In your business, relationships, or family life, pain is
inevitable, but suffering is not. It turns out as few as five words can change
everything from turning around a company to saving a life.
This week, I have been
completely blown away (once again!) by Tony Robbins at his Date With Destiny experience. By his own account, this
event is his personal favorite, and three days into it I can see why. Tonight,
I witnessed 12 people (out of over 2,500) stand up and self identify as
suicidal. The first man was what any entrepreneur would consider
"successful" when measuring from a business metric. But just like Robin
Williams, who had economic and career success beyond what most people even
dream of, this man was ready to end his life. "Success without fulfillment
is the ultimate failure," says Tony Robbins.
I have never witnessed anything more powerful in my life. From
the incredible courage to stand up in front of thousands and admit that you are
ready to end your life to the complete and utter transformation that resulted
in thousands of people, myself included, crying tears of joy right along with
this man who chose to end his own suffering, not through suicide, but through
love and gratitude.
"I love you. Thank
you."
After going through a process of clearly understanding his own value systems (i.e., what gave him pleasure and what caused him pain), this man was transformed by five words repeated over and over again: "I love you. Thank you." This was a shortened version of an ancient Hawaiian practice of reconciliation and forgiveness known as Ho'oponopono. The original is, "I'm sorry. I love you. Please forgive me. Thank you."
After going through a process of clearly understanding his own value systems (i.e., what gave him pleasure and what caused him pain), this man was transformed by five words repeated over and over again: "I love you. Thank you." This was a shortened version of an ancient Hawaiian practice of reconciliation and forgiveness known as Ho'oponopono. The original is, "I'm sorry. I love you. Please forgive me. Thank you."
While it would be an oversimplification to say that these five
words alone ended this man's suffering and turned around his suicidal thoughts,
they were the very words that ultimately led to the breakthrough he had. I was
compelled to share this profound experience because far too many of my fellow
entrepreneurs suffer needlessly. While pain is inevitable, suffering is not.
And if the approach Tony Robbins shared can help a dozen people who were
suicidal, I am certain that it can help the millions of entrepreneurs who
struggle to grow and/or turn around their companies. But more importantly, by
choosing to end suffering, this approach will also lead to fulfillment, which
is the ultimate success.
The Three Ways We Suffer in
Business
"When you get in your head, you're dead," says Tony Robbins. In business, it's our story of limiting belief that causes us and our businesses to suffer. This story usually comes in one of three flavors: 1) Loss, 2) Less, or 3) Never.
"When you get in your head, you're dead," says Tony Robbins. In business, it's our story of limiting belief that causes us and our businesses to suffer. This story usually comes in one of three flavors: 1) Loss, 2) Less, or 3) Never.
The story often begins with a significant loss. This could be a
major client, for example, who decides to take her business elsewhere. In
business, we win and we lose, but it's the meaning we give the event that
causes positive or negative feelings about it. Feelings of failure and
rejection are normal, but when we begin to obsess about ourselves, we move from
the pain of the loss to the suffering around it. A question such as, "Why
did this happen to me?" can be healthy if the purpose is to make the
company better. But if this leads to a process of self-doubt, judgment, and
continued negative feelings, it stops being about improvement and begins to
chip away at your generally positive outlook.
Getting less of something can also cause additional suffering.
When you expect one revenue target and end up with something less, this can
trigger the same negative feelings. While it's fantastic to hold yourself and
your company to a high standard, it's important to understand when that
standard has become an unrealistic ideal that you can never meet. While a standard
is something you grow towards, an ideal tends to be a vision of perfection that
is not realistic. When you are less than the ideal you've set for yourself or
your company, you will feel like a failure and needlessly suffer.
"Loss" and "Less" usually lead to the third
feeling that "The business will never be ______ enough," and this
begins the downward cycle we'd prefer to stamp out.
The Three Ways to End Suffering
The good news is that it's relatively easy to destroy your story of limiting belief. You can:
The good news is that it's relatively easy to destroy your story of limiting belief. You can:
Appreciate and Enjoy
Learn and Grow
Love, Give, and Be Grateful
Learn and Grow
Love, Give, and Be Grateful
This is why the Ho'oponopono is so powerful. The statements,
"I'm sorry. I love you. Please forgive me. Thank you," lead to all
three ways to end suffering. The core idea being a belief that everything
happens for a reason, and that even the most terrible events usually offer an
opportunity. Rather than focusing on our own suffering, we have an opportunity
to learn from what just happened and grow because of it. The love, gratitude, and
appreciation all reinforce the positive feelings we want to maintain, even when
faced with incredibly difficult challenges.
The next time you feel yourself getting stressed out or
frustrated with a co-worker, take a deep breath and say "I love you. Thank
you." You don't even have to say it out loud or to the other
person, as long as you mean it when you say it. Know that the frustration
you're feeling is usually an opportunity to learn and grow. That's why you're
thanking the very person you are frustrated with.
Date With Destiny and Business
Mastery
I am in no way doing justice to the first 40 hours of the Date With Destiny experience I've just had. But when I experience something incredible, I want to share it with as many people as I can. If you're struggling with your business or sense of purpose in life, then I strongly urge you to check out Tony Robbins's Date with Destiny (for personal growth) and Business Mastery (for corporate growth).
I am in no way doing justice to the first 40 hours of the Date With Destiny experience I've just had. But when I experience something incredible, I want to share it with as many people as I can. If you're struggling with your business or sense of purpose in life, then I strongly urge you to check out Tony Robbins's Date with Destiny (for personal growth) and Business Mastery (for corporate growth).
Maybe when The Beatles wrote, "Love is all you
need," they were right in its application to business as well.
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