Thursday, November 21, 2019
7 insanely powerful lessons my mentor taught me (which I didnt realize until later)
7 insanely powerful lessons my ratgeber taught me (which I didnt realize until later)7 insanely powerful lessons my mentor taught me (which I didnt realize until later)Having a mentor is more than an opportunity.A true mentorship is one filled with emotional investment?- ?a desire in the mentor to landsee their knowledge manifest in another, and an ambition from the student to take each lesson to heart. In a true mentorship, the student learns and grows at a rapid rate, which is fulfilling to them, and the mentor sees a reflection of themselves, allowing them to further develop as they review some of their earliest lessons and challenges.A true mentorship is symbioticAnd that is why it is so rare.Follow Ladders on FlipboardFollow Ladders magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and moreI have, for whatever reason, been fortunate to have multiple mentors in my life. When I welches 17 years old, I had a mentor in the World of Warcraft to whom I credit my development as a gamer. He is the reason I ended up becoming one of the highest ranked players in North America.When I was 21 years old, I had a mentor at the gym who taught me everything about lifting weights. He was a powerlifter, and taught me much more than just how to bench or squat. He taught me how to approach the gym with a level of discipline and humility that ended up carrying over to other elements of my life.And when I turned 23 years old and started working at an advertising agency and Think Tank in Chicago calledIdea Booth, I found arguably the most influential mentor I have had to dateRon Gibori, a serial entrepreneur and creative director.What I learned from Ron was one part industry related, one part self-development focused, and one part refined rebellion (that is the best way I can phrase it). As an experienced creative, it wasnt so much his working knowledge of advertising or his mastery over the art of networking that rubbed off on me. It was hi s mindset.Here are seven perspective-changing lessons Ive learned from my latest mentorship.1. There is always a thirdwayOne of my first days working at Idea Booth, Ron asked me to research how to get something posted for a brand within Flipboard.I poked around on Google for about 10 minutes and then came back to tell him, I looked, and its impossible. You can either do this, or this, but what youre asking for cant be done. He smiled and said, There is always a third way. Go find it. He was right. Twenty minutes later I figured it out.And to this day, whenever I fall into the trap of saying I cant figure it out, all he says is Flipboard, and I am reminded there is always another answer?- ?a third way.2. If someone likes your idea the first time you explain it, your idea isnt riskyenoughIve come to learn that the ideas most quickly praised are actually some of my weakest ideas.People praise them because they make sense and dont push boundaries?- ?they dont threaten anyone. This was s omething I didnt understand until I really started sharing my own ideas with the world. The valuable ideas are the ones people question, because where there is a question there is room to explore.The ideas that people immediately validate, that make them say Sure Love it are the safe ones, and tend to lack the risk needed to be truly influential and groundbreaking.3. Titles are meaninglessThis is a lesson I thought I had learned earlier in life, but it needed to be learned again.When I first started working at Idea Booth, I fell into the trap of wanting more. I was a kid fresh out of college and looked around at some of my peers who were in high-paying positions and had fancy titles next to their names, and I wanted that.I wanted that feeling of validation. I wanted people to know I was successful.But whenever I would spend time with Ron, practically asking him how I could have my own title, his only response was, Titles dont matter. Focus on doing great work instead.It took me a lo ng time to understand how valuable that lesson is?- ?and even more so, how many people use a title as a way to cover up how little they actually know.They let their title speak for them, instead of their skills and working knowledge. And they expect people to listen to them because of their title, not because of what they actively bring to the table.4. Rewards are fleeting (and do not bring fulfillment)Another thing I would do (as an ambitious young creative) was ogle the sports cars, nice clothes, and gorgeous women who frequented the Chicago hot spots Ron would take me to.I would look around and say, I want that. I want that. I want that, to which Ron would say,If you judge your success off the things you have, you will never be fulfilled.Being a 23-year-old staring at a jet-black Ferrari parked outside of a fancy restaurant, those words are not easy to encode. But I see now how much those words have deckenfries with me. Because once you get one reward, you want the next one, and the next one, and ultimately they lead nowhere.Real fulfillment comes from being in love with what you do, and always pushing yourself to create your next best piece of work.5. Great ideas dont happen sitting behind adeskThe interesting thing about our dynamic is that Ron and I are both very similar and very different.I am obsessive about my repetitive daily routines, and he is fearless in his willingness to try new things. In many ways, this is something we taught each other. For me, this meant stepping outside of my comfort zone and being willing to ride the waves of life.What I learned from Ron was that as much as daily discipline is required for long-term, sustainable progress and growth, moments of inspiration and creative freedom rarely happen in a closed room. They happen when youre out in the world being exposed to new things. They happen over dinner at some crazy concept restaurant, or while watching live music in a grungy blues bar. They happen at an art museum, or while w alking through a park. They happen on a roller coaster, or in a yoga class. They happen when you step outside what is familiar to you, and your senses are exposed to something different.These days, I try hard to do something I have never done before at least a few times a week?- ?because I see the value.6. Say yes, then figure out how to do itlaterOne of the fundamental changes I have witnessed in myself over the past few years has been my willingness to say yes to what is 100 percent unknown?- ?and I attribute that to having spent so much time watching and learning from a seasoned entrepreneur.Very rarely do you walk into a situation knowing all the answers, and this ambiguity used to keep me from saying yes to a lot of opportunities. Unless I knew exactly how I was going to do something, I would avoid it. What I have since learned is that the unknown is nothing to fear, and the only question you need to ask yourself is,Do I believe enough in myself to be able to figure it out?That s it.If the opportunity intrigues you, say yes. Figure out how youre going to pull it off later. But get yourself in the trenches. Get your hands dirty. And know, deep down, that you have what it takes to get it done.7. True creatives are unapologetic in theirworkThis is hands down, the biggest lesson I learned from Ron, as well as the hardest.Every creative persons fear is rooted in judgment.What will people think of me? What if no one likes what I create? What if Im wrong? These fears are what keep many people from ever creating anything of value?- ?and simultaneously, force them to lean on the title creative. They call themselves creative more than they perform the act of creating, while the truly creative are the ones who are too busy working on their craft to care one way or another how people refer to them.For me, the manifestation of this lesson came through the publishing of my first book,Confessions of a Teenage Gamer. I had just started writing when I began working at Idea Booth, and it took me almost five years to complete and publish. The reason it took me so long was because I cared a lot about what people thought. I feared how people would take it and worried it wouldnt be good enough. I wondered if people would understand or appreciate it.Publishing this book showed me I had finally learned the lesson Ron had explained to me time and time again.You create for yourself,he would say.Your work is an expression of you. And you cant live your life in fear.This wasnt a lesson Ron sat down and taught me. It wasnt explained once or twice, and then I got it. This was a slow progression over several years, the result of my being in his presence and feeding off the energy of someone who was 100 percent confident in his ideas and willing to face the criticism of others.That is the value of a mentor, and what a true mentorship is.Its the opportunity to learn firsthand.It is not a class. It is not I teach you and then youre done. It is an experience. And the greatest lessons come from simply being in the presence of someone who possesses the qualities you hope to one day embody yourself.This article originally appeared on Inc. Magazine.You might also enjoyNew neuroscience reveals 4 rituals that will make you happyStrangers know your social class in the first seven words you say, study finds10 lessons from Benjamin Franklins daily schedule that will double your productivityThe worst mistakes you can make in an interview, according to 12 CEOs10 habits of mentally strong people
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