Create Your Vision and Live To It
Arnold
Schwarzenegger was not famous yet in 1976 when he and I had lunch together at
the Doubletree Inn in Tucson, Arizona. Not one person in the restaurant
recognized him.
He was in
town publicizing the movie Stay Hungry, a box-office disappointment he had just
made with Jeff Bridges and Sally Field. I was a sports columnist for the Tucson
Citizen at the time, and my assignment was to spend a full day, one-on-one,
with Arnold and write a feature story about him for our newspaper's Sunday magazine.
I, too, had
no idea who he was, or who he was going to become. I agreed to spend the day
with him because I had to—it was an assignment. And although I took to it with
an uninspired attitude, it was one I'd never forget.
Perhaps the
most memorable part of that day with Schwarzenegger occurred when we took an
hour for lunch. I had my reporter's notebook out and was asking questions for
the story while we ate. At one point I casually asked him, "Now that you
have retired from bodybuilding, what are you going to do next?"
And with a
voice as calm as if he were telling me about some mundane travel plans, he
said, "I'm going to be the number-one box-office star in all of
Hollywood."
Mind you,
this was not the slim, aerobic Arnold we know today. This man was pumped up and
huge. And so for my own physical sense of well-being, I tried to appear to find
his goal reasonable.
I tried not
to show my shock and amusement at his plan. After all, his first attempt at
movies didn't promise much. And his Austrian accent and awkward monstrous build
didn't suggest instant acceptance by movie audiences. I finally managed to
match his calm demeanor, and I asked him just how he planned to become
Hollywood's top star.
"It's
the same process I used in bodybuilding," he explained. "What you do
is create a vision of who you want to be, and then live into that picture as if
it were already true."
It sounded
ridiculously simple. Too simple to mean anything. But I wrote it down. And I
never forgot it.
I'll never
forget the moment when some entertainment TV show was saying that box office
receipts from his second Terminator movie had made him the most popular box
office draw in the world. Was he psychic? Or was there something to his
formula?
Over the years
I've used Arnold's idea of creating a vision as a motivational tool. I've also
elaborated on it in my corporate training seminars. I invite people to notice
that Arnold said that you create a vision. He did not say that you wait until
you receive a vision. You create one. In other words, you make it up.
A major
part of living a life of self-motivation is having something to wake up for in
the morning—something that you are "up to" in life so that you will
stay hungry.
The vision
can be created right now—better now than later. You can always change it if you
want, but don't live a moment longer without one. Watch what being hungry to
live that vision does to your ability to motivate yourself.
Steve Chandler “100 Ways to Motivate Yourself”
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