Turn problems into a process to pleasure
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Turn problems into a process to pleasure

“Everyone has a plan ’till they get punched in the mouth.”?Mike Tyson

I don’t know about you, but everyday I have a plan to be productive, and every day that plan goes tits up.

I think the phrase ‘Man plans and God laughs’ is so apt.

Yesterday I wanted to edit a massive 110 000-word text for a client when I got a message from a client who needed something to be fixed on her website. Since she is one of my favourite clients, I was loathe to say no to her request. The edit had to wait.

God 1 : Jacques 0

If it’s not a website, it’s a burst geyser, an unpaid fine, a licence that has to be updated, children that have to be picked up from school or something mundane that can scupper the ship. I don’t know if you have the same?problems?with the?banal?and mundane as I do?

It occurs to me that we are beset with problems every day. Big ones and?small?ones. All of them distract us from our mission.

Here’s a thought (,,-`_●-)

  • What if problems are the mission?
  • What if problems are part of the process to?shape?us into the humans we are meant to become?
  • What if there’s a grand design, and problems are part of that design?

How can we reframe problems so that they become part of the process to attaining pleasure? I don’t know, but let me give it a shot.

You’ve probably heard about this thing called dopamine that the hedonist engineers tout as the pleasure and reward chemical.

I think it is a klomp kak, but who can argue with the science. Seriously, who gets excited by someone liking your post on Facebook or goes into a depression if they don’t? Who cares how many followers you have, unless you’re a modern-day snake oil salesperson called an?influencer.

  • Let’s say that it’s true … that our ego, pleasure and happiness hinges on whether someone likes the mind-numbing minutiae that we put out into the world.
  • Let’s say that it’s true, that we like giving away our power to others to make us feel complete.
  • Let’s say it’s true that we are slaves to our hedonistic nature.

If we see these as truths, then let’s not waste our dopamine on inconsequential small hits of pleasure. Let’s save it for a big win.

I don’t know about you, but being in pleasure all the time is its own pain. If you’re in paradise every waking second, how can you possibly appreciate it?

Perhaps you will think that I’m a masochist for saying this, but I like a bit of struggle, failure and pain … it makes the achievement so much sweeter, and the dopamine hit so much better.

“Do not pray for an easy life, pray for the strength?to endure a difficult one.”?Bruce Lee

I prefer to gnaw on something and work through it and come up with a solution. That gives me satisfaction. I don’t like things handed to be on a plate. That?feels?like cheating. In case you think I’m being sanctimonious, I have had lots of things handed to me on a plate. I have been given more than is my due and have been blessed beyond my wildest expectations. On the face of it, it should make me happy when things are easy. It doesn’t.

I feel?cheated?that I didn’t have the opportunity to do it for myself.

That’s why I’ve become (even more) selfish these days and I turn problems into projects.

The pleasure is in the doing, not in the result. For me the dopamine hit comes from the doing and finishing (the result is?irrelevant?[to pleasure]).

You know as well as I do, that achieving a result is not all it’s cut out to be, is it? When we achieve a goal, it doesn’t always give us that elated feeling does it? Achievement doesn’t always play out how we want it to. Sometimes it leaves us disillusioned and disappointed because it didn’t quite turn out how we wanted it to.

And worse, sometimes our victories are pyrrhic. For example, we may achieve financial success but lose our family in the process (I pray that you’re not in that hell).

So we strive for the next goal and the next and the next trying to fill that hole in our heart called insecurity. The more we strive for security the more we become insecure.

It took me a while to assimilate that one into my psyche. The more stuff we have the more insecure we feel because we could lose it. I think that Covid has highlighted this in a macabrely, merciless and magnificent way.

I’m going to go all Dr. Phil on your ass and ask you, “How’s that working out for you?” That marriage, those children, that job and this life? If you’re like most of us, they’re a total bloody mess of disillusionment and disappointment, aren’t they? The things that we strive for and think are important, are?generally?not.

“All paths lead to nowhere … so find a path with heart.”?Carlos Castaneda

If you’re like me:?God 11 : Jacques 0, then things are working out just as they should because ultimately it is not really in my control.

The only thing in my control is to turn a problem into a project, and to work through it. I may achieve the result (I think) I want, or I may not … it’s all good.

Let me leave you with this. If you have problems it means that you are still alive, doesn’t it? That’s a good thing, isn’t it? Some have already been called home, perhaps too early for our liking. Their opportunity to live a blessed life of problems is over. Hopefully, they’re reaping every blessing on the other side. One day we’ll be called home and our problems will be over. But in the meantime, let’s be in awe and gratitude that we still have an opportunity to experience problems, fuck up, fail, live and love.

God 12 : Jacques 0

You’re the job. Make it a good one.

PS.?“A path is only a path, and there is no affront, to oneself or to others, in dropping it if that is what your heart tells you.” Carlos Castaneda

Tim Wagner

International Speaker | Transpirational? Coach | Stress Release | Embrace Burnout

1 年

I love your dynamic of changing the paradigm around to problems and your mission. I love looking at the unwanted as signs - a sign that I am perhaps going the wrong way, the universe is speaking to me and I need to listen. Yes - slow down before reacting. Then ask the question "why has this XYZ been presented to me?" Trust your gut and go with the flow of the new direction that it may be leading you in.

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Dawn Klatzko

Brand Builder Coach | Master Trainer Mind Dynamix | Holding up the ladder for women in business | Entrepreneurial Mindset Profile Practitioner

1 年

Nice to see Woody in action! ??

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Kim Vermaak

The Mindset Whisperer | Helping Coaches, Executives & Speakers Conquer the Fear of Writing to Build Their Legacy | Book Coach | Author | Speaker on Storytelling & Leadership Engagement

1 年

I had to laugh at the headline, “Everyone has a plan until you get punched in the mouth.” But it is so true. When we look back at all our struggles, we see a story unfold. One that shapes us and turns us into the best versions of ourselves, if we approach it with a grateful heart.

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Daniélle Hayward (Kleyn)

Contract & Compliance Specialist. E-Book Author. BCom Law/LLB Graduate. Podcast Host. Anti Gender Based Violence Activist.

1 年

Mike Tyson's quote about everyone having a plan until they get punched in the mouth resonates with the unpredictable nature of life. It's in those moments when our well-laid plans go awry that we truly test our resilience and adaptability.

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Yoke Van Dam

I help leaders step into their executive presence and lead their teams with integrity. I help disconnected teams to find their flow again. Kintsugi Queen ?-Leadership and team transformation specialist

1 年

It's makes me think of Daniel Kahneman's book that says slow down, think slow. Don't react, choose a different response. Turn that problem into a project. I was looking for that Mike Tyson quote thanks for sharing it, a boxer is the ultimate example of resilience getting up and going.

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