Pat's POV: February 2012 |
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The
Beauty of Discipline
I
have to admit, I’ve always hated discipline.
But
at an early age my dad told me that discipline was key to success in life, and
because I could see implicitly that he was right, I practiced discipline
diligently in just about everything I undertook, from sports to school to
work.
Looking
back I can’t deny that discipline was critical in everything I did well (as well
as the culprit in everything that I didn’t do so well). I can say without doubt
that my dad was right, that taking extra steps to do things the right way, again
and again, really is key to success.
But
there was a problem.
See,
in my mind, the ultimate reward for years of discipline would be the arrival of
the day when I could discard it. Someday, I promised myself, I would be
successful enough to live a discipline-free life, to do whatever I wanted,
whenever I wanted. No two days would be the same, and no one would be able to
expect anything of me that I didn’t feel like doing. That would, in fact, be the
definition of success.
I
don’t think I’m terribly different from many entrepreneurs and leaders out
there. Though we all understand the importance of hard work and diligence in
meeting our daily responsibilities, many of us quietly yearn for the day when
our businesses will be in a place where we can be spontaneous and free, where we
can choose how to spend our time depending on what we feel like doing at any
given moment, on any given day.
Well,
things don’t always turn out the way we think they will. For me there were two
flaws in my thinking:
First,
when it comes to having a family, freedom and spontaneity are really rare. There
always seems to be an appointment, a game, a recital or a family activity to
attend when you’re a parent or a spouse. And on that day when there are no
activities, there’s usually an illness or an unexpected emergency.
But
even if my home life was out of my control, I vowed to find a way to be
discipline-free at work. That meant that whenever I wasn’t working with a
client, writing a book or traveling to give a talk, I would free myself from
time commitments and responsibilities that I didn’t enjoy. I would go to the
office and bounce from one conversation to another based on whatever whims moved
me that day or that hour. I would be as free from discipline as I had ever been
in my life.
Well,
to a certain extent, I was able to achieve that goal. And that’s when the second
flaw in my thinking became apparent: freedom from discipline left me feeling
empty.
Not
only did my productivity diminish – which wasn’t a total shock – but something
else happened that surprised me. I came to dread any activity, even relatively
enjoyable ones, which prevented me from exercising “freedom.” I found that even
though my days began with the promise of spontaneous creativity, they almost
always ended with a sense of sluggish disappointment. I’d drive home feeling
like a conscientious seventh grader who had spent his entire weekend playing
video games. Aimless. Wasteful. A little ashamed.
In
a very limited way, I think I caught a glimpse of what it must be like for
professional athletes and famous actors who, when they’re between projects or
seasons, have so much freedom in their lives and still seem unhappy. There is
just something ultimately lonely and unfulfilling about not having any clear
responsibilities, even if those responsibilities aren’t exactly stimulating.
And
there is a point here for leaders and managers who, like me, often dread having
to live more structured, disciplined lives than we think we want. After having
indulged my life-long desire for freedom, I am now a reformed advocate of
discipline, not just because it works, but because it has its own rewards.
Don’t
get me wrong. I still greatly appreciate and understand the need for occasional
freedom and unstructured time. We all need that. But I have to admit that I
didn’t realize that freedom becomes its own kind of prison without a general
sense of structure and limits. By embracing the need for discipline in our
lives, at work and at home, we receive a sense of peace and humility that is far
better than freedom. And ironically, it makes occasional opportunities for
freedom much more enjoyable.
And
so, I would like to take this opportunity to thank my wife and my children for
filling my world with so many to-dos, which I probably never would have chosen
for myself, thereby preventing me from the misery of too much freedom at home.
And I’d like to apologize to my colleagues for tolerating my random
interruptions during my prolonged period of adolescent rebellion. I guess it’s
better to learn something at age 46 than never at all.
Yours,
Link to Vertical Response SaraHHouse365 | 10 Virtues of a Proverbs 31 Woman SaraHHouse365 | How to Discipline Children SaraHHouse365 | Discipline |
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
The Beauty of Discipline
My brother sent me in in an email. It had me from the first line, "I have to admit, I've always hated discipline." It was great to be reminded how important discipline is and how we need it in our lives.
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