Henry David Thoreau wrote in his
book, Walden, “I went to the woods
because I wished to live deliberately … and not when I came to die discover
that I had not live. I wanted to life deep and suck all the marrow out of life
… to put to rout all that was not life.” While written more than a century ago,
we might inquire what Henry David Thoreau might write about today. Perhaps that
we know how to live life fast, but not
deep. Or perhaps that we are so distracted by television, video games, and
other mindless activities that we don’t
actually live life at all.
EXPAND YOUR COMFORT ZONE …
Over the past few years I’ve
assigned students in some of my classes various activities designed to expand
their “comfort zones.” The result? While some students did not obtain all they
could out of the assignment, most appeared to gain significant benefits from
it. Here are a few of the comments I’ve recently received:
- “These experiences have taught me that it doesn’t always matter what people think about you in life. The ones who matter don’t mind, and the ones who mind don’t matter.”
- “What scare me most? Rejection … but now I will try to take more risks and I now understand even if someone does say no to me there is nothing wrong with that because there will always be more opportunities.”
- “I want to change my fixed mindset to a growth mindset.”
- “This assignment helped me realize how small my comfort zone really is. It forced me to do things I wouldn’t normally do and got me to expand my horizons. I think this assignment can be beneficial to whomever is doing it.”
Make the most out of your college
life. Decide right now to make the next seven
weeks the most impactful of your life. Choose to undertake one activity a
week, from the list (see excerpt from Ron's book, below), and you can dramatically change your life for the
better. You own self will love you for it!
CAN THESE VIDEOS CHANGE YOUR LIFE?
There are great pearls of
knowledge and skills to be learned in the classrooms at college. But not
all learning is done in the classroom; much wisdom can be found elsewhere. Hence,
in addition to choosing to expand your comfort zone through the attached
activities, I also suggest you team up with a friend or a family member and
watch one or more of the following videos, from my personal list of favorites
Just take one hour out of your next day, and
you can propel yourself down a path of greater success with the insights you
obtain from these interesting, and often entertaining, short videos:
- Kalina,"Before I die I want to..." [Big Talk] (6:23)
- Carol Dweck: The power of believing that you can improve (10:24)
- Paul Solman, PBS Newshour: ‘Sesame Street’ Tells You How to Get to Sunnier Days Financially (9:35) (be certain to watch the last half of this video!)
- AngelaLee Duckworth: The key to success? Grit (6:12)
- TheSkill of Self-Confidence – Dr. Ivan Joseph (13:20)
- Eric Thomas, “Success … How Bad Do You Want It?” (5:30)
- “LiveLife the Real Way” (4:58)
Believe in yourself. And act to
become a better friend, companion, family member, student, and person – each
and every day.
Carpe diem.
Thank you.
Ron A. Rhoades, JD, CFP®
Ron is a college professor, where he provides innovative instruction in financial planning and other business courses. Commencing July 2015 he will be joining the Department of Finance at Western Kentucky University, Bowling Green, KY, where he will serve as Program Director of its rapidly growing and nationally reknowned personal financial planning program.
EXPAND
YOUR COMFORT ZONE
Eleanor Roosevelt once wrote, “Do
one thing each day that scares you.”
I once met two brothers, students in
my class, who – despite having characteristics of introverts – were outgoing,
friendly, and always willing to tackle new challenges. Having lunch with them
one day, I discovered their secret. Each and every morning, as their mother
sent them off to school, their mother said: “Do one thing today that scares
you.”
We must realize that our brains are
hard-wired, from the days of the cave men, to flee from danger. But in today’s
society, where interpersonal skills are so highly valued, we need to learn to
overcome fear. Otherwise fear prevents us from achieving, and it takes a far
greater bite out of our life than we should permit it to do.
As you expand your comfort zone, you
actually grow as a person to fill out these new boundaries.
If you have a larger comfort zone,
and continue to push the edges of it out, you really do grow as an individual –
you have more experiences, undertake more learning, and acquire more wisdom.
Understand the Need to Say “Yes”!
In the 2008 movie “Yes Man,” Jim
Carrey plays Carl, who reluctantly promises to stop being a "No Man"
and vows to answer "Yes!" to every opportunity, request or invitation
that presents itself thereafter. While the result (in the movie) is both
hilarious and, at times, moving, the movie is actually based upon a real
experiment. In fact, after the movie, some individuals chose to say “Yes!” for
an entire week. Here’s one blog post indicating the results: http://vladdolezal.com/blog/2009/my-real-world-yes-man-experiment/
If saying “Yes!” to everything for a
week is too much of a challenge, then consider an alternative – calculated
activities to expand your “comfort zone.” For much of the past 30 years, I’ve
taken on the challenge of expanding my comfort zone. Being a severe introvert,
I first learned how to socialize at receptions and similar events (a skill I am
still working on). I began to give speeches and presentations, first to small
groups; this evolved into my current ability to give speeches to a several
hundred or a few thousand people at various conferences without any undue
nervousness.
Each and every one of us has her or
his own “comfort zone.” Studies have shown that 40% of college students possess
social anxiety – i.e., shyness. And the remaining 60% possess anxiety in other
circumstances, such as public speaking, meeting someone new for the first time,
etc. The truth is that each and every one of us can expand their comfort zone,
significantly, over time. And college is a great place to undertake this
effort.
Why do this? Life’s magic occurs largely outside your current comfort zone. If
you want to suck all the marrow out of life, as I do, you need to be willing to
put yourself out there into areas of “discomfort.” Then, as you adjust, you
become more and more comfortable in those situations, thereby expanding your
comfort zone, you actually grow as a person to fill out these new boundaries.
If you develop a larger comfort zone,
and continue to push the edges of it out, you really do grow as an individual –
you have more experiences, undertake more learning, and acquire more wisdom.
In short, you experience life more fully.
As an added bonus, when you interview
for a job in your career field you will be a better interviewee, and job
candidate. The better jobs go to the graduates who are more personable and
well-rounded!
Learn to Rush Toward Your Fears!
I am deathly afraid of heights, and
always have been. As a child, during a visit to New York City, I was very
nervous about going up the Empire State Building, and even more so when my
parents urged me to peer down from the observation deck to the streets below. My
fear of falling was intense; and my parents could never get me to ride any
roller coaster - regardless of how small or tame it may have been.
So at the age of 18 years, I faced a
dilemma. I was in my first summer at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy. I found out
that on the summer cruise, in just a few weeks’ time, I would be required to
climb the rigging of the tall ship, the U.S.C.G. Eagle, and to work aloft handling the sails.
While at the Coast Guard Academy I
received instruction from a Boatswain's Mate, who had been in the Coast Guard
for about a decade. He previously had served on the Eagle, and as he taught us various types of knots he explained
where on the Eagle we might find a
use for each one. As he was teaching several cadets and me the intricacies of
tying a bowline (a type of knot), I asked the Boatswain’s Mate, with some
apprehension in my voice, “How difficult is it to climb the Eagle's rigging?” The Boatswain's Mate
paused from working the line in his hands, looked me straight in the eye, and
simply said: "Rush toward your fear."
A few weeks later, my fellow swabs -
that's what they called first year cadets - were flown to Miami, where we
picked up the Eagle to take her on a
week-long training cruise. So here I was, at the Port of Miami, aboard the
docked ship, with my gear stowed. It was
an early summer evening, and I was on deck, looking up at the three masts, the
10 yardarms, the crosstrees, shrouds, halyards, and all the other rigging. As I
was looking up, contemplating my fate, the Officer of the Deck approached me
and asked, "Want to go aloft?"
I imagine I turned white a bit, but
just then I remembered what the Boatswain’s Mate had said. "Rush toward your fear." So I
nodded to the Officer of the Deck, stowed my hat, and headed up the rigging. I
climbed up the rope ladder, past the first platform and the lowest yardarm. I
continued higher and higher, pausing every several steps to look around – and
at times down to the deck, appearing smaller and smaller as I went higher and
higher. Past two more yardarms, and finally I made it to the second and higher
platform upon which I could sit, pause, and regain my senses.
But just then the Officer of the Deck
shouted up, “Keep going. Touch the commissioning pennant.” I looked down, then
up, terrified. The shrouds (lines running up and down) were very narrow at this
point, and it was difficult to fit my big shoe in the rigging to go higher.
But, keeping in mind what the Boatswain’s Mate had told me, higher I did go,
the last thirty feet, and touched the commissioning pennant at the top of the
mainmast, some one hundred fifty feet above the deck.
As I headed back down, I traversed
out onto the footrope that hung beneath each of the yardarms. My big feet found
each single footrope that hung beneath each yardarm with ease with a firm grip
on the handrails affixed to each yardarm. I traversed out to the end of each
yardarm, then returned back to the mast.
I also paused and sat on each
platform, partly to rest and partly to enjoy the view. In the rays of the setting summer sun, I felt
a sense of accomplishment. Not only had I climbed the rigging, far beyond the
point where I ever thought I would, but I was the first among my classmates to
do so.
From that day forward, I was known as
a “rigging rat,” always willing to go aloft to furl or unfurl the sails.
A year later, I was aboard the Eagle for a longer summer cruise, this
time across the Atlantic and back. When returning, just northwest of Bermuda,
the ship encountered a low-pressure system. (A better description of the
low-pressure system would be “minor hurricane” – although I was not convinced
that hurricanes could be minor.)
It was the middle of the night.
Cadets were not allowed on deck, except for the bridge crew. The Eagle was under sail, in seventy-five
knot winds, with gusts up to ninety knots. Even though it was the dead of
night, the sea was awash in white, as the wind and waves combined to brew a
froth of whitecaps and foam atop the thirty-foot high waves.
That night I was on duty on the
ship’s helm. I led a team of six cadets, on three connected six-foot ship’s
wheels, as we sought to keep the ship on course. The Eagle did not have power steering, so turning the rudder, via the
wheel, required a good amount of muscle applied by the six cadets.
Only the three lower sails on each
mast were deployed that night, as the top two sails had long been furled in
order to not strain the masts too much. Suddenly the gaskets that constrained
the topsail to the yardarm blew out. This posed a dangerous condition – not
only could we lose a sail in the powerful wind, but the stress being placed on
the mast by the sail flapping in the high wind could cause it to snap. If the
mast snapped, it could fall to and through the deck, even punching a hole in
the hull of the ship. In short, the ship was at risk.
The Captain quickly sent an
experienced enlisted man aloft to secure the sail. After twenty minutes, the
enlisted man signaled down that he needed more line. The Captain looked around,
spotted me on the wheel, and asked: “Rhoades, want to go aloft?”
I wouldn’t say that I wanted to go
aloft in those conditions. But a request from your Captain was more like a very
strong suggestion, and somewhat close to an order. So I headed down to the
Boatswain’s Locker, measured out eighty feet of line, cut and spliced the ends
of the line, and wrapped it in a coil. With the coil of line slung over my
shoulders, I headed up to the deck, crossed to the side of the ship, and in a
pause between the waves crashing over the ship's side, I then grasped the
rigging and headed aloft.
The Eagle, though under sail, reeled from side to side and yawed fore
and aft. Climbing the rigging was instantly a challenge, for as the ship
careened over onto one side I found myself not climbing vertically, but rather
at times almost horizontally, looking down at the deck. Then, as the Eagle careened
to its other side, I hung on, for I would find myself hanging on to the
rigging, looking straight up to the sky, with all fours – and even at times
with my head seemingly below my feet.
Fifteen minutes of effort later, I
finally reached the top yardarm. I left the rigging and traversed out onto the
footrope beneath the yardarm. There I encountered the enlisted man – the very
same Boatswain’s Mate who had taught me knots more than a year before. We
looked each other in the eye, and he nodded at me, with a slight smile passing
his lips. I nodded back, and then together we set to work, wrapping up the sail
with the line and tightly securing it to the yardarm. Some thirty minutes later,
we were back on deck, exhausted from battling the high winds and sea spray as
we worked aloft. Yet it was a physical exhaustion only, for our minds raced as
we recalled the journey we had together pursued during the past hour.
Rush toward your fear – or you will
miss out on the great experiences in life.
Today I am still afraid of heights.
But I have been on roller coasters since I was eighteen years of age. And I have gone up in many tall buildings
(and even, at times, I have peeked over the edge).
If you are confronted with some fear,
realize this. Whatever fear is facing you - whether it be the fear of meeting
someone new for the first time, or the fear of public speaking, or some other
fear in life - rush toward it. For once you are past it, life is great on the
other side.
Your Assignment:
First, watch the following TedX talk,
only six minutes long: “Measuring Comfort Zones” by Marcus Taylor at
TEDxMelbourne. (6 minutes).
Then, for each of the next seven weeks, choose two activities each week from the list below. Choose those
activities that scare you – i.e.,
those activities that expand your comfort zone. Please note that you may not
repeat any activity.
At the end of each week, you should
write down your progress in your journal. Schedule a reminder on your smart
phone for the same day and time, once a week for nine weeks, to record your
journal entries.
Your journal entries might start off in
the following manner:
I expanded my comfort zone over the past week by undertaking two
activities I would not have normally undertaken.
For the first activity I … (Describe the activity. What was the result
for you? How did it make you feel?) As a result of all of this experience, I
have realized that ….
For the second activity I … (Describe the activity. What was the result
for you? How did it make you feel?) As a result of all of this experience, I
have realized that ….
Here are the activities to choose
from:
1. Eat something different – a food item you have not tried in at least a year.
2. Give at least three people compliments on any day, when you normally would not (counts as one activity).
3. Smile at (all) strangers, and say “Good morning” or “Good afternoon” or “Hi” to all the people you pass by, for one entire day – and wherever you are!
4. Get to sleep (bed) one hour earlier for four nights straight, and at the same time each night (this counts as one activity).
5. Speak up in a class – when you normally would not speak up.
6. Go to an on-campus event or which you typically would not go to, or engage in a new activity on-campus.
7. Thank a friend or family member for their ongoing support.
8. Tell someone they are loved.
9. Let go of your self-judgment for a day. And do something others would never think you would do. Feel good about yourself. If others think ill of you – they do not matter; they are no longer part of your personal universe.
10. Peform on Karaoke night.
11. Show three friends or acquaintances the benefits of the “Power Pose” and show them the video (Google search: “TedX Power Pose”).
12. Unplug your t.v. and video games for one entire week.
13. Use the writing center on-campus for assistance in reviewing the draft of an essay or paper.
14. Do your math homework in the math lab, seeking assistance when needed.
15. Ask for a tutor.
16. Form a study group, or join one, during the next seven days.
17. See a professor for guidance on “how to do better” in a particular class, or on a particular assignment.
18. See a professor for tips or career paths and/or “how to best network to find jobs or internships.”
19. Obtain counseling at the student health center to talk through a problem or to seek ideas on how to relieve stress.
20. Apologize to someone you have done wrong / admit you were wrong.
21. Write a “personal log entry” in which you forgive someone for a wrong done to you. Let go of bitterness and anger. Let go of a grudge. (Whether you choose to communicate your forgiveness to the other person is up to you, and dependent upon the circumstances.)
22. Perform three “random acts of kindness” in one day (counts as one activity). For ideas on random acts of kindness you might undertake, Google search the term “random acts of kindness.”
23. Go up to a stranger in a student dining or coffee shop area. Introduce yourself and ask him or her if you can ask them a few questions, for an assignment you are working on. Find out the person’s name, major or occupation, hometown, and what they like most and least about the college or the program they are in.
24. Change your group of friends (i.e., don’t “lie down with dogs”), or disassociate yourself over time from one friend who tends to drag you down.
25. Undertake a civic engagement activity with others.
26. Post a “success tip” once a day, each day, or your dorm room door or another place on campus, or on your social media page, for five straight days. Make certain you indicate below the success tip your identity, such as: “This success tip provided courtesy of (your name).”
These exercises can be powerful, if
you approach them with an open mind and a view toward personal growth.
Prior
comments received from students include:
- “Some students don’t really understand the point of these exercises. But, it’s teaching the confidence that you need to survive in the business world.”
- “As a result of all these experiences, I have realized how important it is step outside your comfort zone. I never realized how much you could be missing out on when you stay within your safe day-to-day routine. Although not every experience was a pleasant one I still enjoyed all of these exercises.”
- “I feel that doing things which are uncomfortable can make life more worthwhile.”
- “I know some of these tasks might come by easy to some people, but they were hard ones for me. I realize that stepping outside your comfort zone not only builds strength, but it also helps you realize things about yourself you would have never known if you didn’t do the unusual.”
- · “I would do this project one hundred times over again.”
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