Guest AuthorMarshall Goldsmith
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On Impermanence and the Earned Life

By | Dr Marshall Goldsmith | #1 Leadership Thinker, Exec Coach, NYT Bestselling Author. Dartmouth Tuck Professor Mgmt Practice

I have spoken about Buddhism and my approach to coaching, which uses one of the Buddha’s main tenets regarding living well: Everything is impermanent, and we are constantly renewing ourselves with every breath, changing constantly. This is a very different perspective than most of Western thinking, which looks toward the future or the past, and rarely the present. I wrote about how I came up with the concept of the Every Breath Paradigm, based on my understanding of Buddhist teachings, to help clients move forward. 

You might be wondering why I’m going on about spiritual matters. The reason is that the Every Breath Paradigm can have immediate effects on your well-being, and your sense of fulfillment. 

If we accept that everything of value that we have earned is impermanent and it’s subject to the whims and indifference of the world — from the small stuff like a teacher’s praise to the big stuff like our good reputation or the reciprocated love of the people we love — then we must also accept that these prized “possessions” need to be constantly re-earned, practically on a daily or hourly basis, perhaps as frequently as with every breath. 

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One of my most valuable contributions to my clients has been reminding them to stop torturing themselves about their past failures (“That was a previous you. Time to let it go.”). It very often clarifies for them that they are no longer at fault — sometimes they need the permission of a third party to give them leave to accept this. 

I think it’s equally valuable when the opposite occurs: when my clients have felt the need to replay their career highlights reel for me. I see this most vividly in former athletes and CEOs who are struggling to create their next life.

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When they talk nostalgically about previous triumphs, whether it’s winning a gold medal fifteen years ago or leading an organization of twenty thousand people six months earlier, it’s my duty to yank them back to the present. I remind them that they are no longer that admired athlete or commanding CEO anymore. That was someone else. 

This is no different from preferring to live vicariously through someone famous whom you follow religiously on social media. That famous person doesn’t know or care that you exist. You are strangers to each other. It’s the same with your constant returning to the glories of a previous you. It’s not that the honors and attention and respect, each well-earned in its time, were never real. But they have faded. To recall them is no longer an expression of fulfillment; it’s actually a regret about their impermanence, about how swiftly and unceremoniously they slipped away. 

Recapturing that sense of fulfillment cannot be accomplished by wallowing in memories of who we were and what we accomplished. It can be earned only by the person we are in the present moment. It can only be earned again, and again, in subsequent moments when we become someone new.

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“You’re only a success in the moment of the successful act. Then you have to do it again,” said basketball coach Phil Jackson, a student of Buddhism, after winning two consecutive NBA championships in the mid-1990s with the Chicago Bulls and then going for a third ring in 1998.

The truth is, we are never finished earning our life. There is no hard-stop moment when we can tell ourselves, “I’ve earned enough. I’m done.” We might as well stop breathing. 

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In my writings, I’ve helped people learn to be leaders, to find that point where their professional aspirations intersect with their personal well-being. In my book, What Got You Here Won’t Get You There, I wrote about how to eradicate self-defeating behavior in the workplace. In my book, Mojo, I explored how to deal with career setbacks that can stop your momentum. In Triggers, I wrote about how to recognize the everyday situations that trigger our least appealing responses and choices. 

As I look back on my own career, and the work I’ve done and the experiences I’ve had with others, and their accounts of their own lives and leadership experiences, it is appropriate now to tackle the challenge of regret.

It’s true that no one wants to be lying on their deathbed thinking of regrets. The important thing is to address it head on and see how you can overcome it right now. 

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I hope that you enjoyed The Marshall Goldsmith Newsletter and that it is helpful to you!

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Republished with permission and originally published at Marshall Goldsmith’s LinkedIn

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