Petra Post Magazine Issue 1 | Page 13

PEOPLE ARE YOU WHAT IS HOLDING YOU BACK? BY JASON RUSH, CERTIFIED PETRA COACH WHEN I started my first company, I was young, optimistic, doing everything I knew to be right—but I reached a point where things just stopped moving. The momentum that had started it all was gone. One day I sat down and began to write down what “success” looked like to me. It took no more than a few minutes before it dawned on me that I did not have a clear picture or definition of what success looked like in my business. And when I got honest with myself, I realized the escalated expectations that could come with success scared me. As Ralph Waldo Emerson said, “fear defeats more people than any other one thing in the world.” The biggest roadblock holding each of us back is inside of us. Our fears that hold our businesses back the most also happen to be the ones that we are least aware of. They are latent fears—ones often focused around change, our abilities, or the unknown. Many times, we resist doing things that will allow us to reach our goals because reaching those goals would bring us into unfamiliar territory. Perhaps we are afraid of the ways our lives could change once we reach our goals. Perhaps we are afraid we could let other people down. One thing I’ve learned is that when a logical decision meets a deep, unconscious fear, the fear will always win. The only way to level that playing field is to bring your unconscious fear to light. Then, you have the power to harness that fear to push you toward your goals faster than you could have imagined. When I found myself at this point with my first company, it was too late. My business subsequently failed because I didn’t come to terms soon enough with the ways I was holding myself back. My next company was different. I approached it by defining success on Day One and immediately began to weave the Rockefeller Habits/ScalingUp into the fabric of my organization to form the path to that success. I wanted everyone to know the destination and the route to getting there. If you sense your progress is blocked, your business has lost momentum, or things are just not working according to plan, I suggest that you begin by sitting down and creating a clear picture of what your success looks like. Ask yourself some questions about that success: How could your daily life change if you achieve it? What’s the worst that could happen? What’s the best that could happen? How could your responsibilities change? How could your relationships change? Pay attention to any feelings you have in response to the questions. When you notice any points of anxiety or discomfort, you have touched on an area where an unconscious fear resides. Think carefully about how you might be resisting progress because of this fear. It may look like procrastination, indecision, setting goals too low, or even setting goals impossibly high to ensure failure. Here is the good news: uncovering your unconscious fears—and the ways you behave to protect yourself from them— gives you immediate power. Learning that I was ultimately self-sabotaging due to fear of what that success could bring gave me the power to define what my success looks like, plan for it, and decisively take actions that moved each of my subsequent companies in the directions I wanted them to go. Uncovered fear gives us added motivation to find solutions, educate ourselves, and reach out to others for help when needed. Find your fears, own them, and make plans that will move you past them to the place that you want to be. 13