Courtesy Forbes Magazine
The Six Enemies of Greatness (and Happiness)
These six factors can erode the grandest of plans and the noblest of intentions. They can turn visionaries into paper-pushers and wide-eyed dreamers into shivering, weeping balls of regret. Beware!
 
These six factors can erode the grandest of plans and the noblest of intentions. They can turn visionaries into paper-pushers and wide-eyed dreamers into shivering, weeping balls of regret. Beware!
 1) Availability
 
We often settle for what’s available, and what’s available isn’t 
always great. “Because it was there,” is an okay reason to climb a 
mountain, but not a very good reason to take a job or a free sample at 
the supermarket.
 
 
 2) Ignorance
 
If we don’t know how to make something great, we simply won’t. If we 
don’t know that greatness is possible, we won’t bother attempting it. 
All too often, we literally do not know any better than good enough.
 
 
 3) Committees
 
Nothing destroys a good idea faster than a mandatory consensus. The lowest common denominator is never a high standard.
 
 
 4) Comfort
 
Why pursue greatness when you’ve already got 324 channels and a recliner? Pass the dip and forget about your grand designs.
 
5) Momentum
 
If you’ve been doing what you’re doing for years and it’s 
not-so-great, you are in a rut. Many people refer to these ruts as 
careers.
 
 
6) Passivity
 
There’s a difference 
between being agreeable and agreeing to everything. Trust the little 
internal voice that tells you, “this is a bad idea.”






 
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