Every great began as a beginner

Whether they were a leader, writer, painter, artist, athlete, or whatever, they started as a beginner.

Nobody enters any given field as an expert. Nobody.

Yes, some people advance quicker than others. This is dependent on inherent skill and/or talent, how they learn, how fast they learn, natural ability, and all sorts of other factors along the way.

Still, even those who have the most gifts and innate proficiencies begin as beginners. Nobody starts at the top of their game. Unfortunately, there’s a loud false narrative about the latently able starting at the top.

It’s okay when you don’t get it right at the start

There are, of course, numerous stories of people making lots and lots and lots of attempts before succeeding. Some of the most successful people in history endured tons of failures, false starts, and other challenges on the way to their success. They tried and failed and chose to keep working. They didn’t do the half-assed, half-hearted “try” Yoda warns against in my favorite quote,

“Try not. Do or do not. There is no try.”

They do. It’s an attempt, but an action that is doing rather than half-assed trying.

The process is never the same for any creation, discovery, recognition, or success. The process, however, is similar.

Thought leads to idea à Idea leads to actionable item à Actionable item leads to action à Action leads to learning from success or failure.

The top of their game isn’t necessarily THE top

The GOATs all began as beginners. Not a single one of them appeared on the scene fully formed, greater than any other, ever. Holding them up as the pinnacle of achievement is often touted as inspiring. Yet frequently it has the exact opposite effect.

Mindfulness to reach the top of their game

Very seldom, almost impossibly seldom, does someone luck into the top of their game. Unplanned success and achievement at any given thing is almost mythical, like dragons.

Nobody truly starts at the top of their game. They do the work, they attempt and have small successes or failures, and they make new attempts again and again until they succeed. That action isn’t chance or luck or random happenstance. It’s mindfulness.

Active conscious awareness is mindfulness. Success and what it is varies from person to person. Measuring success is a highly individual matter. What’s more, success is different for every individual. Maybe you’re a beginner, maybe in the middle, or maybe at the top of your game. Wherever you are, mindfulness is the key to getting where you desire to go.

This week’s Applied Guidance for Mindfulness Tool:

Try something you’ve never done before.

Is there something you’ve been curious about trying out? Is there something new that has caught your attention you want to attempt to do? Might there be something you’ve not attempted because you were worried that you’d not be good at it?

Do it. Take that thing and do it. OR, if there is nothing already in your queue, take up a new art/hobby/activity that piques your interest. Don’t worry that you might suck at it, that’s how everyone starts. Be the beginner and try this new thing.

Write down what it is, how it goes, and how it’s making you feel.


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S5 Ep9: Sometimes Finding the Words for Your Thoughts and Feelings Is Hard

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S5 Ep7: How Do Choices and Decisions Tie Into Self-Awareness?