The Early Notes

in Reflections2 days ago

There were a couple comments in my last article that mentioned that people no longer realise how much work goes into being successful. And while I have talked about it a long time ago, I think it is salient to consider how the world has changed and what we see of success.


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In the past, we used to have local success where even in small towns, there were small-town heroes who would excel at a sport, instrument, or business. They might not have gone on to make it to the majors, but even in the minors it was generally clear that they worked hard to be at their best. I remember a few hockey players (field hockey) who worked super hard in my little town, a couple them actually did go on to play for the state and Australia. For me, they were role models, even though a couple years older, and I also occasionally trained and played with them. They were good players, hard trainers.

But I wonder how common this is now for most people, where the role models are international stars, which means that they are already successful, have already made it. We no longer see much road to success these days, because we have replaced local entertainment with international celebrity. We don't see the hard yards put in, the hours spent in training and practice, the million failures, we just see the end product of all those years of work by the person who succeeds and all the people who supported them.

I suspect that this has an impact on how we ourselves approach our own workload, where perhaps we have too high expectations, and too low work ethic to actually succeed. And while it isn't about becoming some international superstar, I reckon it impacts on our day to day work ethic too-. Perhaps this is why so many people feel so entitled in the workplace that they expect all the perks, without doing much of the works.

I was watching the women's snowboarding halfpipe final tonight and a seventeen year old Korean girl too a massive fall on the first run. She looked like that was the end of her competition, but she came out again for the second run and dropped after a ginger attempt at her first hit. The commentary were amazed she even tried. But, she came back again for the third and final run, and absolutely laid it down, and took gold. In the space of twenty minutes or so, she went from zero to hero.

But that isn't her story, is it? Sure, that is great for the Olympic viewers, but this girl at only the age of seventeen, has already been practicing for most of her life, competing locally and then internationally, and has likely fallen thousands of time very hard - without anyone watching. She has probably picked herself up, bruised and battered, and then tried a trick again. And again. Her friends watching maybe, and then her coaches. But over and over, she has been in pain, and worked through it.

There are plenty of young people who are similar, but as a percentage of the whole, it is a very small, very visible group that make it to the top. However, most of us these days can't even get our ass to the gym a few times a week, let alone push morning, night and weekends in order to be great at something. And the thing is, many of us are being paid to do a job, and we still can't bring ourselves to improve at it, without expecting the employer to offer some course.

I think that being so far removed from seeing the work that goes into being successful is damaging our work ethic. Even when it comes to our parents, many of us never saw them actually do the work they were paid for, many maybe not fully realising what went into putting food on the table. And these days, if we did watch many people work, they are sitting behind a desk in an air-conditioned office, so it doesn't exactly scream work ethic. Yet, even in great conditions, people complain as if each day they are dumped on their ass from 15 meters up in the air.

Not many of us will ever be world-beating at what we do, but we can be great at what we do locally. We can be hard-working, ethical, helpful, and consciously improve our surroundings and ourselves. But it is still a work ethic thing, where we have to be willing to work, even if there is no reward likely. Fortune favours the bold. Luck favours the prepared.

I guess it is best to be bold, and prepared.

Taraz
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It is about persistence and grit, they are rarely seen if you look at people born after 2000.

There is a term in Finnish "Sisu" that is similar to grit. When I first came to Finland in 2003 I heard a lot about it. Haven't heard about it in years. It used to be a defining trait of Finns.

I've seen a movie about it. Exactly that name.

Ha!
I haven't seen that yet, but I know what you are talking about. Pretty bloody from what I hear.

I think knowing about the local/small town heroes would require being somewhat involved with the small town and I don't know how many people are involved in anything even when they are involved with the small town (I have the bias of having done community sports since the kids were little and encountering/witnessing numerous parents who seem to fully and very firmly believe that they should never ever be asked to do any more than show up/drop the kids off as they're paying money and they are way too busy and their time and things are way more important than anyone else's will ever be and everyone else should be glad that they're involved at all).

would require being somewhat involved with the small town

Oh i agree! "Back in the day" parents would get involved. People would help out at small town carnivals. bands would practice in garages for dodgy eisteddfods. People had fun, and knew each other.

I'm pretending that there's more people around who realise that community is kind of important as along with some program growth we also have more parents willing and helping with more things so I'm hoping there's similar going on outside of my little bubble even if it's in little pockets that no one ever hears about because it probably doesn't generate enough outrage and clicks and ad revenue.

I didn't see that in the halfpipe, but that is awesome. I think that is part of what makes the Olympics so amazing. I've always been a fan of the underdog in general unless they are going against my particular favorite.

I've always been a fan of the underdog in general unless they are going against my particular favorite.

For sure. And she did beat the favourite, who was looking for a threepeat.

I was involved in track and field during my school years and ranked second or third in the region (population 1.5 million) in the 100-meter dash. I wouldn't say I trained hard, just had natural talent.
I remember the look on my 7th grade PE teacher's face when he stood with a stopwatch on the school stadium and couldn't believe his eyes :)

I wouldn't say I trained hard, just had natural talent.

Perhaps you should have trained and been first :)

What was your best time? I was never a great sprinter, especially being so short, but I managed just under 12 seconds. I used it on the hockey field.

You had a good result in running, I also had less than 12 seconds and a little more than 11 seconds.

Sometimes even now I want to speed up, for example when there are 50 meters left before a tram is about to depart, but I’m afraid that it will be difficult for me to brake my 117 kg and I’ll damage the tram :)

BTW, saw Finland play Slovakia in ice hockey yesterday and that was quite an upset... USA rolled over Latvia today.

Yeah it was an upset. Slovakia scored against the run of play. Fin - Sweden today - a huge rivalry.

The result against Latvia was expected :)

Respect for work has been diminishing. I have seen the new kids does not have the craze to respect what they do, their approach is casual just to to get the money at the end of month. But I assume with AI progress soon they realised the importance of having work.

Getting money at the end of the month is fine - but have the self-respect to at least do the job properly.

We’ve traded seeing real, local effort for polished global highlights, and it quietly reshapes how we think success happens. Those “small town heroes” showed us the grind up close now we mostly see the trophy, not the bruises. Being great locally, consistently, without applause that’s the real discipline most of us need to relearn. Respect.

And it isn't even polished anymore. It is a race to the bottom in the grab for attention.

What looks like a miraculous turnaround in twenty minutes is really the payoff of years of invisible suffering and discipline.

Miracles tend to be pretty ordinary - when looking at what led up to them.

It is important to keep in mind that every champion began their journey by working hard long before they became famous. I think we should focus more on the journey instead of just the results.

Journey not the destination, seems to have been lost as a way to live life.

It's being prepared and having the work grit to move forward tht defines it...

Very little grit today.

most of us these days can't even get our ass to the gym a few times a week, let alone push morning, night and weekends in order to be great at something.

Sad but true. I haven't used my gym membership even once in the new year. Maybe I should just cancel the dang membership instead of donating to a company every month? Nah, better I should drag my ass to the gym already!

Work ethic is shot. I love getting in front of my class to teach math, but I hate doing the prep work to plan my classes. There is something kind of thrilling about stepping in and just teaching a lesson without any prep or practice.

If people realized that success is just a pile of managed failures, we’d probably have a lot more resilience and a lot less complaining.

 2 days ago  Reveal Comment