Building Your Life’s Path Takes Structure, Vision and Patience
Have you asked yourself the tombstone question? The yellow brick road is a path to so much more than just work success. Is the one you’re following leading you to fulfillment in every aspect of your life?
What do I want my path to look like when it’s all over, and why?
This is the question that’s been at the forefront of my thoughts and reflection recently.
Here are the answers I’ve been seeking:
Thoughtful answers to these questions aren’t something you write off-the-cuff. This is a heavy ask, and it’s nearly impossible to get right without putting in a ton of emotional and cognitive effort.
I’ve pondered this extensively, and know these answers aren’t set in stone. This will be a living document I hold in my mind every day for the rest of my life.
WHAT LINES DO YOU WANT TO BE CARVED ON YOUR TOMBSTONE?
For the person I am today, these are the lines I’d want carved on my tombstone:
“Bryan crafted a his own unique pathway in this world.?He dedicated his life to helping others do the same.”?
I want this to be my legacy. I hope the people at my funeral echo this same sentiment.
How did I come to this conclusion, you might ask?
How do you do it for yourself?
I know the prospect is daunting, so the easiest way I found was to define my pathways that lead to?belonging.
For me, this all goes back to one of the most important lessons I’ve ever learned. It’s probably not somewhere you’d expect:
High school basketball.
THE CHILDHOOD GAME THAT IS STILL TEACHING ME
When I was in middle school, I felt like my whole life depended on making the freshman?basketball?team when I started high school. At the time, basketball was an outlet for me that extended far beyond the sport itself.
Basketball was a place where I could find progression in and build great friendships. It was a community I wanted to belong to, and a place where I could feel like I belonged.
I trained every day to improve my game, practicing as much as I could independently, and testing those skills in scrimmages. Being on the basketball team felt like the best path to pursue in high school.
There was just one problem. When I brought my hours of hard work to the court, where it counted the most, my progress seemed to vanish. As I endlessly replayed every misstep, mistouch, and every other mistake you can think of, my confidence evaporated.
I could envision myself making the team so vividly, but I had neither the structure nor patience to get me there.
Why?did I stop “being Bryan” the moment I stepped on the court?
Why?did I lose myself the second a game started?
Why?couldn’t I ever perform to the best of my ability during games?
What was I so afraid of?
Before I could block shots, I had to find what was blocking?me.
My mother saw the depths of this inner struggle, and decided it was time we found a sports performance coach. Dr.?Neal Bowes?described what lay at the core of all my problems on the court. I vividly remember him saying,
“Bryan, your confidence is like the water in an open water bottle. When you play a bad game, all the water flies out, and it’s depleted.”
Imagine this image for your goals in life and the set of paths you’re pursuing that will make you finally feel like you belong. You make great progress, set a direction, and then suddenly have a misstep. You lose all of your confidence in one fell swoop. Your momentum is crushed under the force of pressure. All this effort and achievement seem to crumble, and you find yourself having to turn around and start from empty.
Constant depletion can never build consistent, sustainable high performance. After our first meeting, Neal thought he could help me. I immediately trusted that he could, too.
Dr. Neal went on to share how Olympic athletes perform at a high level so consistently by building their foundation on a variety of water bottles (as their tombstone might say, Olympic Gold Medalist).
Each water bottle represents a different foundation with goals, systems, measurements, and skill-sets required.
Each foundation represented a different aspect of both the game and also my life at the time.
Here are mine, for context:
In combination, these foundations, daily habits, and systems helped me achieve peak performance consistently, game-in and game-out. Even though some games are never going to be as good as others, I finally understood the process that went into a good one.
Reviewing my performance taught me how to tweak the systems in each foundation. For continuous improvement, I steadily build upon them all, one by one.
All these water bottles contain the processes, tools, and tactics I need to fully succeed, find belonging, and stand out on my own terms. These lessons empower me to live the life I want, and I learned them all? through a high school sport.
APPLYING CONSISTENCY EVERYDAY
What does a meaningful life look like to you? It all starts with forethought, intentionality, and reflection on where you have been.
The “Tombstone answer” is built on the foundation of crafting a pathway to belonging. How will you fill the right “water bottles,” and what systems and processes will that require?
The water bottles I’ve defined that make up?my life?for?me?include the following:
Remember, these tombstone lines might be different for?you. If that is the case, you’ll need different tactics and strategies to carve a path to get there.
The most important step is defining your tombstone [aka your purpose] as early as you can. Knowing where you want to end up, and how you want to be remembered, will help you create a life with more meaning and intentionality.
Choosing the Correct Water Bottles for You
After asking myself the hard questions, the answers gave me clues I could use to start working backward.
Ask yourself:
1. A Father and Husband My Family Can always Rely On
Why I Care:?To me, a successful life stems beyond work. Work helps lay the foundation to set up a successful personal life and is why I’ve put more of a focus on it earlier in life.
How I’ll Become This Person:?Personally,? I’ve always felt like if I could put in the right habits first with work, and get aligned professionally, it would be easier to build a family on top of that than going in the reverse order. This strategy and sequence will enable me to be a better guide for my future children as I help them chart their own path forward.
2. A Leader & Executor of Ideas that Transcend My Inner Orbit to Reach People and Resonate
Why I Care:?I come alive and feel like I belong in the world when I am pursuing the ideas that matter most to me within my career.
How I’ll Become This Person:?To continue feeling this way, I need to keep building paths that push my ideas forward while helping others do the same.
3. A Person Who Realizes Strong and Sustainable Health Make His Goals Attainable
Why I Care:?I realize I can’t walk down the paths for myself that make me feel like I belong without sustainable health.
How I’ll Become This Person:?Eating, nutrition, exercise, sleep are the bedrock for achieving the other goals of my life.
4. A Person Who Learns About the World by Furthering His Education and Interests
Why I Care:?In my 30 years on earth, I’ve learned that being well-rounded is paramount. It’s easy to get more stuck/focused on one water bottle.
How I’ll Become This Person:?Learning new things about the world around me will help me become more dynamic and relatable in conversations.
Here are just a few ways I plan to do so:
With aspirations I have, walking into a lot of different environments, being able to talk about things outside of work will be fundamental.
5: A Person Who Has Strong Financial Systems
Why I Care:?Without the means to support my vision, the way I show up in the world won’t align.
How I’ll Become This Person:?To support my family, business dreams, health, and learning experiences, it will be incredibly important to set myself up financially to have the means to support these endeavors.
No one’s path forward in life is one-dimensional. I never focus on just one water bottle at a time. I define all the bottles early that allow me to belong on my path, then pick a focus within one. At any given time, I prioritize some of the bottles over the others and tweak my focus along the way by using the right systems and processes.
What Does This Look Like in Action?
Let me create 1 of these “Bottles” for a second…
Health: I want to be remembered as a person who realized strong and sustainable health made his goals attainable. This has more practical guidance and value than you might think, and it sounds a lot like relationship advice.
Why this is important to me:?At the foundation of everything we do, our health is what takes us forward. After going through multiple injuries, it's no fun when you’re in pain. It takes the joy away from positive experiences, it creates angst, worry, and more. To live life and be strong and healthy supports the mind beyond measure.
Structurally, I consider:
Skillsets Required:
From there, I reflect on my life and begin thinking about some of these questions within this bucket more deeply.
There’s no perfect way to do this, but here are the most important steps:
Why Does all of This Matter?
Ultimately, when you get really clear on the tombstone question, I’ve found it becomes easier to understand the path you want to take in life and why you’re on it. Prioritizing the areas I deemed worthwhile will help me belong in the world.
When it’s all said and done, I hope people at my funeral will echo the same verse that’s inscribed across my tombstone.
Events @ OpenAI
10 个月Thanks for sharing!
I empower authentic relationships & deeper connection at work & in life.
10 个月?? beautiful share Bryan. I always loved this quote by David Willis. It takes a lot of intentionality to cultivate thriving relationships. I’m curious, what do your reflections on a system to have the high quality relationships you desire looks like?
Driving Strategic Growth for Mission-Minded Companies | VP of Growth @ Hatch for Hunger
10 个月Great read Brian! Love it
Where Human Connection Meets Human Capital.
10 个月Good stuff. Your Arc is becoming self apparent.