Good Luck, Bad Luck, Perseverance and Doing the Impossible.
Posted By Cliff Tuttle | May 21, 2017
No. 1,323
While it is easy to complain about bad luck when our team loses, not too many of us attribute victory to luck. But the truth is, both bad and good luck have a role and probably a bigger one than we are willing to admit.
The key is not to let bad luck discourage you, even when that is the logical reaction. The good luck may be coming right behind it. Plus, what seems like bad luck when it hits, may turn out to be the opposite. Recognize it and seize it — with both hands. Then hold on like crazy.
I have just started to listen to a fascinating book by Eric Barker called Barking Up the Wrong Tree. It debunks many of the old saws about success, such as Nice Guys Finish Last. In chapter 2, in a discussion of perseverance, he tells the gripping story of a mountain climber who fell while descending the highest mountain in the Southern Hemisphere with one other climber. His name was Joe. He broke a leg and was experiencing extreme pain. To make matters worse, while trying to crawl to safety he fell again and landed on an ice bridge crossing a giant gorge.
As bad as the situation was, the second fall involved an element of good luck. If Joe had fallen a few feet to either side, he would have disappeared into a black abyss. Who could know how deep it was? And he landed on a blanket of snow.
But he soon discovered that the rope he was tethered to was going slack. His climbing partner had assumed that the Joe had fallen to his death in the deep crevasse. A logical conclusion; but now he had no way to pull himself up. He had only two choices — stay put or let himself down on the rope into the crevasse. Bad luck.
Staying where he was meant certain death. So he secured the rope to something solid, tied the end around his waste, and began to lower himself into the darkness.
Suddenly, an element of good luck appeared. He found a ramp along the side of the gorge that led upward to the opening. Crawling up it with a broken leg would be very hard. But it would not be impossible.
Out of the gorge, he started to make slow progress traveling the long distance to base camp. He didn’t know whether it would even be there if he ever arrived. He set himself a long series of small goals. Day turned to night. After what must have seemed to be an eternity, he drifted into a deep sleep. When he started to awaken, smelled the strong odor of excrement. Good luck again. He had wandered into the latrine area of base camp. Before long, Joe saw a light. Against incredible odds, he was saved.
The lesson is this. If your attitude is that everything is going wrong, you’ll be so preoccupied with your bad luck that you will miss opportunities that pass right in front of you.
Instead, tell yourself you’ve been lucky all your life (probably true, whether you admit it or not ). Then pay careful attention.
CLT
Tags: bad luck > Barking up the wrong tree > good luck > snakebite