Be generous with yourself. Donât look for a sign to the perfect opening. Donât wait until all the paths have been cut and freed from thick undergrowth and fallen trees. Just start moving. Listen to your instincts, try to find a role in which you might catch a glimpse of a red thread or two, then, as you move down the path, keep your eyes peeled for more red threads.
When you find one, grab hold and follow where it leads.
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The same is true for you, of course. You have a unique relationship with the world, a relationship that reveals to you things that only you can see. It offers thread-weaving opportunities all the time, but the only person who knows if those threads are red is you. The world wonât do your weaving for youâit doesnât care about your red threads. The only person who can stop and be attentive enough to identify these threads, and weave them intelligently into the fabric of your work, is you.
âSo ask yourself, âWhat do I find myself instinctively raising my hand for?â Left entirely to your own devices, which activities or situations seem to pull you toward them? Block out all the other voices and demands in your world, and see what your answers are. No matter the answers, theyâll be meaningful.
Honor yourself by listening to them.
Use your emotional reaction to the raw material of your life to pinpoint which activities have these red-thread qualities.
Once you identify these red threads, your challenge will be to weave them into the fabric of your life, both at home and at work. Weâll get into how to do that later in the book, but for now please know that you do not need an entire quilt made up of only red threads. You donât need to âdo only what you love.â
Instead, you need only to find specific lovesâred threadsâwithin what you do. Recent research by the Mayo Clinic into the well-being of doctors and nurses reveals that 20 percent is the threshold level: spend at least 20 percent of your time at work doing specific activities you love and you are far less likely to experience burnout. Research by colleagues at the ADP Research Institute reinforces this finding. According to their recent global study of twenty-five thousand workers, if you have a chance to do something you love each and every day (even if you arenât good at it yet), you are 3.6 times more likely to be highly resilient.
So, yes, love matters, but you donât need to love all you do. You just need to find the love in what you do. And as the Mayo Clinic research reveals, even a little love goes a long, long way
Try to change your relationship to your fears. Donât banish them. Donât fight them. Donât turn and face them down. Instead, see whether you can learn to honor your fearsâwhich means listening to them, being curious about them, and admiring them as part of the real you. Do thisâgently, generously, kindlyâand they will show you what you truly love.
On your journey, youâre told to dismiss your fears, to confront your fears, to step outside of your comfort zone. Yet this is all so misleading. Your big choice in life is not âcomfort or no comfort.â It is âlove or no love.â When you step into things you love, you will feel fear. Thatâs not just OK, itâs fundamental. So fundamental, in fact, that if youâre doing something and you feel no fear, then youâve lost your love.
So, take the path of fear, because the path of fear is the path of love.
How do you move further along on your own path toward a good life? First, by recognizing that the good life is not a destination. It is the path itself, and the people who are walking it with you. As you walk, second by second you can decide to whom and to what you give your attention. Week by week you can prioritize your relationships and choose to be with the people who matter. Year by year you can find purpose and meaning through the lives that you enrich and the relationships that you cultivate. By developing your curiosity and reaching out to othersâfamily, loved ones, coworkers, friends, acquaintances, even strangersâwith one thoughtful question at a time, one moment of devoted, authentic attention at a time, you strengthen the foundation of a good life.