Your Thoughts

You’re not as good as they think you are.

You’re not as bad as they think you are.

You are what you think you are.

Earn Your Confidence

“Fake it ’til you make it.”

“Act as if.”

“Just be confident.”

I’m not sure any of this advice is effective. Certainly not in the long run.

What is effective is to just put in the work. Over a long period of time. Because when confidence wanes, you need something to go back to. Some terra firma. Something to tell yourself, “Hey I can be confident here because I’ve earned it. I’ve put in the work. I deserve to be confident.”

Read the below Dwayne Wade story told to Tiger Woods (h/t to Billy Oppenheimer for providing)…

With 1.9 seconds left in overtime of Game 5 of the 2006 NBA Finals, Dwyane Wade went to the free throw line. Wade and the Heat were down by 1. The series was tied 2-2. He told Tiger Woods how he prepared to make those high-pressure free throws: “The night before,” Wade said, “I was in the gym at midnight. And I was like, ‘I know games come down to free throws. No matter what happens, it’s going to come down to free throws.’ So I was in the gym and I had my cousin standing next to me, I had him right in my ear talking shit to me. And so the next night, I get in that same situation where I got to make these free throws. And I just went back to last night in the gym. I just went right back to that. I was like, ‘I just hit 200 of these last night. I got this.’” “That’s so good,” Tiger says. “It’s like,” Wade continues, “your confidence comes from your work.” “Correct,” Tiger replies. “You’ve done it over and over,” Wade says. “You’ve seen yourself do it.” “Correct,” Tiger says, “thousands of times.” Filled with the confidence that came as an epiphenomenon, a byproduct, an indirect reward of his work, Wade hit the two free throws. The Heat won 101-100 to take a 3-2 series lead. In Game 6, he had 36 points to help the Heat win the game and their first championship in franchise history. Wade was named NBA Finals MVP.

Good Judgment

I recently put together a week long, off-campus, Finance & Investing “Experience” for twenty of my high school students (I cheekily called it “Billionaire Bootcamp”). These were all students who wanted to learn more about finance, investing, real estate and entrepreneurship.

I’m extremely lucky to have graduated from the University of Chicago with a very close group of friends, all highly accomplished in various industries, including finance. I called on this friend group to come and speak to my students and they offered incredible, world-class advice.

One of them–Joe–in preparation to talk to my students, asked a billionaire that he works with, what single piece of advice he would give to those looking to make it big. Perhaps even to become a billionaire.

The billionaire’s answer?…

Good judgment.

If you have good judgment and make good decisions, then you’ve got a chance at a billion. More importantly, you will have a high quality and happy life.

Without good judgment?….You don’t stand a chance.

Affirm The Struggle

Positive affirmations are great. And research shows that they can help you get through times when you’re struggling.

But their power lies in the fact that you’re first actually trying to do something hard to then affirm.

Your Inner Whisper

Your inner voice is whispering. Telling you what you should do.

Can you get quiet enough to hear it?

And once you hear it, can you be courageous enough to follow it?

Name Brand

A follow up to yesterday’s post “What’s In A Name”

Pick a name for your project (or company or whatever it is you’re trying to do) that feels right to you in the moment. Don’t worry if it’s perfect. Just decide on something and get moving.

If you’re intentional and consistently produce excellent work over a long enough period of time, then the name will eventually be perfect.

Because everyone will associate your name (or brand) with excellence. And that’s a perfect place to be.

What’s In A Name

Not starting your company or band or project or script or whatever idea you have until you have the perfect name for it is just an excuse to stall.

You’ll never have the perfect name.

Just pick something pretty good. Or at the very least one that doesn’t suck.

And get to work.

True story behind why we named ourselves “Vs. Theatre Company” (or at least a major reason)…It was the title of our favorite Pearl Jam album. (H/t to my good buddy Ron Klier for that one.)

Grit Is A Finite Resource

Grit is a wonderful thing

But it’s also a finite resource.

Therefore, you must have goals that (a) truly energize you, (b) you actually think you can accomplish someday and (c) you can’t have too many at one time.

Choose your goals wisely my friend.

The Compound Effect Of Going First

Speaking of going first, the transcript of this talk given by Peter Kaufman is a must read.

Tons of absolute gems in here. Enjoy it this weekend over a cup of coffee.

And when you’re done, go first at something. And then go first again. And again. And again….

You won’t regret it.

P.S. – H/t to Shane Parrish for providing.

A Third Option

There’s a fantastic scene in the film Jay Kelly in which the character of Jay, a movie star (played by George Clooney), meets up with an old friend from acting class, Timothy (played by Billy Crudup). After reminiscing about old times including Jay telling Timothy that he was far and away the best actor in the class (“I could watch you do anything.”) the two have a confrontation in the parking lot. Timothy tells Jay “I can’t stand you. You kind of stole my life.” He wanted to be an actor, but Jay swooped in on an audition, got the part and the rest is history. Timothy gave up acting entirely, got married and is now a child therapist.

The scene got me thinking…why does being an artist (in this case, an actor) have to be a binary option? Either you “make it” in the business. Or you don’t, and have to quit.

Well, it’s not binary.

There’s a third option.

Which is…Have a job/career that pays the bills, doesn’t kill your soul, and in all your free time, make art.

That could be taking classes, doing play readings (Vs. does one every week), making short films or producing a play. Not to mention reading and seeing plays, and watching films.

Yes, the third option requires discipline and focus and sacrifice and commitment. And yes, you may never get paid a single dime for your art.

But no matter what, you can hang your head high knowing that you never gave up on your dream, your love, your art.

And that’s a helluva good option and life.

Go make your art.

Never stop making your art.