Follow Your River
by Earl
Nightingale
here are
two distinct kinds of successful people. There are what I call
the river people and the goal people. Let's take a good look at
the river people. River people are those fortunate people who
find themselves born to perform a special task. Mozart and da
Vinci were river people. There are thousands of river people
living today. They're the people who know from childhood what
they want to do with their lives.
River people seem born to spend their lives in
pursuit of their interest. And they throw themselves into their
rivers 100 percent, busying themselves with whatever it happens
to be.
They don't
tend to think about the idea of success or the making of money;
they simply spend their lives doing the best they can in their
river of interest.
And
they're often responsible for some of the largest achievements
and institutions on earth.
We all know the stories of Alexander Graham Bell and
Thomas Edison. The businesses that have grown from their
inventions encircle the globe and are among the largest on the
planet. Einstein was such a person, of course, but there are
thousands of them that we never hear of. They are people who
would be perfectly content in their fields of interest with
only a modest maintenance diet and a roof over their heads.
Their work is everything. But because they usually render a
very valuable service in the performance of their work, be it
in the arts or sports or commerce, they're usually well
rewarded for their efforts, though they may struggle for years
before recognition and success come to them.
Dr. Abraham Maslow talked about such people. He said,
"One could say a good match is like the perfect love affair or
friendship in which it seems that people belong to each other
and were meant for each other. In the best instances, the
person and his job fit together and belong together perfectly,
like a key in a lock, or perhaps resonate together like a sung
note which sits in a sympathetic resonance, a particular string
on a piano keyboard." And Maslow said, "Simply as a matter of
the strategy and tactics of living well and fully, and of
choosing one's life instead of having it determined for us,
this is a help."
It's so easy to forget ultimates in the rush and
hurry of daily life, especially for young people. So often,
we're merely responders, so to speak, simply reacting to
stimuli, to rewards and punishments, to emergencies, to pains
and fears, to demands of other people, to superficialities. It
takes a specific, conscious effort, at least at first, to turn
one's attention to intrinsic things and values. Perhaps seeking
actual physical aloneness. Perhaps exposing one's self to great
music, to good people, to natural beauty, and so forth. Only
after practice do these strategies become easy and automatic so
that one can be living totally immersed in his or her
river.
I
believe that each of us, because of the way our genetic
heritage is stacked, has an area of great interest. And it's
that area that we should explore with the patience and
assiduity of a paleontologist on an important dig where it's a
region of great potential. Somewhere within it, we can find
that avenue of interest that so perfectly matches our natural
abilities, we'll be able to make our greatest contribution and
spend our lives in work we love.
If we can find our river of interest, we need only
throw ourselves into it, fully committed, and there spend our
days learning and growing and finding new emerging fields of
interest within its boundaries.
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