The biggest triumph is getting out of bed

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Psychology Today did an interview with me. It was about my most triumphant moments in my life, and how I overcame obstacles to get there. I knew immediately that the interview was going to be a disaster, so I told them I wanted to do the interview written, rather than on the phone.

Then I didn't write the interview for a week.

Then I complained about the questions: I don't really believe in triumph. Because the most triumphant moments are the days when I have no idea how I’m going to fix anything, but I get out of bed anyway. On the other hand, the moments of huge achievement are not actually that hard to get to. By the time you’re close, you are so motivated to get there that it doesn’t feel like work at all.

So I wrote that. And then I felt bad. So I tried to give an example. People like examples. And I like Psychology Today. And I didn't want to disappoint them.

So I wrote that the moment when I was a freelance writer and a new mom and had post-partum depression but I knew I had to keep working so I had to get out of bed and write. Maybe there were fifty moments like that. Or five hundred. But those are the moments of triumph. The thing is, I think it was probably messed up that I kept working and did not check myself into a hospital. And then I started thinking that all my moments of triumph came at the heels of me having done something totally terrible.

Like, let me tell you right now that before I could play volleyball professionally, I was literally starving. So I stole bagels at the bagel shop. I have had about ten editors take that out of my writing. Out of my Business 2.0 column, out of my book, and my editor will tell me now that this is not good to put in a post. Stealing is bad, right? But my point is that it's very hard to do some extraordinary triumph without taking some extraordinary risk or making an odd judgment that other people would not make. That's why the triumph is extraordinary.

Another thing about the bullshit of big triumphs: Our big moments — where we can change the world — come because so many other people have helped us, and luck has come to us. But our small moments, when no one is watching and no one cares and the only thing that makes us try again is an unreasonable belief that we can get what we want for ourselves — those are the triumphs that we do all by ourselves.

When I have been on the cusp of huge success, there have always been people to help me. For example, my agent stayed with me when I was out of money but about to get a six-figure book deal.

But there was no one helping me get out of bed the day I knew I had to start writing my book proposal even though the odds of getting a big book deal from it were terrible. The daily task of believing things will improve when then things look bad. We do that on our own, and each time I do it I am thankful, in a deep, spiritual way. I’m not sure what keeps me going when everything looks terrible, but I know that each time I do it, it’s a triumph. And it happens a lot.

Another thing. Everyone, please shut up about your biggest failures. I hate when people write about their failures because they always write about how they pulled themselves up, or what they learned. And really, then, it’s not a failure, is it? It’s a learning opportunity, or a chance to shine. Failure is something you did not overcome. You did not learn from. And most people are too embarrassed to write about it. High achievers don’t have failures because they can learn from everything.

There is no finish line, there is no gold prize. There is only living with yourself, day after day. So each day needs to be a small triumph so you can pat yourself on the back before you go to sleep. I try to do that. Today’s triumph is doing this interview with Psychology Today. Sure, I couldn't quite do it, and I had to be quirky and weird, and it probably cost me getting into the article. But at least I wrote something.

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  1. CarenDunn
    CarenDunn says:

    This is enlightening. I like the part “There is only living with yourself, day after day.” The only obstacle is yourself. Getting up and doing things for the better is a triumph in itself.

  2. gbg
    gbg says:

    Congrats on your interview … something to be proud of. I am impressed … love that magazine, actually.

    Inspiring post regarding your ordeal during post-partum …

    “The daily task of believing things will improve when then things look bad. ”

    That’s a keeper for mantra possibilities – thank you.

  3. Joe
    Joe says:

    (The late) Joseph Campbell said the same exact thing in several of his books. He called it “following your bliss,” as in, don’t follow the money, follow your passion. No matter what. See “The Power of Myth” (the transcript of an interview with Bill Moyers) or the slimmer volume, “An Open Life.”

  4. ME
    ME says:

    I have the diagnosis of bipolar disorder & am on meds, but I still am an insomniac so the “getting out of bed” ordeal is foreign for me. I have so much trouble getting into bed & after 2-3 hrs. of sleep I feel a physical adrenaline rush coursing through my body to GET UP & GET GOING & I do. I HATE to sleep or lie down.

    Doc prescribing sedating meds but so far they are not working. The only reason I desire to sleep is that I have experienced after about 5 mos. of not sleeping much I crash into a depression so trying to avoid that…

    Yeah, I know my comments do not apply to the general population as I have this “mental illness”, but sleep or reclining is very distasteful for me.

    But interesting to read about the dilemma of “normal” folks!

  5. Liz
    Liz says:

    This is amazing! It’s one of the most insightful comments about life that I’ve ever read. Literally: Goosebumps.

    Thank you so much for sharing.

  6. T. Marsh
    T. Marsh says:

    Another helpful post. I am with you as you say the first step is getting out of bed. To succeed in work and in life, you need to do just that. Keep on posting more helpful blogs, it surely helped me.

  7. Stacia Sanders
    Stacia Sanders says:

    I absolutely love this post! There are days when I get a lot done, really take big strides towards my goals, I wake up and I’m just full of energy and get more done before lunch than I sometimes do all day. At the end of these days I surprisingly don’t feel more accomplished than I do on the days when I had to work to get out of bed and it took all of my effort to just get something done, to take a baby step towards my goals. Doing something when you feel like it and it’s easy is not a triumph. Working through adversity and your own baggage to do something when you don’t feel like doing it is a triumph.

    As far as “big” triumphs, sometimes when I have those days when others look up to me for what I just did I wonder where they were for all the “little” triumphs. I don’t think there are “big” triumphs, there’s just the accumulation of a bunch of “little” triumphs.

  8. sean
    sean says:

    This is a great post. Facing hardship and having to get out your bed to face another day of it is tough..But that bad guy on one shoulder tells you to stay in the bed..The good guy on the other shoulder is saying get out the bed and fight….

  9. Renee
    Renee says:

    I enjoy your blog and sometimes feel like you are writing what I am thinking… I liked this post when I read it the day you posted it and then a week later I found my back went out and I was laid up for about a week. I could crawl on all 4s to the bathroom & kitchen and that was about it. It wasn’t until this happened that I found myself fantasizing about getting back to work or driving or taking a damn shower! This post really came at a time in my life that was especially meaningful and I passed it on to my little sis when she said she didn’t want to get out of bed for work. Seriously it is the hardest part, but once we pass the hurdle, anything is possible. And I am also trying to be kinder to myself and others and appreciate the small victories. PS congratulations on the engagement!

  10. Marco
    Marco says:

    I just read the post and a lot of these comments and had to get my say as well.

    Well we all have difficulties in most of the things we do and especially day to day, something we work very had and nothing seems to go right other days we just fly by and things just click into place. Both big and small triumphs are achieved everyday some people achieve them easier than others. I think the most important thing is motivation and encouragement.

    For example myself and my colleagues achieve great triumphs almost every week at our work (we work in marketing – €“ in a tough competitive environment) but sometimes they go unnoticed, no one acknowledges our small victories and it can seem a bit disheartening with a why bother feeling but when people do notice and we receive the praise for our hard work we are much more motivated.

    This is true for all tasks and challenges, be it at work or personal either by praising yourself with a small reward or receiving praise from your peers, this praise helps to motivate and encourage you to achieve greater things. But I don't mean praise in a self-centred greedy I am the best kind of way I just mean a small token of appreciation for your achievement or triumph – €“ in other words to get the best out of your self and others then I recommend acknowledging achievement and triumphs no matter how big or small.

  11. Emily Chen
    Emily Chen says:

    I’ve been having a rough week and I randomly remembered this post from over a year ago. Thank you so much for writing this. Your words here are comforting and memorable.

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