Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Motivation Monday: Excuses or Progress: Choose One
Episode Date: January 15, 2018This episode is part of a weekly series that I have dubbed “Motivation Monday.” (Yes, I know, very creative of me. What can I say, I’m a genius…) Seriously though, the idea here is simple: Eve...ry Monday morning, I’m going to post a short and punchy episode that I hope gets you fired up to tackle the workouts, work, and everything else that you have planned for the week ahead. As we all know, it’s one thing to know what you want to do, but it’s something else altogether to actually make yourself do it, and I hope that this series gives you a jolt of inspiration, energy, and encouragement to get at it. So, if you like what you hear, then make sure to check back every Monday morning for the latest and greatest installment. Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: www.muscleforlife.com/signup/
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excuses are a very harsh mistress they are like the lotus fruit in homer's odyssey excuses have
a narcotic effect they sap us of our spirit and our desires hey this is mike from muscle for life
and welcome to another episode of my podcast this episode is part of a weekly series that I have dubbed Motivation Monday. Yes, I know,
so creative of me. What can I say? I'm just a genius. Seriously though, the idea here is simple.
Every Monday morning, I am going to post a short and punchy episode that I hope gets you fired up
to tackle the workouts, work, and
everything else that you have planned for the week ahead. Because it's one thing to know what you
want to do, but it's something else altogether to actually make yourself do it. And I hope that
this series gives you a jolt of energy and encouragement to go ahead and do all of those things that you want to do.
So if you like what you hear, then make sure to check back every Monday morning for the latest and greatest installment.
Okay, so let's start this week with a quote as usual.
And this one is on the topic at hand, actually.
It's from Benjamin Franklin. He said
that he that is good for making excuses is seldom good for anything else. One day, we say that we're
going to live a beautiful life. We're going to live the best life. We're going to wake up at the
best time every morning. We're going to do the best workouts. We're going to eat the best foods
and we're going to do the best things with all of the best people. One day we say, we're going to lose that belly fat once and for all. We're going to
learn that instrument. We're going to get that corner office. We're going to write that poem
about the goat that screwed the pumpkin. Yes, I know about that. The kicker though, is that that day is never going to come because it's
always tomorrow. It's always next week, next year, next lifetime. There are always excuses why today
isn't that day. So whenever we say that, well, I would do X, but I can't because of Y, it's almost
always bullshit unless Y is, I really don't want to. And that's what
most everything in life that matters really comes down to. Necessity, the mother of all invention,
as it's said. The reality is there's probably very little that we are actually incapable of.
There's only our sense of urgency and our willingness to act. And when we lie to ourselves,
and when we say otherwise, what we're really saying is that we find alibis more attractive
than achievements, that we find excuses more seductive than excellence, and that we find
comfort more desirable than challenge. And it's understandable. We do this because excuses are
seductive. They promise freedom from pain. They promise freedom from embarrassment, freedom from
failure. They can lull us into letting ourselves off the hook. The reality is without excuses,
we have to face the things that we don't want to face. And we have to do the things that we don't want to do.
We have to go out there and put ourselves on the line every day.
And we have to prove every day that we're still worthy of our station.
Without excuses, having done and having been is never enough.
We have to continue doing.
We have to continue becoming.
And we have to continue living up to our standards.
It also doesn't help that the world loves to offer us excuses. People can't wait to justify
our shortcomings and our shortfalls for us and thereby attempt to absolve themselves of their
own shortcomings and shortfalls as well. The problem though is excuses are a very
harsh mistress. They are like the lotus fruit in Homer's Odyssey. Excuses have a narcotic effect.
They sap us of our spirit and our desires. And if we partake in too much excuse making, we eventually lose our sense of what psychologists call an
internal locus of control, which is characterized by praising or blaming ourselves for our successes
and failures rather than assigning responsibility to factors that are outside of our control.
That mode of thought is called an external locus of control. So,
for example, an athlete with a strong internal locus of control will credit his success to hard
work rather than innate talent. An entrepreneur with an internal locus of control will chalk
a failed venture up to his faulty due diligence rather than just bad luck.
And psychologists have been studying locus of control since the 1950s. And what they found
is that an internal locus of control is associated with greater academic success,
higher levels of self-motivation and social maturity, and a lower incidence of stress and depression and even a longer lifespan.
Scientists have observed that people with an internal locus of control tend to make more
money, they tend to have more friends, they tend to fare better in marriage, and they also tend to
experience more professional success and satisfaction. And on the flip side, people with an external locus of
control generally experience more stress and hardship in life. So when you refuse to believe
that it's okay to give up and when you refuse to take the easy road out or to look for reasons to
be weak or to blame anyone or anything else for your circumstances, for the situation
that you find yourself in, you're able to tap into something primal and something powerful
that really does set extraordinary people apart from everybody else. When we can let go of our
excuses and really embrace a sense of personal responsibility, there's no telling what
we can do. And to illustrate that, imagine for a minute that you are an 11-year-old boy and you
have a dream of graduating from high school. Now, the problem here is you're a boy who lives in the
backlands of the war-torn country of Uganda, and your entire family has succumbed to disease by the time you were six,
and your grandmother simply can't afford the tuition fee of $43 a month for your schooling.
Now, how do you think your odds are looking to you? Not very good, right? Plenty of things to
complain about, plenty of excuses that could be made. Well, that was once reality for James
Kasaga-Aaron Otway, who refused to see his goal as impossible and refused to resign himself to
working the fields filled with everyone that he knew. And instead, what the young James did is he
came up with a plan. His plan was to sell a goat to get shoes, clothes,
and a bus ticket to visit his aunt who lived near the Ugandan president's country home,
and then infiltrate the compound by scaling the barbed wire fence and sneaking past the guards,
and finally to get in front of the president and humbly ask him for his help. Well, that's exactly
what James ended up doing and his Mission Impossible stunt worked. And now today he has
two master's degrees and he's the CEO and co-founder of an organization called Teach
for Uganda, which works to expand educational opportunity to all children in his home country. gimmicks can match the power of word of mouth. So if you are enjoying this episode and you think of
someone else who might enjoy it as well, please do tell them about it. It really helps me. And if you
are going to post about it on social media, definitely tag me so I can say thank you. You
can find me on Instagram at Muscle for Life Fitness, Twitter at MuscleForLife, and Facebook at MuscleForLifeFitness.
Let's do another one. So imagine that you've been arrested for writing derogatorily about
your government and you have been shipped off to serve an eight-year sentence in forced labor camps
that have an average life expectancy of just one winter. How might you view your fate?
Well, Alexander Solzhenitsyn was once a decorated Soviet soldier who fought against Nazi Germany.
And in February of 1945, when he was serving in East Prussia, he was arrested by Smirsch
for criticizing how Stalin was conducting the war in a private letter that he wrote to a
friend. And then a few months later, in July of the same year, he was convicted in absentia of
anti-Soviet propaganda and, quote, founding a hostile organization, and he was sent to the
gulag. Now, after spending some time in the camps and witnessing the true horrors of communist
totalitarianism, Alexander began to reflect on exactly how he had gotten there. Whose fault was
it? Who should he blame? Now, he could have easily blamed Hitler or he could have blamed Stalin,
of course, but he came to a very different conclusion. He concluded that it was his fault
because ultimately he was playing the same game as his captors. He realized that he had completely
forfeited his relationship with the truth and he had not only allowed his society to degenerate
into a brutal monocracy, he had also fought to advance his captors' tyranny into the
world. And he looked the other way while his compatriots looted and executed civilians,
gang-raped women and girls to death, and bombed and strafed refugees. And here's how he later
explained it, quote, the cruelty of our executioners. I remember myself in my captain's shoulder boards and the
forward march of my battery through East Prussia enshrouded in fire. And I say, so were we any
better? You see Alexander's insistence on shouldering responsibility for the entirety
of his condition and his refusal to point the finger elsewhere eventually inspired him to write the book that that passage appears in, which was published in 1973 and was called the Gulag Archipelago.
This book chronicled Alexander's years in the slave camps and constituted such a powerful indictment of the very foundations, especially the moral foundations of the USSR,
they would eventually contribute to the entire Soviet downfall and win Alexander the Nobel Prize.
So think twice before you say, I can't. I can't get in the gym a few days per week,
or I don't really want to. I can't save any money, or I don't really want to. I can't save any money or I don't really want to. I can't ditch the junk
food for home-cooked meals or I don't really want to. Take a moment and imagine what you might be
able to do if you refuse to make excuses for every failure, for every shortcoming, for every
disadvantage. If you refuse to believe that it's okay to give up and that it's okay to just take the easy road out,
if you refused to look for reasons to be weak, if you refused to blame anyone or anything else for
your troubles. There's a little anecdote in Ashley Vance's biography of Elon Musk that I think applies
here. And early on in Elon's career, he once wooed investors into a business of
his by sharing that he approaches life and he approaches work and business as a samurai would.
He'd rather kill himself than fail. We find a great example of this type of mentality in Alexander
the Great, because whether he was sieging the supposedly impregnable city of Tyre or facing the supposedly invincible Persian hordes, he refused to believe that he couldn't succeed.
He said that there is nothing impossible to him who will try and then demonstrated it.
It's one thing to say it.
It's another thing to actually do it.
Thomas Edison is another great example.
to actually do it. Thomas Edison is another great example. After going through thousands of unworkable light bulb filaments, he was challenged about his lack of results by a
journalist. And his reply was great. He said, results? Why, man, I've gotten lots of results.
If I find 10,000 ways something won't work, I haven't failed. I'm not discouraged because
every wrong attempt discarded is often a step forward. You
see, people like these, they don't lard their decisions with a thick coat of maybe. They don't
saddle them with ifs or buts. They don't look for loopholes and they don't keep justifications or
rationales for failing, just waiting in the wings. They don't leap to explain why they haven't or
why they don't or why they can't or why they aren't. People like these refuse excuses and
they particularly refuse all the excuses that might be made by mediocre people. And that I think
is power. I think that is one of the big secrets. That's how to do the unimaginable because when podcast on the internet, then please leave a quick review of it on iTunes or wherever you're listening from.
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reach out. All right, that's it. Thanks again for listening to this episode and I hope to hear from
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