Everybody wants
what feels good. Everyone wants to live a carefree, happy and easy life, to
fall in love and have amazing sex and relationships, to look perfect and make
money and be popular and well-respected and admired and a total baller to the
point that people part like the Red Sea when you walk into the room.
Everyone would like that — it’s easy to like that.
If I ask you, “What do you want out of life?”
and you say something like, “I want to be happy and have a great family and a job I like,” it’s
so ubiquitous that it doesn’t even mean anything.
A more interesting question, a question that
perhaps you’ve never considered before, is what pain do you want in your life?
What are you willing to struggle for? Because that seems to be a greater
determinant of how our lives turn out.
Everybody wants to have an amazing job and financial independence — but not everyone
wants to suffer through 60-hour work weeks, long commutes, obnoxious paperwork,
to navigate arbitrary corporate hierarchies and the blasé confines of an infinite
cubicle hell. People want to be rich without the risk,
without the sacrifice, without the delayed gratification necessary to
accumulate wealth.
Everybody wants to have great sex and an awesome relationship —
but not everyone is willing to go through the tough conversations, the awkward
silences, the hurt feelings and the emotional psychodrama to get there. And so
they settle. They settle and wonder “What if?” for years and years until the question
morphs from “What if?” into “Was that it?” And when the lawyers go home and the
alimony check is in the mail they say, “What was that for?” if not for their
lowered standards and expectations 20 years prior, then what for?
Because happiness requires struggle. The positive is the side effect
of handling the negative. You can only avoid negative experiences for so long
before they come roaring back to life.
People want to start their own business or
become financially independent. But you don’t end up a successful entrepreneur
unless you find a way to appreciate the risk, the uncertainty, the repeated
failures, and working insane hours on something you have no idea whether will
be successful or not.
People want a partner, a spouse. But you don’t
end up attracting someone amazing without
appreciating the emotional turbulence that comes with weathering rejections,
building the sexual tension that never gets released, and staring blankly at a
phone that never rings. It’s part of the game of love. You can’t win if you
don’t play.
What determines your success isn’t “What do you want to
enjoy?” The question is, “What pain do you want to sustain?” The quality of your
life is not determined by the quality of your positive experiences but the
quality of your negative experiences. And to get good at dealing with negative
experiences is to get good at dealing with life.
There’s a lot of crappy advice out
there that says, “You’ve just got to want it enough!”
Everybody wants something. And everybody wants something enough. They just aren’t aware of what it is
they want, or rather, what they want “enough.”
Because if you want the benefits of something
in life, you have to also want the costs. If you want the beach body, you have to want the
sweat, the soreness, the early mornings, and the hunger pangs. If you want the
yacht, you have to also want the late nights, the risky business moves, and the
possibility of pissing off a person or ten thousand.
If you find yourself wanting something month after month,
year after year, yet nothing happens and you never come any closer to it, then
maybe what you actually want is a fantasy, an idealization, an image and a
false promise. Maybe what you want isn’t what you want, you just enjoy wanting.
Maybe you don’t actually want it at all.
Sometimes I ask people, “How do you choose to
suffer?” These people tilt their heads and look at me like I have twelve noses.
But I ask because that tells me far more about you than your desires and
fantasies. Because you have to choose something. You can’t have a pain-free
life. It can’t all be roses and unicorns. And ultimately that’s the hard
question that matters. Pleasure is an easy question. And pretty much all of us
have similar answers. The more interesting question is the pain. What is the
pain that you want to sustain?
That answer will actually get you somewhere. It’s the
question that can change your life. It’s what makes me me and you you. It’s
what defines us and separates us and ultimately brings us together.
For most of my adolescence and young
adulthood, I fantasized about being a musician — a rock star, in particular.
Any badass guitar song I heard, I would always close my eyes and
envision myself up on stage playing it to the screams of the crowd, people
absolutely losing their minds to my sweet finger-noodling. This fantasy could
keep me occupied for hours on end. The fantasizing continued up through
college, even after I dropped out of music school and stopped playing
seriously. But even then it was never a question of if I’d ever be up playing
in front of screaming crowds, but when. I was biding my time before I could
invest the proper amount of time and effort into getting out there and making
it work. First, I needed to finish school. Then, I needed to make money. Then,
I needed to find the time. Then… and then nothing.
Despite fantasizing about this for over half of my life,
the reality never came. And it took me a long time and a lot of negative
experiences to finally figure out why: I didn’t actually want it.
I was in love with the result — the image of
me on stage, people cheering, me rocking out, pouring my heart into what I’m
playing — but I wasn’t in love with the process. And because of that, I failed
at it. Repeatedly. Hell, I didn’t even try hard enough to fail at it. I hardly
tried at all.
The daily drudgery of practicing, the
logistics of finding a group and rehearsing, the pain of finding gigs and
actually getting people to show up and give a shit. The broken strings, the
blown tube amp, hauling 40 pounds of gear to and from rehearsals with no car.
It’s a mountain of a dream and a mile-high climb to the top. And what it took
me a long time to discover is that I didn’t like to climb much. I just liked to
imagine the top.
Our culture would tell me that I’ve somehow
failed myself, that I’m a quitter or a loser. Self-help would
say that I either wasn’t courageous enough, determined enough or I didn’t
believe in myself enough. The entrepreneurial/start-up crowd would tell me that
I chickened out on my dream and gave in to my conventional social conditioning.
I’d be told to do affirmations or join a mastermind group or manifest or
something.
But the truth is far less interesting than
that: I thought I wanted something, but it turns out I didn’t. End of story.
I wanted the reward and not the struggle. I
wanted the result and not the process. I was in love not with the fight but
only the victory. And life doesn’t work that way.
Who you are is defined by the values you are
willing to struggle for. People who enjoy the struggles of a gym are the ones
who get in good shape. People who enjoy long workweeks and the politics of the
corporate ladder are the ones who move up it. People who enjoy the stresses and
uncertainty of the starving artist lifestyle are ultimately the ones who live
it and make it.
This is not a call for willpower or “grit.”
This is not another admonishment of “no pain, no gain.”
This is the most simple and basic component of
life: our struggles determine our successes. So choose your struggles wisely,
my friend.