Attending a recent seminar, the
speaker, Darren Hardy related a story where he went to meet a successful man
that had just turned 100. He asked him
in advance to write out a bunch of points and paragraphs to explain how he was
able to reach this great point in his life in preparation for their
discussion. When they sat down to speak,
expecting a volume of pages to greet him, Darren received a single sheet of
paper. Dumbfounded, he asked why so
little? The man explained that not being well educated as a lad; he always had
to take the simplest route to achieve his goals. The point of the story was that when
presented with something simple, we tend to nod our head then go and find the
most difficult way to achieve the same ends.
If you have worked with programmers,
there are those that tend to write direct code that achieves the applications
goals in the simplest manner. There are
other programmers, that will achieve the same outcomes, but tend to write code
with, shall I say, more finesse leading to more lines of code and the process
more complex. For whatever reason, this
seems to be part of our human nature. I
remember reading the comic strip Family Circus growing up, which demonstrated
this attribute every so often as follows:
Variations of this cartoon
were repeated every so often, where the quick, easy and direct path was forgone
for the more adventurous one.
For a time, I was involved
with one of the top 20 network marketing companies. When you join, you pay a fee that provides
you an ID, authorization to sell products and the methodology. Basically, you have purchased a license to be
part of a company’s distribution network.
The methodology that you buy is simple, but not easy. Simple, because the business model has few
steps - talk to people, invite them to a meeting (pick up the phone), have
someone present the opportunity, sign them up, teach them, repeat the process. The steps outlined do not take a rocket scientist
to follow. However, we tend to get in
the way of ourselves. I made lists, I
spent time thinking about the products…like the cartoon above, instead of
walking out to the curb, I followed Billy’s path – I over complicated the
process, got frustrated and, in the end, failed.
Jim Rohn stated it best when
he said, “That which is easy to do, is also easy not to do.” It must be part of being human, and having
this wonderful organ called a brain. It
helps to set us above all of the other living entities on this planet. Given the ability for free will and thought,
we feel that we must constantly analyze everything. Even when presented by a path successfully taken
by others, laid out in simple steps, we tend to think we can improve on
it. Here’s to moving towards finding the
simple ways to accomplish our goals.
Meeting Darren Hardy |
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