People Who Love What They Do Take Risks
Michael Kroth • January 10, 2020
"Trust The Bike."
I am "one with everything". Bend, Oregon, 2007
(This essay, with minor edits, originally appeared in my August, 2007 E-newsletter.)
People who love what they do take risks. The same is as true for an entrepreneur as it is for someone beginning a new interpersonal relationship. People who stop taking risks, because they are callused or have been burned or who decide they need security, begin to lose their excitement, their aliveness. In the many, many interviews I have conducted with all sorts of workers who are fervent about their work - managers, CEOs, individual contributors, first line supervisors, authors, small business owners, teachers – I have never found one who wasn’t taking risks, trying something new, putting it on the line, and learning. They might be little, learning risks. They might be trying-out-something-new risks. They might be taking strategic risks, waiting when everyone else is jumping in, or jumping in when everyone else is waiting. But they aren't sitting around docilely.
I looked down the “mountain,” and Shane urged me to “trust the bike,” and to “look ahead,” instead of at my feet. I was scared. My heart was flopping like a salmon heading up one of our beautiful NW streams. I started. I stopped. I fell over. I did that a couple of times.
Why had I decided this would be a fun hobby?
I got up. Decided, “To heck with it,” (maybe that’s not exactly
what went through my head), and started down, wobbling all the way. The “mountain,” really a short decline in a beautiful wooded area, was conquered. I let my breath out, and felt alive. It wasn’t a risk at all for someone like my son Shane but it was a big step for me, and as the day progressed I had many little victories (and falls – I was one with the earth and the brambles that day).
Conquering the fear of taking on risk in the workplace I, think, also means “trusting your bike,” in this case your own skills and intuition and wisdom. It also means “looking ahead,” that is, not focusing so much on today’s possible mistakes, but looking down the road and the goal at hand. Too often we complain about managers micromanaging, when in fact we micromanage our own fears and hopes to the extent that we become paralyzed.
To be totally alive, in work and in life, trust yourself in the moment, and look down the road toward your own success.
One simple slope for humankind, one daunting precipice for a 54-year-old-rookie.
Conquering the fear of taking on risk in the workplace, I think, also means “trusting your bike.”
Shane and Me. Bend, Oregon. The Teacher and the Student. What A Terrific Day!