
You can’t lift a thousand pounds all at once, yet you can easily lift one pound a thousand times. Tiny, repeated efforts will get you there.
I have witnessed people reinventing themselves at all ages — 48-year-olds starting families, 57-year-olds graduating from college for the first time, 71-year-olds starting successful businesses, and more. How did they all do it? In a nutshell, they started being more mindful about making progress in their lives, step by step. And by doing so they changed the trajectory of their lives.
What you need to remember most right now is that it isn’t too early or too late to start making positive changes in your life. Your future is always affected by what you start doing today. Yet so many people wait around for some arbitrary date and time, like tomorrow, to take action. Don’t be one of them! Make yourself a bigger priority starting now. It’s time to…
1. Insist on embracing your humanness.
“Human” is the only real label we are born with, yet we forget so easily. To become attached to a loaded label of overweight, divorced, diseased, rejected, or poor, is to be like the rain, that doesn’t know it is also the clouds… or the ice, that forgets it is water. For we are far more than the shape we’re currently in. And we, like the wind, water, and sky, will change forms many times in our lives, while forever remaining beautifully human.
So forgive yourself for the bad decisions you made, for the times you lacked understanding, for the choices that accidentally hurt others and yourself. Forgive yourself, for being young and reckless. These are all vital lessons. And what matters most right now is your willingness to grow from them.
Once we forgive ourselves and fully embrace our humanness, it’s almost funny to see how seamlessly we can adapt to life’s transitions — how we outgrow what we once thought we couldn’t live without, and then we fall in love with what we didn’t even know we wanted. Take this to heart. And don’t forget to pause regularly to appreciate how far you’ve come. You’ve been through a lot, and you’ve grown a lot too. Give yourself credit for the steps you’ve taken, so you can step forward again with grace.
2. Insist on subtracting what doesn’t belong in your life.
When you discover something that nourishes your soul and brings you joy — something that truly matters to you — care enough about yourself to make room for it in your life. And if you find that you don’t have enough time for what matters, stop doing things that don’t. In other words, start subtracting what isn’t working for you.
Every time you subtract negative from your life, you make room for more positive. Let that sink in. When things aren’t adding up in your life, begin subtracting. Life gets a lot simpler and more enjoyable when you clear the emotional and physical clutter that makes it unnecessarily complicated. And there’s so much you can let go of in life without losing a thing. It’s called growth. Letting go of the old makes way for the new. Letting go of what isn’t working makes way for what will. When the pain of holding on is worse than the pain of letting go, it’s time to let go and grow.
3. Insist on leaving other people’s judgmental opinions alone.
When Angel and I first started writing on this blog, I’d agonize over whether people would think what I was writing was good enough. I desperately hoped they’d like it, and oftentimes I’d catch myself imagining they didn’t. Then one day I realized how much energy I was wasting worrying about it. So I’ve gradually learned to relax with simply not knowing. Some problems in life, such as not knowing what others think of you, are not really meant to be resolved.
What you need to remember is that you can’t control how other people feel, or how they receive your energy. Anything you do or say gets filtered through a mindset occupied by whatever they are going through at the moment, which likely has nothing to do with you. Just keep doing your thing with as much love and passion as possible.
4. Insist on upholding your boundaries.
When it happens, be sure to tune out the cheap shots people take at you. Don’t waste words on people who deserve your silence. Sometimes the most powerful thing you can say is nothing at all. So before you waste it on anger, spite, or frustration, think of how precious and irreplaceable your time is, and carry on with grace.
And remember that not all toxic relationship situations are agonizing and uncaring on purpose. Some of them involve people who care about you — people who have good intentions, but are toxic because their needs and way of existing in the world force you to compromise yourself and your happiness. They aren’t inherently bad people, but they aren’t the right people to be spending time with every day.
You simply can’t ruin yourself on a daily basis for the sake of someone else. You have to create boundaries and make your well-being a priority. Whether that means breaking up with someone, loving a family member from a distance for a little while, letting go of a social obligation, or removing yourself from a daily situation that feels painful — you have every right to create some healthy space for yourself. (Note: Angel and I discuss this in more detail in the Relationships chapter of “1,000 Little Things Happy, Successful People Do Differently”.)
5. Insist on putting your heart and soul into the things you do.
There’s a big difference between empty fatigue and gratifying exhaustion. Starting today aim for the latter. Too often we wait around because we think we need to “find” something new or different to be passionate about, but that’s not true. If you want more passion and satisfaction in your life, act accordingly right now. Put your whole heart and soul into the next thing you do. Not into tomorrow’s opportunities, but the opportunity right in front of you. Not into tomorrow’s tasks, but today’s tasks. Not into tomorrow’s run, but today’s run. Not into tomorrow’s conversations, but today’s conversations…
In the end, purpose is the reason you journey and passion is the fire that lights your way. So start believing in your heart that you’re meant to live each day full of purpose and passion — that each and every moment is worthy in its own way. I’m absolutely certain you have plenty in your life right now that’s worth your time, energy, and passionate focus. You have people and circumstances in your life that need you as much as you need them. You have a massive reservoir of passionate potential within you, just waiting. Stop waiting! Put your heart and soul into what you’ve got right in front of you! Become it, let it become you, and great things will happen for you, to you, and because of you.
6. Insist on stretching yourself in the right ways.
Again, many great things can be done in a day if you don’t always make that day tomorrow. Will it always be easy? No, but remember that when you’re struggling to make progress that’s when you actually are. You want to be stretched to the edge of your ability — it needs to be slightly hard and uncomfortable sometimes. Of course most of us don’t want to be uncomfortable, so we subconsciously run from the possibility of discomfort. The obvious problem with this is that, by running from discomfort, we are constrained to partake in only the opportunities within our comfort zones. And since our comfort zones are relativity small, we miss out on most of life’s greatest and healthiest experiences, and we get stuck in a debilitating cycle.
Choose differently starting today… Go to environments that expand your mind. Spend time with people who inspire you to stretch yourself. Read books. Grow. Get better. Your life is in your hands.
7. Insist on reminding yourself why every step matters.
In the end all the small things make a big difference. Every step is crucial. Life isn’t about a single moment of great triumph and attainment. It’s about the trials and errors that slowly get you there — the blood, sweat, tears, and the small, inconsequential things you do on a day-to-day basis. It all matters in the end — every step, every regret, every decision, every minor setback and minuscule win.
The seemingly useless happenings add up to something. The minimum-wage job you had in high school. The evenings you spent socializing with coworkers you never see anymore. The hours you spent writing thoughts on a personal blog that no one reads. Contemplations about elaborate future plans that never came to be. All those lonely nights spent reading novels and news columns and comic strips, questioning your own principles on life and sex and religion and whether or not you’re good enough just the way you are.
All of this has strengthened you. All of this has led you to every success you’ve ever had. All of this has made you who you are today. And all of this proves that you have the strength to deal with the challenges in front of you. So keep giving yourself grace, and carry on. (Note: “The Good Morning Journal: Powerful Prompts and Reflections to Start Every Day” is a great tool for this kind of self-reflection.)
Now it’s your turn…
Yes, it’s your turn starting today. I hope you will have a delightful one, that you will dream boldly and dangerously, that you will leverage the reminders above to create something that didn’t exist before you took action, that you will love and be loved in return, and that you will find the strength to mindfully accept and grow from the outcomes you can’t change. And, most importantly (because I think there should be more kindness and wisdom in this crazy world), that you will, when you must, be wise with your decisions, and that you will always be extra kind to yourself and others.
But before you go, please leave Angel and me a comment below and let us know what you think of this essay. Your feedback is important to us. 🙂
Which one of the points above resonated the most today?
Finally, if you haven’t done so already, be sure to sign-up for our free newsletter to receive new articles like this in your inbox each week.
Rudy says
I truly appreciate this post because I think it encourages people to just be more of themselves, and begin each day on a more sincere and focused note.
I think that something I have to work on more in my life is the ability to make mistakes. It’s okay to make mistakes–fail forward–and I think that sometimes I have to remind myself that, and really appreciate on the freedom to do so.
Nancy says
You nailed it, Rudy!
Lee says
Wisdom I needed as I think about a change I’m currently making in my life. I sometimes forget my humanness and my need for boundaries, especially when I’m around gatherings of people who don’t always lift me up. Thank you.
Catherine says
This is a profoundly enriching article with so many nuggets. I too particularly resonated with “Embracing our Human-ness”. It is true, in life we are human first and I see to forget that. And despite the labels I give myself or others give me, I am human first and I will exist in so many forms in this life. I felt this liberating the hard stance I take to who I should be forgetting, first, I am human. I can’t explain it but wow, mind kinda blown!
MJ says
I’m 75 years young today and I fully embrace your philosophy. Thank you for putting yourself out there for the rest of us. It take constant reminders to appreciate our gifts. I feel like the time I have left is going to be a good for me.
Jean Lacombe says
I’m 79, and I feel the same way as you.
I lift weights, do resistance training, and eat healthy.
Right now I am tackling a project of painting my living room ceiling and walls.
It’s so fun starting a project, quietly working with it, enjoying the doing, and seeing it through.
Lee says
Jean..you’re such an inspiration! I admit, painting is abit tedious for me…I find a new project around the house and pour my love into it! Enjoying the beauty of today’s gift. =living!
Michael Mc Govern says
Well its all great advice and my dear friend Tom Healy used to post your advice daily on his Facebook page where I came across it. Sadly Tom passed on in the last few months so I looked you up and so glad I found you so inspirational. Kind regards from Mike in Ireland. Also, you’ll be pleased to hear I’ve just published my 1st book recently at 76.
Alice Corti says
Good for you, honoring the present. Congratulations for starting your project on writing a book Right Now and honoring your passion.. May this work bring you fulfillment. It is great to use Marc and Angel’s ideas too.
Sylvia Ebbert says
Congratulations.
Patricia says
Hi guys … I love your wisdom! I haven’t been a daily reader too long but now I never skip a single entry. I am a young 71 year old wife, mother, grandmother and friend and in the past 12 years or so, an artist. Point #2, while not exactly new think for me, it is certainly something I have not applied to my own life maybe ever really. By the time you have lived as long as I have, it will be eye opening to see how much baggage, extra weight I’ve made a part of what I consider vital. So it will require a time of inner work, writing and brutal honesty to get it out there – take that honest look at anything and everything that’s just not working. But my decision is to take the time, and without any self condemnation, at least make the list. Doesn’t call for broad swipes but choosing 1 or 2 things at a time and see how it feels! Thanks for providing your readers a forum to process!
Melissa Meyer says
I am so thrilled that I came across your “essay”. It is VERY WELL written and I can relate to all 7 points in this article!! So it really touched my heart and it is definitely things I needed to “hear”. For starters I am usually so UNKIND to MYSELF and I need to change that first and foremost! Maybe some people believe that how you talk to yourself doesn’t matter but I’m here to tell you it certainly does. And BOUNDARIES…What are those?? I fiercely need to set some boundaries with a lot of people in my life and stick to them!! I love this article and I’m saving so I can reference back to occasionally or more!! I feel like you wrote this “essay” directly to ME!! Lol that’s HOW MUCH I really feel every word in it VERY HARD! Keep Up the GREAT WORK and MUCH NEEDED Inspiration and Direction (at least for me anyway). Thank You.
Daniel Fierro says
This is true. I learned in my teens to accept what is for what it is. I’ve never ran from problems. I didn’t and still don’t like facing them, but I do. It’s true, nothing worth having comes easy.
I am now 53 years old and going through my second divorce. We both have grown apart and stopped growing as a couple. We’ve tried to work on it to no avail. Rather than wasting away in misery, we both are amicable and help each other still. We will both start over, but we understand this is not the end for us. Not living for tomorrow, but for today. Tomorrow is NEVER guaranteed.
Yaso says
Thank you for this timely article, just when I need to remind myself it’s never too late for anything. Really well written!
Sylvia Everette says
A very important lesson I learned the hard way is point number 1 – forgive the person who hurt you ,they are only human they make mistakes… and more importantly forgive yourself. We are all human bound to make mistakes… forgive, learn, and move on.
RHONDA WHITAKER says
Well this was exactly what I needed to break five months of pouring my energies into things that I need to let go of. Once you see things clearly you can allow yourself some mercy and grace. Fteedom… to let go of what has been holding me back. Thank you for opening my eyes.
Lynn says
Congratulations Michael who commented above. It has been my dream to do the same. Marc and Angel are inspiring me to begin the process.
Regards from South Africa.
Lynn
Carolina Slattery says
Thank you Angel and Marc for doing what you do!
I really needed this today.
Blessings, from New York.
C & L Logue says
These posts an your emails are so insightful and inspiring!!
We are dealing with our son and daughter in law. They are shutting us out of their lives and grandsons. It is adding stress and hurt to our lives, but we are working to do what makes us happy! Your articles continue to help us deal with this and make us understand this is something we have to not focus on!
Thanks
lmp says
Hi Marc and Angel,
Once again, thank you so much for speaking out loud for me to insist on the things that you mentioned.
Today my schedule is very tight, but i took time to read this one.
Thank you, I will!
L
David says
“5. Insist on putting your heart and soul into the things you do,”… is what I’m doing at present… and I love how you ended the essay with “And, most importantly (because I think there should be more kindness and wisdom in this crazy world), that you will, when you must, be wise with your decisions, and that you will always be extra kind to yourself and others.” Beautifully presented and worthy of remembering. Hugs.
Devin says
Thank you for this post and the blog is not unread. It’s the regular little boost, the adjustment to rebalance the mind. Its a helpful reminder
Cassie Hannah says
I think this was an amazing an encouraging article… Thank you for sharing this… I’ve wrote down key points in my reflection book..