business, work, CrossFit and in
everything. But a little perspective goes a long way. Michele just
posted a Time Hop picture of the old gym on Facebook and it instantly
brought me back to where it all started and how far the gym has come.
It's funny to me because often in this world with Instagram, Facebook
and Twitter it's so easy to think the grass is always greener on the
other side. On social media no one or very few people show themselves
making a mistake or messing up. For the most part people only post and
show the best parts of their lives on Social Media, the exotic vacation
they took, their chiseled 6 pack abs or their PR lifts.
It's
so easy to look on social media at someone else's life and start
comparing yourself to them. Doing this makes you ignore or forget how
far YOU'VE come and what YOU'VE accomplished. When I first started at
CFGR we had zero members. Not a single member. I spent the first couple
weeks or months sitting and waiting like a lost puppy waiting for
someone to show up. It's so easy to look at what we don't have, when we
should spend some time looking at we do have and what we have
accomplished. Take a minute to slow down, look around in your life and
appreciate where you are and where you came from. In fact do it right
now. Stop what you're doing and think about where you were 5 years
ago. Seriously. Stop reading this and think about it... Take the time
to appreciate what you've done.
To
help get this perspective find an old training log and look through it
at the weights you lifted 5 years ago. Look back at your picture of what
you looked like 5 years ago. Look back at what school you were in or
what job you had 5 years ago or what your kids were doing 5 years ago.
Don't forget how far you've come! Now that you've gained that
perspective and appreciation, realize how far you've come and let
yourself live in that moment. Enjoy this moment, right now this very
second. Enjoy it and be thankful. Seriously stop right now and enjoy it
and be thankful...................................
Great!
Now you know how far you've come. Don't be satisfied with it. You now
know how far you can go so keep pushing. Think how far you can be in
another 5 years if you just keep staying after it. We all face set
backs, but those are only small hiccups in a longer journey. Keep
pushing, keep going and every once in a while take some perspective.
Reflect and enjoy what you've accomplished. Don't focus on what other
people are doing or compare yourself to other people.
On
the subject of talking about where the gym has come and our journey,
I'm going to be doing an interview/conversation with Austin Mariglia on
his Facebook page, about the gym, coming up on March 24th. I'll post
more info soon about the interview/conversation.
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