Significance
There is a story about Mother Teresa (Noble Peace Prize 1979) being on an airplane and sitting next to a passenger who was extolling his amazing achievements; CEO of a huge company, possessions, fame, network of influential business leaders and fortune. You know and can imagine the person. He was unaware that the listener was Mother Teresa.
Mother Teresa finally interrupted the gentleman by asking a simple question: “What have you done that is significant?” Despite his career highs; the thousands of adoring shareholders, the countless subordinates and employees and the awesome salary, he was silenced, deflated and probably disappointed or embarrassed. But where was his significance agenda? There is a natural tendency to pursue success and forget or negate significance. Urgency overwhelms purpose, as ever larger survival urges overwhelm longer term wellness.
Along your life journey regularly ask if there are opportunities for significance and higher purpose in your daily actions. Start by thinking small and locally; do a random act of kindness, volunteer, put yourself out to help someone else, mentor a subordinate - seek simple service gestures, as these opportunities are countless.
One of the more powerful tools or habits that brings a sense of well-being and contentment is serving others. It will improve your spirits, your local community and your world view.
Significance, and the purpose it engenders, encourages a cycle of improved wellness and wholeness. Significance encourages joy to flourish around and within you. Start to look for significance opportunities, and you will find they are everywhere.
Balance your life and career so you both do well (personal rewards) but also do good (benefit others). “Doing good” is your significance agenda and challenge.
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