The Unseen Prison of Perpetual Preparation
Jennifer Amedorme
Business Executive| Engineering Infrastructure for Emerging Market Businesses | SME Scale Expert | PM| Writer| Neo-Generalist|
Mid-January 2025, and already the initial excitement of New Year resolutions is fading for many. But for you reading this – you who felt a shift in our last discussion about Identity Architecture – today we're addressing the elephant in the room: the trap that keeps brilliant minds stuck in cycles of 'almost' and 'soon.'
The most dangerous prison is one where you've convinced yourself the walls are necessary. In our communities, we've mastered the art of dignified survival. We wake up early, hustle harder, plan better, and yet – something still feels off. The survival trap isn't about lack of effort, you're evidently trying; it's about a mindset that's become too comfortable with scarcity thinking.
You see it in the way we plan our lives: "Let me first secure this before I can start that." "Let me save a bit more before I take that risk." "Let me wait for the perfect moment." These aren't just decisions; they're symptoms of a deeper condition – the survival trap that mistakes perpetual preparation for prudence.
Your mind has been running calculations you didn't authorize. Every time an opportunity presents itself, your survival algorithm kicks in: "What could go wrong?" "What if I lose what I have?" "Is this the right time?" These aren't rational analyses; they're reflexes born from generations of learned caution.
And the brutal math: while you're calculating risks, opportunities are calculating their next recipient. While you're preparing to be ready, someone else is learning through action. The real risk isn't in moving too soon – it's in waiting too long under the guise of being responsible.
The most cunning aspect of the survival trap is how it masquerades as wisdom. "Shouldn't we be careful in this economy?" "Isn't it smart to wait and see?" But the paradox is that the very actions that keep you safe are keeping you stuck. Your carefully constructed safety net has become a cage.
Think about the successful people you admire. Did they wait until conditions were perfect? Did they have guarantees before they started? No. They understood something crucial: in an imperfect economy, imperfect action beats perfect preparation every time.
Liberation begins with recognition. Start noticing your survival patterns: the automatic 'no' to opportunities, the instinctive retreat to comfort zones, the habitual postponement of dreams. These aren't character flaws; they're learned behaviors that can be unlearned.
Your first task isn't to leap blindly – it's to question your assumptions. When you say "I can't afford to take that risk," ask yourself: "Can I afford not to?" When you think "This isn't the right time," challenge yourself: "According to whose timeline?"
And here's your new framework: Instead of asking "How can I survive this situation?" ask "How can I leverage this situation?" Instead of "What could I lose?" ask "What am I losing by not acting?"
Start small but think big. Take your survival instincts – your ability to conserve, to plan, to work hard – and redirect them toward growth rather than mere preservation. Your survival skills aren't the enemy; they're just being misused.
For the next two weeks, maintain a "Survival Decisions Log." Every time you make a choice, note whether it comes from growth or survival thinking. Track not just the decision, but the internal dialogue that led to it.
Create what I call "Controlled Chaos Moments" – deliberately put yourself in situations where your survival instincts kick in, then practice responding differently. Start with low-stakes decisions and gradually increase the complexity.
See you soon.
Yours in unwavering belief.
Jen.
Creative Problem-Solver | Fund Administration & Operations Specialist
1 个月Good read