How can you stay self-motivated and productive in the midst of turbulent times and a sluggish economy? How do you persevere as a salesperson when times are tough and customers seem to be holding on to every penny in fear of economic uncertainty?
Every challenge, setback and personal difficulty you encounter in life also brings with it the seed of equivalent or greater benefit! The key to overcoming adversity is to avoid the temptation of panic and instead, focus on finding the greater benefit. Adversity will never leave you where it found you; it will either strengthen your character or weaken your resolve.
During the early years of WW II Nazi submarines, operating in wolf
packs, roamed the frigid waters of the North Atlantic with impunity
sinking an alarming number of British military and merchant ships.
Hitler was confident that his U-boats could blockade England and
eventually starve the British people into submission.
In the summer of 1940, while the Battle of Britain was being played
out over London, the Germans unmercifully sank over 300 British
military and merchant ships. Prime Minister Winston Churchill, fearing
the negative impact these devastating losses might have on the nation's
morale, ordered the information withheld from the public. In an effort
to reduce the appalling number of casualties lost at sea, Churchill
instructed the British Royal Navy to begin a study to determine what,
if anything, could be done to save more lives during sea rescue.
While interviewing the survivors an interesting discovery was made.
To their complete astonishment, the researchers noted that the survival
rate for the younger, presumably more physically fit sailors was
remarkably lower when compared to their older shipmates. The study
concluded that the older sailors had a significantly higher survival
rate due to the fact that they had overcome more adversity and
therefore, had developed greater confidence in being rescued than the
younger, less experienced sailors.
The head of the research project, Kurt Hahn, was so moved by this
discovery that he created the Outward Bound program. Hahn designed the
Outward Bound program, utilizing a series of progressively rugged
challenges, to mentally and physically prepare young British sailors to
cope with the adversity of naval combat. Today, the Outward Bound
program works with troubled youth to help them develop greater
confidence and self-image.
I find it interesting that people faced with similar adversity often
experience remarkably different outcomes. Some people become weakened,
some become hardened and some become stronger. If you place a carrot,
an egg and a coffee bean into a pot of boiling water, each reacts in a
completely different manner to their conditions. The carrot goes into
the boiling water firm and comes out soft; the egg goes in fragile and
comes out hardened; while the coffee bean turns the hot water into
coffee by releasing its flavor and aroma!
Selling in these challenging times demands determination and
personal fortitude. Having the will to persevere when times are tough
is a characteristic commonly found among self-made millionaires. Are
you a quitter? The last time you failed, did you stop trying because
you failed or did you fail because you stopped trying?
Thomas Edison documented 10,000 failed attempts to develop the
electric light bulb. A reporter asked the great inventor how it felt to
have failed 10,000 times trying to invent the light bulb. Edison
responded, "Young man, I didn't fail 10,000 times trying to invent the
light bulb, I simply documented 10,000 ways that it wouldn't work."
Imagine how different our world would be today if Edison had been a
quitter.
You must expect to encounter detours, roadblocks and potholes of
adversity along the road of life. The next time you are faced with
adversity, learn from it and know that you are becoming a much stronger
person because of it!
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