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How High Do You Bounce?
By Dave
Carlson
The ladder was braced against the railings
going to the basement. I started climbing up. I had to get
to the ceiling and this was my Rube Goldberg way of doing
it without having to put up scaffolding. I made it up two
or three rungs before coming to my senses. It would be so
easy for the railing to break and for me to go tumbling down
the stairs.
You see I was trying to paint my living
room with a cathedral ceiling. I had to get up near the apex
at 12 feet. The problem was that there were stairs going to
the basement and nowhere to safely put the ladder. So I tried
bracing it against the railing before giving up. I was trying
to put primer over a quote painted in black that said, “It’s
not how far you fall, but how high you bounce.” It would
have been so ironic for me fall from the ladder while trying
to paint over that quote. Believe me, I wouldn’t have
bounced very high.
How much risk is too much? I calculated
the risk and found the risk was too high for the reward. I
ended up taping a paintbrush to a long pole, and I got the
quote painted just fine. Just a little ingenuity.
In the book, “Mental Judo” by
Lance Lager, he talks about falling also. “In physical
judo, practically the first thing you learn is how to fall.
… In Mental Judo, as in physical judo, learning how
to ‘fall’ is important. I don’t mean, of
course, falling on your rump, but in a figurative sense falling
is falling. Life is a series of ups and downs, and none of
us is our imperfection can avoid taking a fall from time to
time. When you don’t reach your goal, when you are rejected
or ignored or just outwitted for the moment, you are experiencing
a fall. It is extremely important that you learn how to fall
gracefully and be able to snap right back up with a minimum
of effort and without fear of the next fall or concern about
an injured ego. Just as in skiing or ice skating, if you are
not falling, you are not learning or trying something new.”
We are bound to fall, whether through our
own fault or the fault of someone we depended on, be it life
at home or in the workplace. What do we do when we fall? Sit
and cry? Get mad? Resign ourselves to the fact that this is
the way life is always going to be and that success will never
come my way? It can be happen in any of these scenarios.
I’ve taken some tumbles myself. A
big tumble came last summer when I was doing a job search.
I had a good meeting with a company that was looking for someone
to do business development for them. I had a very good first
interview and was invited back for a second one. The owner
of the company called the morning of the second meeting and
said he had to postpone the meeting until after the weekend
because of time deadlines. Okay.
On Monday I called and left a message. No
returned call. The next day I tried the phone and an email.
Nothing. On Wednesday, I got ahold of the second in command
who was in on the meeting. He said I needed to talk with the
owner, and that he would call me back. I heard nothing more.
I gave one more attempt on Friday and never heard a word.
Did I do something to offend them? Did they
think I was a loser who couldn’t possibly help them?
Was I overly naïve and put too many eggs in this one
basket? I don’t know what happened and may never find
out. But what I learned from that experience was to bounce
back and keep doing what I needed to do in order to support
my family.
I decided a while after this incident to
restart my business, which is another excellent opportunity
to fall. But it hasn’t been so far. I’ve been
meeting a lot of new people and getting new clients on a weekly
basis. But it is a risk.
I was talking with a gentleman who had owned
his own business for thirty-five years. He told me, “I
didn’t go into business for myself to make a lot of
money. I just wanted to control my own life.”
Life is risky. We are learning in the current
economy that it can be risky to even have a day-to-day job
with a company. Risk can be fun, and it can be ulcer producing.
So, take a bit of a risk right now. It doesn’t have
to be something big. It takes a while to develop your risk
muscles. It can start with little stuff and then move onto
something bigger.
*****
Dave Carlson is the owner of Green Chair Marketing Group, a boutique marketing
firm specializing in developing comprehensive marketing plans focusing on Internet
strategies to help businesses succeed. He can be reached at 720-922-3124. See
his Web site at www.GreenChair.net.
© 2001, Dave Carlson, All Rights Reserved
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