2013 was, in a nutshell, alright.
I made dozens of new friends. I learned to cook. I started
writing a blog, and I believe I became a better writer.
I was more stressed than I’d ever been before. I was always
afraid of failure. I spent so many nights either apathetic to my work or
praying for miracles. I never missed a deadline, but I never quite did my best.
I still did well, because producing under pressure is a by-product of being a “good”
procrastinator. I still felt guilty, because that is the primary symptom of all
procrastinators.
It felt great to beat the odds, even if I couldn’t beat the
demon that was the fear of failure.
There’s nothing I’d love more than to make a sweeping
declaration, here and now, that I would never again let that fear hold me back.
It would make me feel good and impart to all of you the hope that I believe you’ve
come to expect from this blog. The hope that we can all be better.
Yes, we can all be better. That part is true.
But it starts with a belief. More than any quotation, any
philosophy, anything at all, it starts with one belief: it’s the belief that
you are in control.
There is something alluring about the belief that we are not
in control. The belief that I need to be in the mood to work or have the right
circumstances to produce. The problem is that, for me, this mood or these
circumstances always rose up as the clock counted down.
No more.
Here’s the deal I’m going to propose to you. I’m going to
spend one year taking full responsibility. I might still fear failure. But I
refuse to let it hold me back anymore.
No more “doing my best, given the circumstances” when I am
the one who brought those circumstances about.
No more “being busy”. Busyness is an excuse. “Oh, why
couldn’t you read that paper to know what’s actually happening in the world?”
You weren’t busy, you were lazy, and to the point above, you chose not to read it. Being legitimately busy
is one thing. Using it as an
excuse is quite another.
I have resolutions, which I’ll share next time. If you’re
making goals, remember to write them down and to structure them. If you’re so
inclined, post them in the comments as a public commitment, and check back in a
year to post an update.
Let’s make 2014 awesome. Let’s do it together.
As an aside, I wanted to say how thankful I am that you took
the time to read this post and all the others. I didn’t start blogging to help
people, but I continued because I did. What I didn’t expect was to open up as
much as I did, and for the blogs to hold me to account as much as they did.
Thank you for reading. Thank your for inspiring me to be
better. Have a happy and safe December 31st, and until next time,
C-Suite Dreams!
Editor’s
note: If you understand the reference in my title, you’re wonderful. If you
have a topic idea, I’d love to hear from you! Suggestions can be made in the
comments section or on Twitter @JeremyDeMello.
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