The Problem with Problem Solving |
| Posted on Dec 07 2009 |
| Blog, News and Articles >> Confidence & Self Esteem |
He looked at me curiously. "To prevent buyer's remorse - after all, research has shown..."
What followed was an in-depth explanation of why this was so important, and suddenly I understood why I hadn't been understanding him.
"The reason this hasn't been making any sense," I explained, "is because you're trying to help me solve a problem I don't actually have."
A few days later, a client was explaining to me his concerns about his big break - his first gig in front of over 1000 people. He wanted tips on how to find the "extra" confidence to make his performance "really, really, really good".
I told him that I could share tips with him, but what would make the biggest difference was to have fun and not try to make this performance any different to any of the ones he had done that had led to this opportunity.
As I explained it to him, here's how the problem-solving cycle usually works:
The problem is, apart from the original event, nothing's actually happened except our over-reaction in the physical world to the problems in our imagination!
He didn't quite seem to get what I meant, I told him the following story:
| Imagine that it's the Wild West and you are surrounded by hostile Indians. Your only hope is if the cavalry comes to save you. Just as you are about to abandon all hope, you hear hoofbeats in the distance and see a lone rider coming towards you at a gallop. He pulls up beside you, leans down from his horse, and in a voice dry and crackling from the trail, says "I've got some bad news and I've got some good news..." "The bad news is that the cavalry's not coming. The good news is, this isn't the Wild West and there aren't any Indians." |
Have fun, learn heaps, and relax... while life will always have its ups and downs, coping with them is inevitably much simpler than you think.
With love,
Michael
www.geniuscatalyst.com.
Last changed: Dec 07 2009 at 10:28 AM
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