Get Comfortable With Being Uncomfortable (According to a Green Beret)
7
steps to acclimate yourself to extreme situations so you can excel at every
level
I've been an entrepreneur for seven years. Midway through the
fourth year, things were coming to a head. I wasn't getting enough sleep. I
wasn't exercising, and I wasn't keeping my mind clear with meditation.
In
the middle of what felt like my most stressful month of my life, my most senior
employee resigned.
While I was complaining about the debacle to an entrepreneur
friend, he called me out: "Get comfortable with the feeling that you have
right now."
Confused,
I asked, "What feeling?" He replied, "Feeling uncomfortable. Get
comfortable feeling uncomfortable."
He
stopped me in my tracks. He was right. We all need to get more comfortable with
being uncomfortable. We're soft!
Here
are 7 ways to get comfortable with being uncomfortable, according to one of the
toughest and most resilient people I know, Green Beret Jason Van Camp.
1. Start.
The
first step is always the most uncomfortable. All you have to do is show up. The
battle is half won if you just show up. I get it. It's uncomfortable to start
something.
If
possible, make the decision to start on your own rather than have someone make
that decision for you. Once you start, you are going to want to quit
immediately.
Whenever
you start something, it sucks. You start a diet, it sucks. You start working
out, it sucks.
Remind
yourself that you made a decision. You are already committed and there is no
going back.
2. Don't quit.
You've
decided to start. You're not seeing results. It's difficult. You want to quit.
It's OK. Just keep pushing forward.
You're
going to start thinking of a way out where you can quit and save face. Don't do
it. Don't give yourself an out. Just don't. Don't give yourself any options.
Either you succeed or you fail.
No
excuses.
The
point when you are just about to give up is the precise moment when the other
guy gives up. At some point you are going to ask yourself, "Why am I doing
this?" You better have an answer. What is driving you? Is it something
someone said or did to you? Is it a competition?
Is
it a challenge? Is it something that you have to prove to yourself? Is it just
pride? Whatever it is, it had better be powerful.
3. Push yourself past your comfort zone.
At
some point, you are going to say to yourself, "I've never done this
before" or "I don't know what I'm doing."
We've
all been there. Here's a trick: Don't say it out loud. Just pretend to be
confident. Fake it till you make it. It's scary, but I promise you this: When
it's over, you are going to say, "It wasn't as bad as I thought it
was." Fear kills more dreams than failure ever will.
4. Embrace "the suck."
The
situation is bad--deal with it. And don't just deal with it--open your arms and
welcome it as you would an old friend. You know him well.
Just
when you think things couldn't get any worse, he shows up. "The suck"
is here to make you tougher. He's a friend that arrived to make you better.
Instead of complaining, celebrate the blessing that is the suck.
If
you are embracing the suck by yourself, laugh at how ridiculous the situation
is. You are building your mental and physical toughness points. If you are
embracing the suck with others, you've just made new best friends for life.
Embracing
the suck in a group is a powerful bonding experience.
5. Be around like-minded people.
Create
a support network. Talk about your experiences. The worse the experience it is
to you, the better the story it is to everyone else.
Soon,
you will be seeking uncomfortable experiences to share with your friends. Be a
good storyteller.
6. Recognize your improvements.
Track
your progress. Revel in it. You are now a changed person. You know it because
you see it. Build your confidence by going back to what before was
uncomfortable and go through the experience again.
You
are seeing your progress in real time. By nature, you are going to want to push
the envelope to find out your boundaries. You will find yourself saying,
"I wish it would suck more." It's our human nature to know what we
are able to overcome.
7. Rinse. Repeat.
There's
an old Russian saying, povtorenie mat ucheniya, which means
"repetition is the mother of learning."
The
more you perform the same activity, the more confident you become.
Confidence
is a tangible thing--it comes from practice and repetition.
Source: Inc.com
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