The Power of Purpose – 2 – Mike Robbins

Mike Robbins is the author of the book Be Yourself, Everyone Else is Already Taken. He was interviewed for the power of purpose summit and here’s a few takaways that I got from him.

Freedom Through Failure

In life we’re driving to succeed and even if we’re not doing well at it we’ll try and try and try until the very bitter end. That is if you’re a driven individual. Many people do not have a lot of drive and therefore they float through life with out ambition, goals, or any indication of a path that they’re on. However, most people work, slave away, and try to earn more and more money and work very hard to support their families and themselves. Sometimes we get so caught up in working and succeeding that it takes a catastrophic failure to move forward or switch gears.

Steve Jobs spoke about this during his Stanford commencement address when he talked about getting fired from his own company. Looking back, he can see that it was for the best because it freed him from the responsibility and burden of Apple and allowed him to create Pixar and Next. If he’d never been fired, the world would have never been blessed with Monster’s Inc. or Toy Story.

My friend talked about this when she was beaten up by her husband. For years she endured emotional abuse, but when he finally physically abused her she felt that it was socially acceptable to leave. Before, with just emotional abuse, she was worried people would think that she didn’t try hard enough or wasn’t a good enough wife. However, no one would justify a man beating up his wife. Thus she left and was free to get a divorce and eventually meet a great man who loved her and cared for her.

Mike Robbins also encountered this when he was injured while playing baseball. His life was setup to be a professional baseball player and when he injured himself, he was greatly saddened, but deep down felt a kind of relief from the burden of social and family expectations to be a great baseball player. By himself he couldn’t tell everyone who had been rooting for him and supporting his baseball for almost two decades that he didn’t want to do it anymore. However, by being injured and being unable to play, he was freed from the burden of responsibility and allowed to change direction in his life.

Freedom without Failure

Now the reason each of these people tell their story is to help teach us through their example. They are working to free your mind from it’s self imposed social, familial, and other obligations that are not really there and allow you to move onto a new path freely and without having to endure the pain that they felt.

Hidden Obligations

The second main benefit from Mike’s failure is that it revealed to him some of the driving forces and reasons for continuing baseball even as he was feeling as though he didn’t want to pursue it anymore. A primary one, and one that many people feel, was an obligation to be the the “good kid” or the “perfect child”. The siblings who go off the deep end and reject their parents ideals and beliefs are viewed as “lucky to still be alive” and the parents will love them while telling the other child that they’re lucky they have “at least one good son” or “one of the kids turned out okay” all the while the “good son” or “good daughter” is living a life that is unsatisfying. This came up in the truth box where people want to get out of their religion, or career, or place they live, or degree program. But expectations set by the parents, leaders, and other outside forces keep them on the straight path to “happiness” as defined by their elders. Mike was able to discover that he had been secretly working to please his mother. His mother had come to all the games and sacrificed and after seeing her enthusiasm and her support, he couldn’t “let her down” and just quit. He felt trapped.

 

For more information you can buy his book, Be Yourself, Everyone Else is Already Taken from Amazon. or check out his website at mike-robbins.com

The Power of Purpose – 1 – Day 1 Introduction

The people over at the ManKind project put on a online summit called the Power of purpose. See here: http://otp.mkp.org/powerofpurposesummit/

The Premise of Purpose

I decided to go over some takeaways that I took from listening to the summit. In the introduction Chris Kyle and George Daranyi ask some poignant questions about purpose. They set up he basic premise:

That people are born with an innate purpose or reason for their existence. Nothing happens by accident and we all are here because we have something to give to the world.

Regardless whether or not you believe in this premise, this must be true for us to set out and discover our purpose. Now some may think this is narcissistic or overly grandiose but what the heck?A little narcissim is normal for everyone. Only when it goes crazy and becomes a personality disorder do you need to be worried. Also, believing that your gift to the world is teaching others or helping lift others up or some kind of benevolent giving action isn’t a bad thing.

Finding Purpose

George and Chris set up two questions that are to be answered:

  1. Have you answered your inner call to your purpose? In this question it is assumed that we all have some inner drive to accomplish something or do something and finding what that something is may or may not be easy and may or may not be something that we have done yet.
  2. If you have found your purpose, what have you done to fulfill it? The idea being that many people may have found their purpose, but in the interest of dealing with the minutiae of life, they relegate their purpose to a hobby in the workshop in the basement. This is especially true for men.
This next song is about putting your dreams on hold and doing whatever it takes to pay the rent.
This next song is about putting your dreams on hold and doing whatever it takes to pay the rent.

The next point they made was about the different types of purpose:

Collective Purpose and Individual Purpose

Some people find purpose in a collective way such as in a religion (The Pope), or political group (The President), or some other group working toward a higher purpose.

Some people find purpose in an individual way such as a painter (Thomas Kinkade), sculpture (Michelangelo), writer (Stephen King) , computer programmer (Richard Stallman).

For more information go to the ManKind Project: http://mankindproject.org

You can also find out more about Chris Kyle from : http://www.ascendantcompany.com/

and George Daranyi from: http://www.georgedaranyi.com/

The Limitless Man: The Four Pillars of Manhood

  1. Integrity. Say what you’re going to do and do what you say you will.
    Do not judge or blame yourself for your failures, but do take responsibility for them.
  2. Don’t take anything personally.Girl doesn’t call back? Don’t take it personally.
    Job doesn’t work out? Don’t take it personally.
    Got a speeding ticket? Don’t take it personally.
    Get the hint?
  3. Don’t make assumptions.Girl is too pretty and she’d never like you? Don’t assume that.
    You’re not smart enough for that job? Don’t assume that.
    You’ll never be able to get a college degree? Don’t assume that.
    Things will work out in the end? Don’t assume that!
  4. Always put forth your best effort.We can’t lie to ourselves. You know when you’re doing 100% and when you’re not. Enough said!

The Litany Against Fear

If you’re a science fiction buff it’s probably stands to reason that you’ve seen this before. I think everyone should say this once a day as it is a great quote. It is the Bene Gesserit Litany against fear.

“I must not fear.

Fear is the mind-killer.

Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration.

I will face my fear.

I will permit it to pass over me and through me.

And when it has gone past I will turn the inner eye to see its path.

Where the fear has gone there will be nothing.

Only I will remain”

Becoming a Limitless Man: Power

Your power is your ability to affect change in your life.
We limit our power in several ways.

Shame

We can feel shame for many, many things. As men this is especially true when dealing with women. If you look at a beautiful woman you can be accused of objectifying them. If you’re attracted to younger women, you’re accused of being a pervert. If talk to a very pretty girl and you’re not the reincarnation of Adonis himself, then they think you’re weird. As men, it’s very hard to throw off the shame imposed on us by others so that we can go for what we want.

Shame can be overcome by recognizing that you should live with no regrets and you don’t need any justification to follow what you want and what you are going for.

Q: “Why are you hiking that mountain? I don’t understand. It’s 16 miles and you’re going to be sore and tired and dirty and gross and you might die”
A: “Because I want to”
Q: “Why are you checking out that girl!?!?”
A: “Because I think she’s beautiful.”
Q: “Why do guys like big boobs?”
A: “I don’t know, but I like them too.”

Lack of focus

You can spend large amounts of time watching TV, playing games, and puttering around and not get anything done.

Overcoming a lack of focus can be done in a couple of ways. One way is to go on a media fast. Get rid of our TV, Video Games, and other mindless entertainment. A second way is to journal. If you want something you need to journal about it to know that you’re making progress. A third way is to master your first hour. This is the first hour in your day that can set the mood for the whole day. A fourth thing is to do the worst thing first. If you’ve got a particularly nasty thing to do one day, do it first so that everything else that day becomes easier. There are hundreds of books on getting things done.

Timidity

Sometimes you’re afraid to do something and you’re shy or you need help and are afraid to ask for it.

Overcoming timidity is difficult. Especially if you’re on your own. However, you can cultivate friends, buddies, wing-men, and others to help give you courage. Also, you must actually put forth effort and go out and DO! If you don’t, you’ll never get past this point. You can also use accountability buddies who will make sure that you do what you’re supposed to.

Fear of failure

You fear the social pressure of failure. As men we’re meant to succeed and dealing with failure is not an easy thing.
The only thing to say about this is life is about the journey. There is no failure, there is only feedback. Make sure when you fail, you learn something from it so you get feedback and can improve.

Fear of Success

We fear that if we succeed we’ll be given more responsibility than we can handle. “I can barely take care of myself, how am I going to take care of a wife and family?”
One of the pivotal, central, core parts to being a man is to take responsibility for yourself and your life. If it isn’t what you want, then it’s your fault and you need to do something about it. If you don’t do it. Nobody else will.

Negative Conditioning

This is social pressure caused by others around us and taught to us when we’re young. “Go to college and get a college degree”, “Make sure you make a lot of money”, “Never ask for help as men do things by themselves” are all some lessons that men get taught growing up.

Rest and Recovery

Power needs rest. Make sure you have sufficient sleep. Take a day off every week where you can just goof off, but work hard the rest of the week. This goes for diets as well. If you eat perfect 6 days and bad 1 day, you’ll look awesome.

For more on this please visit my friend Rick at: www.scpua.com

Becoming a Limitless Man: Love

Love: It’s all about connection

Connection is your ability to care about, connect, find common ground, and get along with other people.

Disconnecting

You can disconnect from other people in many ways:

  1. Fear (I’m afraid to meet other people)
  2. Disconnected mindset (more concerned with video games or work than the people there)
  3. Being nice rather than real. (this can build resentment)
  4. Being unauthentic. Helping other people and expecting something rather than just being helpful.

Reconnecting

  • Reverse Time travel meditation (picture yourself in 5 years talking to yourself now. What would they say?)
  • Never eat alone (not at work or when you’re out or whenever.)
  • Future pace (where will you be in 5 years and what’s the path forward to that)
  • Direct approach (go talk to people)
  • Appreciation and Gratitude for your life

For more on this please visit my friend Rick at: www.scpua.com

Becoming a Limitless Man: Truth

I went to a quick little seminar called “Becoming a Limitless Man”. It discussed some of the ways we limit ourselves and how to recognize our limits, overcome them, and grow in strength. Here’s my take:

Truth: Things as they actually are


Truth is things as they actually are. It doesn’t care about your viewpoint, others viewpoints, opinions, beliefs, hopes, dreams, or anything else. It is the actual reality. It is rare for us to see and recognize the real truth.

Beliefs limit us from seeing the truth


Our reality is distorted by our beliefs. These beliefs come from lots of different places. Some of them are formed by our past experiences.

  • “Every time I ask for a girls’ phone number she says no”
  • “Every time I go back home for vacation my mom nags me”

Lots of time these past experience beliefs become created in absolutist terms.

They can come from social conditioning. Our friends, family, mentors, teachers, religious authority figures, all give us some of their advice, knowledge, and experience. Then we accept their beliefs as our own.

  • “It’s good to be married”
  • “Drinking alcohol is bad”
  • “You shouldn’t ask that person out as they’re not good for you”

Another way to generate beliefs are from Secondary Gain or the “Good Enough Syndrome”.

  • “I keep my job because it gives me money even though it drives me crazy.”
  • “My boyfriend is nice to me and takes care of me even though I don’t really like him.”

Limiting beliefs


Now not all beliefs are bad, some of them are good. If you get sick whenever you drink milk, the truth is you’re probably lactose intolerant. Your experience taught you that and no amount of believing otherwise is going to change that. However, when you can identify a belief as unreal. Like, “I’m lonely” when you actually have a lot of friends. Or “I’m fat” when you’re actually skinny. These are false beliefs that are harming you and you need to over come them and embrace the truth.

Paths to overcoming our truth


1. Try new things for 30 days
2. Social conditioning can be overcome by learning to trust yourself
3. Remove yourself from media
4. Travel. Traveling is fatal to prejudice
5. Simply getting older will give you more experience which will help you see the truth
6. Cultivate the observing ego

For more on this please visit my friend Rick at: www.scpua.com