“Enthusiasm releases the
drive to carry you over obstacles and adds significance to all you do.”
Norman Vincent Peale
I’ve
been thinking . . . about inventing a passion injection. I’m not kidding. I’ve encountered so many people with an
apathetic, poor me, life’s the pits mentality that siphons the energy out of
others at an alarming rate.
There
has to be a solution.
President
Ronald Reagan told the story of a little boy who had reached school age. His mother worked very hard to get him
enthusiastic about the idea by buying him his favorite new tennis shoes,
telling him about all the new friends he would make, and the great teacher he
was going to have. He was excited as he
left for school on the first day and came home with reports that lived up to
everything mom said it would be.
The
next morning his mother went into the bedroom to wake him up. Struggling to open his eyes, the little boy
drearily responded, “What for?” Mom
replied, “You’ve got to go to school.”
The little boy said, “What, again?”
Life
is like that sometimes. We get ourselves
up for the big event only to realize we have to do it again tomorrow. Somebody once said the only problem with life
is that it is so daily.
People
who live lives infused with passion realize it is a perpetual lifestyle. Enthusiasm isn’t something you get yourself
up for and then its over. A passionate
life is lived by passionate people.
Napoleon Hill asserted that “Enthusiasm is the radio wave by which you
transmit your personality to others.” I
like that.
While
researching over 500 top performers from all areas of work, the arts and
sports, Robert Kriegel concluded: “No two were alike, but the one quality they
had in common was passion! It was their
drive, their enthusiasm, their desire that distinguished them.”
Kriegel
went on to say that, “Passion kindles a spark that inspires you and others
around you to greater heights.” You
can’t put life into your living if you’re living with a lukewarm heart. Excitement for learning, a desire to grow, a
willingness to try new things, creating lofty dreams, energizing talents and a
positive outlook are all important for putting vitality back in life.
Enthusiasm
is a mystery to many people. It’s
perceived as this mystical quality possessed by people who jump up and down,
talk loud, or have a curious grin pasted on their face. Enthusiasm is simply the psychological
adrenaline that makes the difference between going through the motions of
existing or really living.
The
word enthusiasm has very little to do with a showy outward display but is
created by an inner exuberance. That’s
probably why Eleanor Roosevelt believed, “Age wrinkles the skin, but to lose
your enthusiasm wrinkles the soul.”
Think
about this. The furnace in our home is
powered by natural gas. During the
winter season, a pilot light is always burning low, ready to ignite the flame
that will produce the necessary heat to warm our home. So it is with enthusiasm. The power is inside ready to be ignited when
life’s situations call for it. It’s your
job to light the inner fire. But how?
I’ve
watched enthusiastic people maintain their inner exuberance day in and day out
with unwavering commitment. I believe
the primary reason for their consistency is the choice they make to be
enthusiastic. That may sound simplistic,
but it’s true. You become enthusiastic
by deciding to.
I
firmly believe with William Arthur Ward that, “Enthusiasm and persistence can
make an average person superior; indifference and lethargy can make a superior
person average.”
Here’s
a few practical ways to infuse your life with passion:
- Approach
every day, routine task, or common experience with the gusto you would if
it was your first time. Wake up
every morning with a mind set that this will be a great day filled with
opportunities and challenges I’m prepared to meet.
- As you
approach your job, be motivated by the cause you believe in rather than
the monthly paycheck. You can never
excel at something that you don’t passionately care about. Involve yourself in work that inspires you
to become “constructively obsessed.”
- Light your
own fire. Be self-motivated. Smile enthusiastically. Walk enthusiastically. Talk enthusiastically. Incorporate words like “fantastic”, “terrific”,
and “exciting” into your vocabulary.
Act as if you’re enthusiastic.
Even if you don’t feel enthusiastic this very moment, fake it with
your actions and you’ll begin to feel the emotion.
- Exceed
yesterday’s performance today.
Never be content with “good enough”. Strive for excellence. Henry Ford once said, “You can do
anything if you have enthusiasm.
Enthusiasm is the spark in your eye, the swing in your gait, the
grip of your hand, the irresistible surge of your will, and energy to
execute your ideas. Enthusiasm is
at the bottom of all progress! With
it, there is accomplishment.
Without it, there are only alibis.”
- Make your
work fun rather than an obligation.
Seek out ways to add fun into your work or find a way to have fun
doing what you’re doing. Laugh.
- Be committed
to set an enthusiastic example for others.
Don’t wait for others. Be
the most enthusiastic person you know.
You can never expect a fire in others unless it is burning within
you. I love John Wesley’s
approach: “I set myself on fire and
people come to watch me burn.”
- Anticipate,
accept, even welcome change as an opportunity to grow and draw upon your
internal flame to go beyond where you are.
Loosen the limits of your comfort zone thinking and explore the
adventure change introduces.
- Open your
mind. Don’t get stuck on today’s
problems with yesterday’s solutions.
Raise your curiosity concerning what might be and be willing to try
new methods to deal with nagging issues.
Develop a “whatever it takes” approach and accept responsibility
for the outcomes.
- Make it an
ongoing mission to draw the best out of others. Believe in people and their
potential. “There is an energy
field between humans,” wrote Rollo May.
“And, when a person reaches out in passion, it is usually met with
an answering passion.”
- View
mistakes and failures as temporary setbacks and stepping stones to future
success. People with passion
continue to pursue their dreams when others give up. Their commitment and dedication provide
unstoppable energy even when the odds are against them. Obstacles and hurdles are actually used
to propel them forward rather than set them back.
Philosopher
Soren Kierkegaard believed, “This age will die, not from sin, but from lack of
passion.” Helen Keller observed, “Science
may have found a cure for most evils; but it has found no remedy for the worst
of them all - the apathy of human beings.”
Our
generation needs a renewed passion. We
need to insure the pilot is burning and ready to ignite the flames of
enthusiasm. As the Italian poet Dante so
aptly said, “A mighty flame followeth a tiny spark.”
Think
of three things that ignite your passion.
How can you get that same level of excitement in other areas of your
life? Determine what adds spark to your
daily living and keep those fires burning.
There are many things in life that will catch your attention, but it’s
more important to find the few things that will capture your heart and ignite
your passion.
Infuse
your life with passion!
“If there is no passion in
your life, then have you really lived?
Find your passion, whatever it may be.
Become it, and let it become you and you will find great things happen
FOR you, TO you and BECAUSE of you.”
T. Alan Armstrong
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