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Five Habits of Happy High-Achievers

Guest post by: Renita Kalhorn

Article Overview: Falling short of a goal can be tough for some people, while, other people are content with giving their best effort regardless of the outcome. What differentiates those that lament their perceived failure and those that appreciate the experience? Happy High-Achievers - let's call them HaHAs – have learned the secret to play hard and stay content. They are able to maintain their balance, they enjoy the process, they pursue excellence and not perfection and most of all of all they focus on what they can control

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Five Habits of Happy High-Achievers

When Shannon Bahrke won bronze in women's moguls at the 2010 Winter Olympics, in her excitement she "hugged first-place winner Hannah Kearney so tightly that she almost knocked her U.S. teammate over." Next to them on the podium, however, Canadian skier Jennifer Heil looked crestfallen after taking silver. From our vantage point as a spectator, it might be hard to imagine feeling disappointed at "only" winning a silver medal. On the other hand, we can kind of understand how, after years of training and sacrifice, being so close to the gold -- and falling seconds short -- could feel like failure.

That crucial difference in perspective is why "on average, bronze medalists are happier than silver medalists," says Victoria Medvec, a psychologist and professor at Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management in Illinois. Research shows a disconnect between performance and satisfaction, she says. "Those who perform objectively better can actually feel worse than those who they outperformed."

Of course, there are high-performers in all arenas - business, medicine, performing arts - who are never quite satisfied with their impressive achievements. They zone in on the flaws, lament their missteps and don't really seem to savor and enjoy the fruits of their labor. Makes you wonder, what's the point of achievement again?

The secret to happy goal attainment comes down to focus. Here are five ways Happy High-Achievers - let's call them HaHAs - play hard and stay content:

1. HaHAs keep their balance. Come on, there's no glory in pushing to the edge, sacrificing proper nutrition, sufficient sleep and movie night, if it means you're going to collapse, be out of commission and have disgruntled friends and family. HaHAs keep an ongoing cost-benefit analysis and remember their core values (that trophy isn't going to come visit you in the hospital!) to make sure they don't sacrifice what's really important.

2. HaHAs enjoy the process. Yup, that ol' chestnut. But, it's true: isn't most of the time we spend in pursuing a goal considered "process?" To focus on the fleeting moments on the podium (the stage, the finish line) and expect them to feel like sufficient reward for your hard work is a recipe for dissatisfaction. For HaHAs, the purpose of a goal is for what they'll learn and the joy in striving for it - actually achieving the goal is just icing on the cake.

3. HaHAs pursue excellence, not perfection. Can we just all agree already that perfection does not exist? And if it does, it's subjective and a constantly moving target? HaHAs know this and refuse to hold themselves up to some impossible standard. They don't compare themselves relentlessly to others or pay attention to the inner critic. Instead, they prefer to focus on the more satisfying challenge of simply doing better than they did the day before.

4. HaHAs focus on what they can control. And they spend minimal time focusing on what they can't. When results fall short, HaHAs don't blame the weather, their neighbor's barking dog or the dry-cleaners. They don't constantly look in the rear-view mirror and beat themselves up for a result that is past and done. Whatever happens, HaHAs forgive (themselves and others), show gratitude and find a way to reframe the situation so they can feel good and move forward.

5. HaHAs are doin' it for themselves. That's because working toward a goal solely to satisfy someone else's expectations - whether your parents, fans or society - is destined to create a feeling of gnawing emptiness and "is this all there is?" Conversely, no matter how "unimpressive" or inadvisable a choice of action might seem to an outsider ("Whaddya mean you don't want the promotion?!"), HaHAs have figured out which accomplishments give them the greatest satisfaction in practice - not just theory - and they stay true to themselves.

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Article Tags: control, energy, flow, motivation, optimum performance, peak performance, recovery, resilience, stress

About the Author: Renita Kalhorn
RSS for Renita's articles - Visit Renita's website

Renita Kalhorn is a Juilliard-trained concert pianist with a first-degree martial arts black belt and an INSEAD MBA who helps entrepreneurs, executives and sales professionals get exceptional results under pressure. Using her Step Up Your Game Performance System, clients dramatically increase their mental stamina, productivity and ability to perform under pressure -- generating exceptional results more quickly and easily than they would on their own. Fluent in Japanese, Renita has delivered leadership training programs in the U.S. and Asia for Fortune 500 clients such as Deutsche Bank, Pfizer, GlaxoSmithKline and Time Warner. She also delivers mental toughness training to the Navy SEALs RDAC. Find out more at http://www.stepupyourgamenow.com

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Related Forum Posts
Re: What I'm reading this weekend - Sept 10, 2010 Re: What I'm reading this weekend - Sept 10, 2010 - Glad you liked it David! I only managed to get partway through the list today because my one year old was looking for some playtime but I did read the Zen Habits one - I love reading Zen Habits while relaxing at a coffee shop!
Re: My 3 best business books Re: My 3 best business books - 1. Think and Grow Rich - Napoleon Hill 2. The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People - Stephen R. Covey 3. Permission Marketing - Seth Godin Think and Grow Rich seems more powerful each time I read it or dip into it. The 7 Habits not only offers some very effective ways to organize your life (which I have yet to master!), but also some great quotations and thought provoking statements including this by Nazi concentration camp survivor, Viktor Frankl: [i:2naxzsom]Between stimulus and response, man has the freedom to choose.[/i:2naxzsom] Seth Godin's Permission Marketing is a good read for anybody seeking to understand how to approach doing business on the Internet in the right way with regard to winning people's trust.
Re: What I'm reading this weekend - Sept 10, 2010 Re: What I'm reading this weekend - Sept 10, 2010 - I was also interested in the Zen Habits affiliate programme as it might mix well with my business/japan blog...
Re: Money Does Not Guarantee Happiness Re: Money Does Not Guarantee Happiness - Thanks for singling this point out, Chris. One book that comes to mind that covers it in an overall approach is "The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People" by Stephen Covey. He addresses our inner life and the way it can change our effectiveness home and at work. There are corporations who have taken this model and effectively molded their business around it.
Re: What I'm reading this weekend - Nov 12, 2010 Re: What I'm reading this weekend - Nov 12, 2010 - Hi Evan, Yes, do keep posting the list, please! I socked two articles into my "read later" file... Zen Habits - Momentum, and $100 a day from info products. The "read later" file is a real time saver... the only problem being that I haven't yet read anything in it. I know: I'll read it later! Mañana! DH


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