In 1933, an overwhelmed and frustrated woman named Frau sent a letter to psychologist Carl Jung, asking βhow to live.β
(She didnβt have any Instagram influencers to yell motivational platitudes at her, I guess)
Jung replied:
βYour questions are unanswerable, because you want to know how one ought to live. One lives as one can.
β¦if you do with conviction the next and most necessary thing, you are always doing something meaningful and intended by fate.β
He was sharing the key to life.
Itβs part of recovery communities like Alcoholics Anonymous.
It was even the title of a song in βDisneyβs Frozen 2β.
βThe next right thing.β
Revisiting this story caused me to reflect on how much my thoughts on success and progress have changed over the years.
βSuccessβ Redefined
Iβve been doing this Nerd Fitness stuff for 15+ years.
Millions of people visit the site every year, 50,000+ customers have bought stuff through NF, and our coaches have served 15,000+ 1-on-1 clients.
In that time, Iβve changed my perspective quite a bit on βsuccessβ and βliving well.β
I used to think that the only path to success required militant discipline following a specific plan. I never missed a workout, and was unbelievably proud of this.
It didnβt occur to me just how much of a βprivileged and simple lifeβ I lived, where I was 100% in control of my time.
(Apologies to all the parents and caregivers who read my 25-year old perspective!).
Now that Iβm 40, and I can see the types of people we actually help with Nerd Fitness, Iβve changed my perspective on success and βliving wellβ fairly dramatically.
Success happens not when we learn how to do everything perfectly, but instead when we get better at staying afloat even when things go poorly.
In other words, success is learning to be inconsistently consistent. Learning to be good enough for long enough.
And that means, when life seems chaotic, narrowing our focus down to βthe next right thing.β
Do the Next Right Thing
A βrecent newsletterβ from author Oliver Burkeman talked about how heβs chosen to retain a tiny bit of sanity in an overwhelming world.
It led me to these sentences from author Eckert Tolle:
βWhat you refer to as your βlifeβ should more accurately be called your βlife situation.β It is psychological time: past and future.
β¦Forget about your life situation for a while and pay attention to your life.
Find the βnarrow gate that leads to life.β It is called the Now.
Narrow your life down to this moment. Your life situation may be full of problems β most life situations are β but find out if you have any problem at this moment. Not tomorrow or in ten minutes, but now.
Do you have a problem now?
When we ruminate on what already happened, and we freak out about all the things that could happen or need to happen in the futureβ¦
Itβs easy to feel out of control and overwhelmed.
Which brings us back to that clichΓ© solution: βthe next right thing.β
Itβs a clichΓ© only because itβs true.
We can zoom wayyyyyy in, and narrow our focus to something that is still in our control. In some situations, yes, there is a problem right now. And we can just focus on that one thing.
But in many other situations, itβs often us worrying about all the problems that might be, or the problems outside of our control, that keeps us from taking action on the actual things we can control.
Burkeman continues:
As for telling myself I only needed to do the very next thing⦠you always only can do the very next thing, then the next, whether you like it or not.
Itβs a little strange, actually, to refer to any of these techniques as βnarrowing your horizonsβ, as if they involved somehow artificially limiting yourself.
Really, youβre just consciously recognizing how limited you always already were.
We all know how easy it is for us to βovercomplicate thingsβ.
And when the world feels like a dumpster fire, it can help to zoom way into that next decision, the tiniest goal, and just do the next right thing.
It might involve a workout or a walk, focusing on the next meal, calling up our therapist, or βfinally saying noβ to a commitment.
If βnowβ is the only time that exists, then βthe next right thingβ is the only thing that we can really do.
Iβm gonna go do the next right thing for me: take a walk.
-Steve
PS: Maria Popova has βa great writeup about βthe next right thingββ as it pertains to her life as a writer that inspired this piece.
PPS: Nerd Fitness is hiring a few remote, part-time humans (especially with flexible nights and weekends) to take inbound, scheduled calls from potential clients interested about our 1-on-1 coaching. βClick here to learn moreβ.
###