Step Up To The New Win
Some Lose Some Philosophy
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We
win some.
And
we lose some.
We can’t win if we don’t
know how to lose.
Just
ask any sports person.
Kareem
Al Jabbar said: “You can’t win unless you learn how to lose.”
Michael
Jordan said, “I've missed more
than 9000 shots in my career. I've lost almost 300 games. 26 times, I've been
trusted to take the game winning shot and missed. I've failed over and over and
over again in my life. And that is why I succeed.”
How
do you know if you are a good loser?
Ask
yourself:
Do
you let your losses turn you into a victim?
Are
you quick to blame someone or something when things don’t go as planned?
Do
you talk and act like a loser when the chips are down?
Then
you have not learned to be a good loser.
People
who lose are not “losers”.
It
is people who talk and act like “losers” when things don’t go as planned who
are “losers”.
“The
only way to prove that you are a good sport is to lose”, said Ernie Banks.
If
you can’t lose, it means you have let success go to your head.
Don’t
let success go to your head.
You
should be able to bounce back from any failure, set-back or loss.
You win some, you lose
some.
In
any area of life, you should be prepared to win some and lose some.
Personal Decisions
You win some, you lose
some.
Because
of not being focused during my freshman year of college, I did not have enough credits to do my finals.
However,
during the course of my freshman year, I had immersed myself in several different
creative activities, which included composing songs and writing freelance pieces
for the newspaper.
My
freelance pieces caught the attention of Mela, who was a friend of my sister Christine.
Mela
worked in advertising, and when a vacancy arose for a copy cub at the agency
where she worked, she contacted my sister Christine and said, "We have a job for that sister of yours who writes."
I
interviewed for the copy cub job and the rest is history.
I
embarked on a successful career in advertising copy, which culminated in me
founding my own creative shop Purple Patch.
You win some, you lose
some.
Investments
If
you invest your money and expect only to win, you will be terribly disappointed
You
will win on some of your investments and you will lose on others.
You
have to treat your losses as a learning experience and become wiser about your
investments as you continue to invest and grow as an investor.
This
is what happened to me.
I
had some embarrassing losses and some gratifying wins, but I grew as an investor, and I learned lessons and more lessons, until I developed my sleep well at night approach
to investing.
You win some and you
lose some.
Political Mandates
You win some, you lose
some.
I
appear to be one of the losers of Obamacare.
The
plans available to me have premiums three times higher than what I could get before Obamacare.
As
a healthy person, who takes no medicines and has no chronic conditions, I cannot
justify paying these premiums.
So
I have made the decision to go without health insurance and pay the fines.
Do
I think of myself as a loser?
No.
I
look after my health as best as I can.
I
know if I do get sick, I will not be denied insurance because of Obamacare.
I
think that’s a big plus.
It
gives me peace of mind.
You win some, you lose
some.
Professional Life
You win some, you lose
some.
You
may get a great job with a terrible commute.
Or
a job, where the pay is not great, but the environment is supportive and
nurturing.
Or
a job where you enjoy flexibility, but you have no growth prospects.
You win some, you lose
some.
You
can’t have everything.
I
know this firsthand.
I
have never had a Goldilocks job.
I
have always made sacrifices for what I wanted.
When
my daughter was younger, because I wanted to work from home, and be available
for her and my mother, I sacrificed promotions, recognition, even dealt
with negative appreciation, just to be able to do that.
When
Tanita reached high school and needed me less, what I wanted was not to be tied
down to one particular job, but to enjoy the flexibility of working on different assignments.
Of
course, I have had to make sacrifices to do that.
As
a Commissions Consultant, I have to roll off an assignment, just when I am
getting comfortable with it, and the team and I have gotten used to working together.
And
I have to be prepared to go from an Excel environment to a Varicent environment
to an Xactly environment.
Different
companies have different sets of expectations of their commissions team and I
have to adjust to those expectations.
Further
they may have urgent needs which have to be met.
I
have to be ready to meet those needs.
On
the bright side, I get to meet and work with many different and wonderful commissions,
finance and sales ops people (most of whom become friends for life) and I get
to sharpen my skills on every new assignment.
Being
a Commissions Consultant has increased my network, broadened my horizons, expanded my skill-set
and developed my people skills.
You win some, you lose
some.
Lifestyle Choices
You
win some, you lose some.
As
I have mentioned in several posts including What Do Lakshmi Mittal and I have in Common?, I live in a small, economy rented
apartment, in which I have lived for the past 14 years.
By
not investing in a home, I have never had a place to call my own, and I have
never experienced the thrill of seeing a home investment pop in value.
But
on the plus side, I have never had to fix anything.
Further,
at the current time, I am renting at a rate that’s 25% lower than what new
renters are paying to live in my apartment complex.
I
have met some wonderful friends because of my decision to live in my apartments,
and that must be factored in as well.
I
have written about these friends on my blog.
One
of them, Cindy, is a writer herself, and has written several posts on my blog:
I met Aunty
Valarie and Kim, whom I wrote about in my post The United States of Friendship– Part 6, in my apartment complex.
I met Nadya,
whom I wrote about in my post – The United States of Friendship – Part 7 in my apartment complex.
I met Becky,
who has been my steady walking companion for over 3 years, in my apartment complex.
You win some, you lose
some.
Living in the Bay Area
Living
in the Bay Area has its pluses and its minuses.
It
is expensive, it is busy.
It
takes me one hour to get to my current assignment in Sunnyvale.
But
on the plus side, the Bay Area offers great weather, many great companies to
work for, and an amazingly diverse population.
Besides,
I have family here.
You win some, you lose
some.
Humbling Situations
The
element of winning some and losing some was brought home to me starkly when I
was an advertising copywriter
We
would have to come up with lots of ideas, most of which would not see the light of day.
In
fact, our best ideas were often rejected.
But you win some, you lose some.
I definitely won big by getting to be the person who wrote the Fiesta campaign.
It
is no different with my Commissions Consulting projects.
On one of my projects, I came
in right after a consultant who had developed an Excel commission model.
I soon found out this Excel model was double crediting sales reps
on some deals, because it was based on assuming the sales rep name would be
only in one SFDC field (owner field) and not in two SFDC fields - owner field and co-owner field.
I
did not know how to fix the model, so I created my own model and began using that.
But before my assignment ended, a new Controller
was hired, and he decided he did not like my model and began implementing his own.
The work I had done on my model was thrown out of the window.
You
have to learn to deal with stuff like this.
You should develop the mental tools to do so.
If you have read my post The Element of Imagination and Its Hope For Developing Toughness With Compassion and Artful Flair, you will know that the mental tool that I used to deal with my shelved model was imagination.
If you want to read this post again, you can do so here.
We Will Not All Win the
Genetic Lottery
You
win some, you lose some when it comes to genes as well.
I am predisposed to diabetes.
In spite of diet and exercise, every year I get closer and closer to becoming diabetic.
But
if disease runs in families, gifts run in families too.
Writing
runs in my family as you learned from my post No Need for 23 and Me.
There are family traits and gifts.
And then there are family traditions.
We win some and lose some with family traditions as well.
There are some family traditions we will cherish, some not so much.
Singing
is one of the family traditions that I cherish. My family loves to sing and whenever we get together, guitars are brought out and we sing.
You can learn about some of my family's favorite songs from my post Family Songs.
Calling each other by
pet names is another of our family traditions.
I have been called by many different names.
If you want to know what some of those names are, read my post The Porki and Bonkers Tradition.
Forgetfulness
Ultimately,
not being able to get with the “you win
some, you lose some” idea boils down to a problem of forgetfulness.
We
forget the good things others have done for us.
We
forget the good things that have happened to us.
We
forget the bad things we have done, or the bad choices we have made.
And
we are unable to forget the bad things that happen to us.
We
have to learn to remember.
When
we remember all the good things others have done for us, and all the good
things that have happened to us, we will feel blessed.
Meditate
on doing that.
I
do it all the time.
When
we remember all the bad things we have done, and the bad choices we have made, we
can work to avoid repeating those mistakes.
But
we should also remember all the good things we have done.
We
each have a level of behavior and performance.
If
we drop from this level of behavior and performance for a while, it is a
question of time before we will return to our normal level of behavior and performance.
We
have to remember that we are capable of a lot more than the current situation suggests.
We need to do the exercise recommended in my post How to Feel Good About Yourself When the Chips are Down.
Instead
of dwelling on the nasty details of our current crisis, many of which will be
draining, we should be 100% focused on bridging the gap between where we are
and where we used to be.
“But Minoo, isn’t it crazy to want to reclaim
our former glory? Isn’t that what middle
age crisis means?”
Yes
and no.
Any
attempt to bridge the gap between where we are, and where we used to be, has to
take into account current reality.
When
I was young, I loved to dance and I could dance all night.
I
even entered the Knock Out disco competition with a great dancing partner whose
name was Zubin, and we took the second prize.
Today,
I cannot burn the midnight oil, and my physical activities are limited to
riding a stationary bike and going for long walks.
But
mentally and spiritually, I can do a lot more than I could ever do when I was
young.
You
see, when we are young, all we have going for us is our energy and
enthusiasm, and whatever little we learned at school and college.
When we are older, however, though we may not have the same energy, we have the knowledge,
the experience, the wisdom and all the different technical, relationship and
life skills.
We can bring all of this to bear on anything we decide to do.
In
fact, we have a lot more than the “us
of our younger years”.
Say
to yourself, “I have a lot more than the I
of my younger years”.
It
is true.
It
is 100% true.
You Can’t Have
Everything
Yes,
we will win some and we will lose some.
We
grow older but we grow wiser.
We
get great weather and great opportunities, but life is expensive.
We
telecommute but we do not get any raises or promotions.
We
have peace of mind and money in the bank, but we don’t have a house we can show
off.
We win some, we lose
some.
It’s a Question of
Priorities
Because
we can’t have everything, we have to prioritize.
What
do we want most?
Out
of a job?
Out
of a housing situation?
Out
of a relationship?
Once
we know what’s important to us, it’s easy to get rid of what’s unimportant and
to focus on getting what we want.
For
example, there are no built-in washer-dryers in our apartments.
We
have to go to the laundry room to do our laundry.
Just
say, someone decides they want an apartment with a built in washer dryer.
So
they move from our apartments (where they have friends) to another apartment
complex which has built in washer dryers.
No
sooner do they move, they start complaining that the people in their new
apartment complex are not very friendly.
What
they don’t realize is that you can’t have everything.
You win some, you lose
some.
Ultimately
each one of us has to decide what matters to us.
For
me, there is no question.
The
built in washer-dryer does not take priority over friendly neighbors.
In
fact, I have struck up friendships precisely because in our apartments, people
have to walk to the garbage dump to throw their garbage and walk to the laundry
room to do their laundry.
You win some, you lose
some.
Get cracking on your
new win some lose some philosophy
As
Bob Feller said, “Every day is a new
opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind
and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day”.
As always, thanks for
reading and have a great day and week...M....A Pearl Seeker like you. I
am so thrilled to have one of my earliest blog supporters and readers, Aarathi
back (Aarathi, it is you, isn’t it?). Aarathi and Ajay,
thanks for your comments. And thanks to
the rest of you for your likes, votes and pins.
Much appreciated!
2 comments:
I am forever a reader and supporter of your blog Minoo,I never left it.It's been a pleasure!Thank you!
A/A/A/A
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day”.
Absolutely...that's the underlying theme highlighted by you for success!
A superb motivational post!
Ajay
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