Real Men Do Cry
The last time I broke down in public I was trying to articulate what it was like to totally commit to winning Ironman Canada and not achieve my goal. Looking back, it was a highly effective explanation, but difficult to explain in words!
Collectively, we share an aversion to pain and protect ourselves by limiting commitment and managing expectations. This provides an opportunity to succeed through uncommon commitment - the flipside of which is temporary pain if we fall short.
I've been working on a writing project that shares what I've learned so far about wealth, longevity, real estate, personal finance, marriage and kids. As part of that process, I've been reviewing a dozen years of blogging and came across an article from December 2004.
The article references my Top Ten List from March 2000.
Touch someone with my writing
Clean out my computer room (had to have one easy one!)
Relax more
Sub-10 at an IM
Buy a house to have a base
Be published in a major magazine or in a forum where a wide audience can read me
Get rid of a lot of stuff in my life
More love in my life
Write entertaining pieces that make people laugh
A new career that would give me time to do what I want as well as travel
Over a decade ago, I wrote an outline of a life that I wanted to create for myself. I was 31 years old, working at a desk job and wishing I was somewhere other than Hong Kong. When I read that article, I smile because my pals in Boulder would recognize the guy that I describe but I had NO idea who was within me.
In fact, 11 years on, I managed to go further than my wildest dreams. That knowledge cheered me up last week, when I was nursing a rib injury and wondering what the heck I was going to do with the rest of my 40s.
So I think it's time to put myself out there again and write my Top Ten List as at November 2011.
Be able to walk to world class long course masters, ideally at Stanford University
See my wife vibrant within our marriage
Have my kids tell people their Dad loves them
Publish my second book
Complete a new high mountain cycing route each year
Stay fit enough so I continue to get a mini speedo given to me on my birthday
Start my fourth career
Maintain freedom of location and occupation
Quarterly retreats in nature
Touch 1 million people with my writing
It will be fun to look back when I'm in my 50s and see how I did.
This week a friend joked that when you spend your entire life acting like a dog chasing a car, it can be tough to figure out what to do when you finally bite the bumper...
...I guess you write another list and enjoy the ride.