On this, my forty-second birthday, have I indeed found “the meaning of life, the universe, and everything,” as Deep Thought might have predicted?
Probably not, but I have at least learned some things that should prove useful in whatever years I have from here. The one lesson I will focus on this year? That of achieving my potential.
As human beings, we all have a natural desire to reach our full potential. Rollo May, the famous psychologist, once said that "One central need in life is to fulfill its own potential." This statement resonates with many of us, as we all strive to make the most of our lives. However, fulfilling our potential is not an easy task, and it requires us to make some difficult choices along the way.
Doris Lessing, the Nobel Prize-winning author, once said that "There is only one real sin, and that is to persuade oneself that the second best is anything but second best." This statement is particularly relevant when it comes to fulfilling our potential, but I would argue in the opposite way that Lessing might have intended. To achieve our goals, we need to accept and even embrace second best in many areas of our lives. We need to direct our focus towards the thing, or at the most, a small subset of things, that matter most to us and accept that we will not be the best at everything.
I have repeatedly learned this lesson firsthand. To fulfill my own potential, I had to direct my focus towards what mattered most to me and recognize that other potentials would fall by the wayside. For example, I love playing sports, but I realized that I couldn't be the best at all of them. I eventually chose swimming as the sport I wanted to focus on and direct all my training and effort towards, and this came at a cost. My skills and competitiveness in basketball, soccer, and much else, all suffered as a result, but this was a tradeoff I knowingly and willingly made.
Singular focus is something those at the pinnacle of their respective pursuits know well. As Warren Buffett famously said: "The difference between successful people and really successful people is that really successful people say no to almost everything." For example, Lionel Messi, one of the greatest football/soccer players of all time, is competitive when he plays other sports, but he explicitly does not put focused training and effort into those areas. He directs all of his energy towards football/soccer, the area in which he wants to achieve his full potential. He is comfortable and probably happy to accept second best (or worse) in other areas.
The same is true for all of us. Trying to find the right “balance” that allows us to achieve the most in every area is a fool's errand. Instead, we need to identify for ourselves what potential we want to fulfill and find the equilibrium that allows us to do that without creating harmful situations in other areas.
Can we have it all? Yes, if "all" is defined as what gets all of our focus. But can we have all of everything? No, and deluding ourselves that we can is a recipe for discontentment and failure. To reach Rollo May's full potential requires us to see Lessing's second best for what it is and make it okay.
This being my 42nd birthday in particular, I am also reminded of perhaps the most famous athlete to wear that number: Jackie Robinson. Robinson is widely regarded as one of the best baseball players of his time, but he was far more than that, and in many ways may seem to undermine my entire argument for focus. In college, he became UCLA's first athlete to win varsity letters in four sports: baseball, basketball, football, and track. He even won the 1940 NCAA championship in the long jump. After college, he played professional football before breaking the color barrier in professional baseball.
Even after his record-breaking baseball career, Robinson continued to excel in other areas. He became the first black television analyst in MLB and the first black vice president of a major American corporation. Later on, he helped establish the Freedom National Bank, an African-American-owned financial institution based in Harlem, New York.
However, I would argue that Robinson proves the point I am trying to make here – that reaching our full potential requires focus and discipline. While Robinson was great at four sports at the same time, including winning the NCAAs, being the best of his time in one area required the focus of saying no to other pursuits and going fully into baseball alone. His business career also came after his playing career was over, allowing him to give it his full focus to reach his own full potential.
While few of us have the potential of Jackie Robinson in a single area, much less the many in which he excelled, we all have the ability to achieve our own full potential with the same focus and discipline he modeled. That personal potential resides within us all. However, fulfilling our potential requires us to make difficult choices and persuade ourselves that second best in other areas is not only acceptable, but even desirable.
Embracing the (forty) second best is my birthday present to myself.