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Honoring the Long Road to Success

John C. Davis
2 min readMar 15, 2020

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Photo by Holden Baxter on Unsplash

There is a part of my mind that tells me that I should be able to achieve great results just by some sheer act of will power on my part. This idea of getting into the trenches and doing the hard work of the daily grind somehow has eluded me. And, yet it is this daily grind that ultimately achieves the success I’m looking for.

Yesterday I drove past a new housing development. I observed that this development took many months before any buildings were placed on it. I was reminded that it is the foundation of the homes that takes a long time to lay. A solid foundation must be in place to support the above ground structure.

Our lives are like this home. If I do not honor the long process of building a foundation I will become frustrated by my lack of process. I will start to get upset when things are not moving fast enough. I will find myself procrastinating, because if I can’t do it right the first time then I quit.

I am reminded of my old “friend” perfectionism. Perfectionism tells me that I must get it right the first time. Of course, this ignores the reality of the millions of people that make tons of mistakes before going on to be great successes. Look for the biography of any successful person, and it will be riddled (if they are honest) with lots of failures. In fact, failures become these people’s greatest asset.

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John C. Davis
John C. Davis

Written by John C. Davis

I am an author, writer, and speaker, interested in highlighting and celebrating the endless beauty of the human spirit. https://johncdavisauthor.com

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