My ‘Why’ – part 1 of, well, a few perhaps…

{When you’ve got something you want to accomplish that most likely isn’t going to be easy, the ‘why’ is arguably the most important aspect.  ‘Cause when times get tough, it’s that ‘why’ that’s going to keep you pushing through.  I was reading an ebook recently by a guy named Michael Dlouhy and I like the way he put he.  He said (and I’m paraphrasing here a bit) that mostly likely the thing you’re trying to do isn’t easy (otherwise you would’ve done it by now), and so, if you’re why is not there, or it’s only let’s say “70% strong”, then when you come up against an obstacle that’s “80% strong” (be that obstacle fear, doubt, lack of funds, lack of resources – there are reasons NOT to do something literally everywhere you look, there’s something you could always be doing instead), you’re done.  That ‘why’ has got to be there, and it’s got to be good – 99% strong.  So here’s mine, well, part of it anyways…}


All through my life, I’ve done things as “good enough”.  All through school my report cards read more or less the exact same way…”Has potential, could do better.”  My average in high school never left the 68-72% range until grade 13 (and 14^-^) when I knew I had to do better if I wanted to go to university, and even then, though my grades in certain classes were significantly better, they were still just good enough to get me in.


Then once in university, and my apologies to my dad on this, I just scraped by – failing courses, passing with Cs and Ds, doing just enough in the classes that affected my program to keep my average just above the point of getting kicked out.  But it was easy to justify.  I was excelling at the program I felt I was really in, ‘life’, and I still had the luxury of that mentality “Wh0 I’m gonna be”, meaning I was still a student.  Real life hadn’t arrived yet.


But then I graduated.  Spent some time out west skiing (which was awesome!!), and then came to Korea.  Now, this was the first time when my mentality started to change.  Not being a student anymore, it was no longer “who I’m gonna be”, but “Who I am.”  And I will admit, that did give me a certain kick and when I got here, I began to study Korean, harder than I’d ever studied anything in my life.  The first year, I will admit, I was quite proud of myself, but after about a year of it, my usual ways kicked in.  I was conversational, and I decided that wouldn’t study anymore, I’d just learn conversationally, which, execpt for a few brief stints, I continued up until even now.


For the first 5 years in Korea, things continued to improve and I continued to get better and better jobs – even to the point of starting our own little school, but after a little while, it started seeming like a trap to me.  Yes, they were better, but the words of my report cards from my whole life ago kept ringing in my head…”Could do better.”  I felt like the improvements in contracts (salary, vacation time, etc) were just good enough to keep me thinking I was advancing, and to keep me comfortable, but that it was that comfort that was stopping me from really reaching my potential – really seeing what I could do.


Fast forwarding to about a year and a half ago, I decided that enough was enough, I was going to make a go at this.  I didn’t know what ‘this’ was, or was going to be, but I thought I’d start. Skipping through part of the story that will be saved for another time, I quickly found myself studying the second subject I’d ever studied with any great passion – direct marketing.


Now, similar to the Korean thing, I started quickly out of the gates, but again found myself getting too often caught up in the ‘other things I could be doing’ and not really giving it my all – not doing it to my full potential (dammit, were my teachers right way back in elementary/middle/high school when they said if I didn’t break the habits then, they’d be near impossible to break when I’m older?)


I’ll have to go back here a bit and get into another fear that had been slowly growing in me as my years here in Korea passed, and that was about my parents.  They weren’t/aren’t getting any younger.  Was it right for me to be over here while they were there, and not spending the time with them I should be?  I could usually justify it fairly easily as I knew they supported me being here, and actually did a similar thing when they were about my age (meaning, lived overseas), but the fear of “What if something happens to one of them, and I spent the last of our time away” kept growing.  And then it happened.


I didn’t have a strong enough ‘why’ and so I a-little-more-than-half-assed it for long enough, and my ‘why’ got handed to me.  The phone call came…


“Rob,” they began, “they’ve found a lump on your father’s brain.” Easily the worst moment of my life.


Now, a little bit about my father.  He’s easily the man I respect most in this world for the amount he’s worked to give our family what we have, to put up with me and the way I liked (like) to do things, and to give me everything he’s given me, including the opportunity to go to school, come to Korea, the freedom to be who and do what I wanted, and the opportunity to be sitting here typing this, which, as I do, can’t help but well up a bit.


But basically, after hearing that news, my world came crashing down around me.  Like I said, my ‘why’ was created.  ‘Cause for us (Renee and I), the way I saw it, we could move back to Canada, but that really wasn’t a long term answer ’cause that would just put Renee in the same position I had been – spending time overseas while her family was over here.


But something had to be done.  I felt I had to figure out a way for us to basically spend as much time as we wanted in whichever country we wanted, to be free to travel back and forth at any point.  To be able to spend as much time as we wanted with the people most important to us (a lot of great friends fall into that category as well).


I’ve told some people about this plan, sometimes without them knowing the ‘why’, and occasionally I’d get a bit of a snicker, as if to say, “That’s a bit of a lofty (perhaps “unachievable) goal, no?”  Yes, it is lofty.  It won’t be easy.  But it’s doable (and perhaps worth doing because it won’t be easy), but not without that ‘why’.


So, why I am writing this?  Well, I think people find comfort and motivation when they know other people are going through something equally hard – I know I do – and if this will help even one person with that, then that is the first reason I’m writing it.


The other reason is to possibly suggest not waiting for that ‘why’ to be handed to you.  ‘Cause I think in most cases, when it does get handed to you, rather than you creating it, it’s going to come in the form of something not quite so nice – the universe giving you a sign that it’s time to quitting friggin’ about.  But if we can somehow create a goal that excites us enough to give us that ’99%-strong why’, then we’ll just be that much further ahead of the game, and perhaps ourselves save a bit (or a lot) of unecessary heartache.


And I’m not saying it’s an easy thing to do at all.  I certainly wasn’t able to do it.  Like I said, my ‘why’ got handed to me.  But again, perhaps it not being easy is the reason it’s worth doing.


So that’s the first part of my ‘why.’  I’d love to hear about yours, if you care to share.


Cheers,


Rob…


p.s. And just as a bit of an update with my dad, things are a lot better.  The diagnosis turned out not to be something as bad as was first brought to us.  I still wouldn’t use the word ‘great’, but we’re all happy with (and grateful for) the way things have progressed so far.

Tags: ,

Leave A Reply (2 comments So Far)


  1. Airhart
    829 days ago

    Rob,

    First I’d like to say that I am very glad to hear the news about your father. It is certainly something that we think about often but it’s not something you want to call someone up and ask about. It’s one of those strange situations where you don’t know if it’s faux pas to bring up or faux pas not to bring up.

    I’ve been trying to think about my ‘why’ exactly….simply because it had never really crossed my mind to think about until you asked us to share our ‘why’. For me, for a long time, it’s been more about the what than the why. Trying to find something to really throw myself into 100% has definitely been a long process, and certainly a process that ebbed in and out of periods of actively searching and passively waiting and just living life. To a point I think that there is only so much you can do, though, when trying to find the right what….the guess and check method really is the only option for most people, and I don’t think that people in their early 20s should stress themselves out if they don’t know what they want to do with their lives. All in all I’m happy with finding my ‘what’ at this point in my life, and I have no regrets concerning what I’ve been doing with my life up to this point.

    So now that the ‘what’ has finally made its presence known…I’d say that our ‘why’ (other than the basic premise that it’s what we want for our lives) is that we’re going to put ourselves into a position where failure isn’t going to be an option…and not from the philosophical point of view of psyching ourselves up to believing that failure isn’t an option, but literally because we’ll be investing every penny of our life savings into this project and so therefore failing would mean losing everything.

    So yeah…I’m not really sure if that’s creating a ‘why’ or just finding a ‘what’ that is enticing enough to make us want to risk everything we’ve ever worked for (and will work our asses off this last year in Korea for) in order to achieve it.

    I also wanted to make a comment about something you were talking about in your last post. You had said that you think that you could eventually eliminate fear. I don’t think that you can ever truly eliminate fear, as something new will inevitably always come up for you to be afraid of…but I do certainly think that you can learn to not let fear control your decisions, and that as fears pop up you can eliminate those individual fears and have control over that fear forever.

    In closing…I really liked your idea that if it was easy you’d have already done it. It’s like a modern twist on the old adage that nothing worthwhile is easy, but instead of being a motivator for doing hard work, it tells us that we cannot achieve greatness passively. We can be content and successful somewhat passively, but not great.


  2. Mike Yates
    828 days ago

    I guess I have had 3 “why’s” in my life.

    My first was financial security. I come from a very poor part of England, and all through my life my parents struggled with money. My old man worked hard to do right by us, but we were never well off. All I wanted out of life was money. I got it too… more than was good for me.

    By the time I was in my mid-20′s, money had no meaning to me. I didn’t have to think about what I wanted to buy as I could afford anything I needed. Damn… I bought a house over the internet! By the time I bothered to go and see it, the deal was done! The job I had paid well, but more the real damage was the amount of money I handled on a daily basis. The amount of zeros in a figure meant nothing to me!

    When I bought that house, I moved back to my home town. I continued to do the same job, which was to be an account manager for a large bank. Being back with ‘my people’ played on my conscience. I started to see the damage that my job was doing for people, and I wanted an out. I decided that money could go to hell, and I would do whatever it took to change careers. I was toying with teacher, social worker, or probation officer. The problem was… all of them would have required another undergraduate degree, and I really couldn’t be bothered.

    I quit my job anyway.

    Around this time, my dad got cancer. It was terminal, and he died at just 48 years old. This was my second “why”. He was a decent man (no angel, but a decent man) who worked damn hard for his family. He never took a vacation in his life, and from a young age he worked his arse off for his family. My younger brothers already had the same kind of life. They had become fathers at a young age, and whilst happy, had lost the opportunity to do what they really wanted with their lives.

    I took a low-paying stress free management position with a local company until I figure out an exit route. I figured I would travel and perhaps go back to Uni after that. I was browsing online for teaching jobs, to get a feel for the amount of retraining I would have to do, when an ad for Korea jumped out at me (posted as a job in Liverpool). Now THAT was interesting!

    So… my second “why” was really a desire to escape the monotony of the 9-5 life, and to run as far away from domesticity as I possibly could.

    The third “why”? Well… shortly after arriving here, I met a great woman. I figured I could be very happy with her, and for the first time in my adult life, I entertained the idea of settling down. Within 6 months, she had an engagement ring. At 7 months she got pregnant. Oops!

    We sped along the marriage plans and on the 28th June, 2008 (just 16 months after I arrived in Korea), my life changed forever.

    It would be easy to say my “why” has become money again, but it hasn’t. I work like a madman in order to earn money, and I am determined to truly become fluent in Korean. I have just signed up for my first semester of Uni classes, and I am not slowing down work-wise. I am more motivated than I have ever been in my life, and I am going to do whatever it takes to make sure my daughter has whatever she needs.

    I am working my arse off for my family. I have abandoned any thoughts of further travel, even forgoing visits back home. I am doing exactly what my dad did for all of those years, and I am loving every minute of it!