“You can lose every battle, yet still win the war”- Don Ake
Through my life experience, including my climb out of the
pit, I believe that one of the most valuable traits one can possess is
resilience.
Oxford Languages defines resilience as:
1.
the capacity to
recover quickly from difficulties; toughness.
2. the ability of a substance or object to spring back into shape; elasticity.
If you have resilience, you can endure anything life throws
at you and bounce back. If you still have air in your lungs and the diagnosis
is not terminal, then you will come fighting back.
However, saying you want to be resilient is like saying you
want to climb Mt. Everest. You may achieve your goal, but not without a lot of effort,
practice, and a great deal of pain. You become resilient by failing repeatedly.
The long climb back is full of difficulties and failures.
You will develop the capacity to recover. You will gain toughness because you
have no other choice.
There are two other traits you will pick up along the way:
Persistence: firm or obstinate continuance in a course of action in spite of difficulty or opposition.
And
Perseverance: persistence in doing something despite difficulty or delay in achieving success.
This is going to be a long, arduous journey where to face difficulties
and opposition. It will involve frequent losses and a long delay in getting to
where you need to be.
How does perseverance work?
You tell yourself you are going to quit …
BUT YOU DO NOT QUIT
You convince yourself that it would be better
if you quit …
BUT YOU DO NOT QUIT
You list all the advantages of quitting …
BUT YOU DO NOT QUIT
You tell yourself you are never going to win
BUT YOU DO NOT QUIT
You endure emotional pain that grinds on you
BUT YOU DO NOT QUIT
That Grind
And it is a heavy grind. You are going to lose, then lose
again and lose some more. Lose, lose, lose, lose again.
You get punched in the face so often that you become
impervious to the pain. This is not entirely a good thing. Pain exists for a
reason. Some friends asked why I was so persistent. The honest answer was:
Because it doesn’t hurt anymore.
However, this is what it takes to ultimately achieve
success. If you are committed to climbing out of the pit and getting back to
where you were, this is the price you must pay. Unfortunately, the longer the
fall, the longer the climb back. There are no shortcuts. You may not be
responsible for ending up in the pit, but you are responsible for climbing out.
So climb, and don’t stop climbing. Resilience … Persistence … Perseverance
The Back Story
Of course, the only way I could describe everything I have
written to this point is to have experienced it myself. My ability as a writer
is based on my capacity to feel emotions intensely and express those emotions
in words.
I was plunged into the pit years ago due to a loss of a
long-time job. I should not have reacted this poorly to that event (a subject
of a future post), which is my responsibility. It was also my responsibility to
climb out of this pit.
If you charted my progress at that time, it was slow and
painful. It looked like this:
Loss, loss, loss, big loss, loss, terrible loss, loss,
stupid loss, loss, painful loss, dispiriting loss ……
Through the process, I learned resilience. I learned to bounce
back, much like a shortstop, after diving for a ground ball instantly. It is
the most valuable skill I acquired during this process.
Persistence? Oh, there was obstinate continuous, alright. I
was turned down by the same company five times for five different positions.
Perseverance? There was much difficulty and pain, and my climb
back took years.
After four years of battles, if my internal condition was
visualized, my clothes were in tatters and contained a couple of near-miss
bullet holes. My face was bruised and battered, and there were numerous bloodstains.
I had fought as hard as I could and I had lost every battle
– every one. At that point, you could have considered me a loser. You could
have pitied me.
And then suddenly, unexpectedly, I won the war. (“How”,
explained in the next post).
“You can lose every battle, yet still win the
war”- Don Ake
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