I ran just enough track in junior high school to remember that final push you’re supposed to give at the end of any given race. The finish line is in front of you and, filled with the fervor of a potential win or PR, you’re supposed to really give it your all.
I totally get this. It’s a good plan. It’s what makes people winners. Which is why we carry all kinds of athletic metaphors into every other part of life. We want to be winners.
I’m currently in the last stretch of relaunching Get There From Here. New focus, updated website, expanded offerings and new partners. It’s really terrific. I couldn’t be happier with where the business is going. It’s just that I’m ready for a nap.
I know I’m supposed to finish strong if I want to be a winner. I’m supposed to stay up late finalizing documents and IMing with my website developer. I should over-caffeinate and be sure to “leave it all on the field.” These were all the thoughts banging around my head earlier, when I was playing Scrabble on Facebook to avoid generating yet one more document. It was then that I had an aha moment!
I don’t need to finish strong because I’m not trying to win. This is no competition. There is no race. As a matter of fact, in a situation like this, if I leave it all on the field, I won’t have anything left for the actual business growth that results from this effort.
So I’ve got a new plan. I’m just going to finish. If I need to stop and walk a few paces before I can resume with speed, then walk I will. At the very least, walking will make it easier for me to watch the jiggle.



