The Best of the Worst and Worst of the Best
In our last several +1s, we’ve been having fun hanging out with world-class mental toughness and peak performance coach, .
And, trust me.
Any time spent with Cainer is going to be fun.
He is EASILY one of the most inspiring human beings on the planet. You can’t help but feel energized just being in his presence.
So…
Today we’re going to talk about one of the lines in his little fable on The 10 Pillars of Mental Performance Mastery that jumped out at me and tattooed itself on my consciousness.
It’s about being average.
Coach Kenny is the guide in the fable. He’s coaching a burned-out executive.
He tells him:
Me: Oh, snap!
Average.
It’s the best of the worst. And the worst of the best.
Stuck right there .
Not where we want to hang out.
Brian has Coach Kenny say:
And: “The world needs you at your best. You can’t be normal, you must be elite.”
And: “If you don’t have a plan, how are you getting better? The problem is when you stop getting better, you start getting bitter, and nobody likes being around people who are bitter all the time.”
Lest you think that wisdom is just some rah-rah, pom-pom waving goodness from an overly ambitious peak performance coach, how about this parallel wisdom from one of the twentieth century’s great spiritual teachers, ?
As we’ve discussed, Butterworth was Maya Angelou’s spiritual teacher. And, apparently, Oprah considers Discover the Power Within You one of her all-time favorite books.
So…
Here’s how Butterworth puts it in one of MY all-time favorite books, Spiritual Economics.
Average.
It’s the best of the worst and the worst of the best.
Let’s commit to getting just a little bit better today in service to something bigger than ourselves as we remind ourselves that the process of becoming the best, most Heroic version of ourselves is SUPPOSED to be challenging and that the only antidote to mediocrity is excellence.
Remember:
Let’s do that.
Today.