You know what the problem is with a lot of goals and grand
plans? They are mostly fueled by emotion rather than commitment. It is why most
New Year’s Resolutions are long forgotten by now and many aspirations quietly
fizzle out over time.
True commitment is sticking with the effort even – if and
especially when – the emotion has diminished or disappeared. Emotion can be a
great initiator of action, like kindling on a fire, but it lacks staying power.
Commitment is the logs that keep the fire burning long after the kindling is
consumed.
The butterflies after falling in love, the best intentions
of waking up at 4:30am every day to work out after you join a new gym, the
excitement of your first day on campus, even the sleep-deprivation induced euphoria
of a new baby: all kindling. But it is commitment that keeps you working hard
on the marriage twenty-three years after “I do.” It is what causes you to keep
going when you do not want to make one more sales call, do one more
presentation, or take one more test.
Commitment is a choice you make, not a feeling you get. And
the interesting thing is, when you are committed and you put forth enough
effort, the emotion will show up again. But the effort comes first.
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