
Don't You Quit!
By
Richard Flint
Steve came to me at the conclusion of my program and I
could tell by the look in his eyes something was wrong. He stood there
pondering how he was going to say what his emotions were struggling to
understand. Finally, he took a deep breath and said, “I'm tired!
Oh, I don't mean I'm physically tired. I'm the person you were
describing. I'm mentally and emotionally worn out. Richard, I've been
doing this job for sixteen years. I'm not having fun anymore.
Each day I get up, head to work and feel the anger creeping in before I even
get there. I want out, but this work is all I know. What am I
supposed to do?”
A week later, I finished my program in Allentown and Paula
approached me. “You nailed me!” were her opening words. “I sat
there today and felt as if you were taking my life apart right in front of
my eyes. Richard, I'm so tired! I go to work each day, go home to my family,
take care of them and the house and collapse each night knowing I have to
get up and do it all over again. My life seems like one giant rat
race. I don't know how much longer I can continue this. I really
just want to stay home and take care of my family, but the financial strain
makes that impossible. I don't know who I am, and if I did, I probably
wouldn't like the person I met. There has got to be more to life than
this rat race. Please tell me there is!”
Can you identify with either of
these two people? Have you ever felt trapped in your own life?
Have you ever had the urge to just chuck it all and run away? Have you
ever looked at your life and felt it was going nowhere? Have you ever
just sat and wondered where is all of this
leading me? If you have, there is nothing
to be ashamed
of. Millions of people move through a day of life
with physical presence, yet have mentally and emotionally quit. They
are present without a presence.
I believe this feeling of "lostness" has reached epidemic
portion in our country. Millions face it each day, but don't understand
what, how, or why.
Truth:
You don't just show up one day tired and worn out.
Tiredness is the result of all of the yesterdays that were filled with
mental and emotional drain you chose not to face.
What is happening is the process I call “Flameout.”
Everywhere I turn I see the term "Burnout." Reality is you can't
burnout until you have flamed out.
Burnout is when the fire/desire for what you are doing is
out. Nothing I can do - nothing you can do can rebuild the passion
necessary for rekindling the inner drive. You cannot experience
growth; all you can do is show up each day and exist. You're mentally
and emotionally gone. You are present without a presence!
Flameout is when the fire/desire for what you are doing is
not gone; it is just not burning as brightly as it once did. The
exciting part is that with the right understanding you can rekindle the
passion. In Flameout you are present, but your presence has been
diminished.
Why Do People Quit? That question has been posed to
me hundreds of times. In my research with those who were willing to
face what was happening, here are the common reasons I heard.
Quietly, they just gave up: This doesn't just happen
overnight. Quitting is a process that works its way through your mind
and your emotions. There are three steps to Quitting:
• you stop mentally searching for a way;
• you emotionally stop caring;
• you pack your things and leave.
Most of the time you don't talk to people about what is
happening to you. They notice the change, but when you are asked you
just shrug it off. Yet, inside you are quietly giving up.
Under Appreciated: I
don't know how many times I have made the statement
“The #1 thing a human wants to know is that they
matter.” Most people go to work each day and
exchange their talents for $'s. Very seldom does anyone approach their life
and thank them for their effort. Forget me
long enough and I will soon believe my presence doesn't matter.
Over a period of time, this will cause me to mentally and emotionally
withdraw.
It's Just Not Fun Anymore! Where there isn't any
fun, there is mental and emotional drain. When I stop having fun, my
mind only sees the pain. Over a period of time, I will mentally and
emotionally withdraw.
The Emotional Drain Is Overwhelming: When you can't
see things changing, you go through emotional blindness. Your emotions can't
find any hope to feed your mind. The result is the feeling of depression and
being overwhelmed. It doesn't take long before you will mentally and
emotionally withdraw.
What Can You Do To Handle Flameout? How do you get
yourself back on track? You can turn this whole thing around if you
understand the process.
First,
Talk honestly with
yourself. You can't solve anything by denying it is happening. Getting
better, getting back on track begins with you facing your life honestly.
Only then can your mind start the process.
Second,
Refuse to accept or
make excuses. Excuses give you permission to stay where you are.
They become the justification you use for not being honest. When you
deny yourself the excuse, you focus on what needs to be done to turn this
around.
Third,
Adjust your mental
diet. The only definition to truth your mind has is what you feed it.
When your mental diet is all negative, your mind feeds your emotions
negative information which brings out your negative feelings. You must
change your mental diet!
Fourth,
Clarify your emotions.
This is critical. You are more emotional than you are logical.
Your emotions control so much of your sight. Don't deny the feelings
you are having. Admit and face them. Only through doing this
will your mind feel you are serious about getting through this.
Lastly,
Keep responding with a
controlled pace. The faster you move, the bigger the problem becomes.
Slow down! Only then can you deal with Flameout.
Richard Flint, for ten years,
Richard has been working as a coach to many of North America’s
leading companies, leaders and salespeople. His coaching
approach is different than most. It is more about the behavior
of people and/or organization, rather than the wrongs. His
belief is behavior never lies. He teaches that the essence of
who a person is, is demonstrated through their behavior and not
their words. Richard is a master at examining behavior and
taking people from contradiction to consistency.
|