Is True Success Active or Passive?

by Business Article on January 8, 2007

A simple definition of success could be something about
achieving one’s goal or goals.

We often read or hear, “he achieved success” in such and
such a year or upon completion of a project.  Success seems
to be viewed by many people as an end in itself.  Once
reached, some sort of cup or wreath is given to the victor,
and they remain “successful” for all time.  The term is,
somewhat confusingly, applied in several types of
situations.  In baseball, a batter may be successful at a
single time at bat, yet not be successful for the entire
game or season.  A politician runs a successful campaign
when he or she is elected to the office which was sought.
That same politician may run an unsuccessful campaign and
yet be successful in bringing some important issue or
issues to the attention of the electorate.

So, it is easy to look at success as being, as mentioned,
the achievement of a specific goal, whether your own or
someone else’s.  After all, the ballplayer may be wanting a
hit to reach a new record, and his manager may want the hit
to make it to one more playoff so he can hold on to his
job, and the owner may want the hit in order to win the
game and create an atmosphere where he can sell more
tickets to future games.

However, if we are to look at success as applied to an
entire life, one home run, as successful as it may be at
the moment doesn’t quite define a person.  After all, to
continue with the baseball motif, Bobby Thomson hit the
“Shot Heard Round The World”, a home run that won the 1951
World Series to help the New York Giants win the pennant.
He went on to have a good career as a ball player, but
never achieved such a high level of (subjective) success as
on that particular day.  Oddly enough, waiting in the
on-deck circle that day was a rookie who would achieve a
level of success that Thomson never reached.  He was a
young kid named Willie Mays.  At a later point, Hammerin’
Hank Aaron, one of the most successful ball players of all
time, got his chance to play in the big leagues due to
Thomson’s breaking his ankle.

Sticking with baseball just a little longer, let’s take a
quick look at Roberto Clemente.  As a ball player, he won
four batting crowns and had 3,000 hits.  His achievements
as a baseball player include: All-Star (15): 1960-67,
1969-72; National League MVP 1966; Gold Glove (12):
1961-1972; 1971 World Series MVP.  His life and career were
cut short at age 38 when he died in a plane crash while
flying relief supplies to Nicaraguan earthquake victims.
Throughout his career, his humanitarianism earned him the
respect and admiration of fans, players, and the public in
general.  If success is doing the right thing for the right
reasons, then Roberto Clemente was a successful man, just
as Mother Theresa was a successful woman.

While people who achieve what the public tends to applaud
as success often do gain fame and wealth, they are also
often NOT the people who are considered to be the real
successes of a society.  And, while we often hear a great
deal about people who gain momentary success by achieving
some great feat or goal, such as sailing around the world,
or scoring the most points in a game, we hear for decades,
and often for centuries after they are gone, about those
whose lifetime of success was measured in small daily
actions and attitudes which contributed to the betterment
of their fellow humans or the improvement of the earth upon
which we all depend so completely.

So, while not to belittle the amassing of fortunes or
benefits of fame, if you would be truly successful, perhaps
you should try to achieve something of value each
day…something of benefit to all.  Perhaps you will find
that you enjoy the pursuit of THAT sort of success much
more than the pursuit of wealth, fame, or power.

One last note.  People such as Angelina Jolie and George
Clooney are rich and famous because they live in a world of
make-believe and produce make-believe pieces for people who
live vicariously through their stories.  However, it is
possible that they will be more famed and admired for the
steps they have taken to improve the world they live in
than for what they have done in the world of entertainment.
After all, the next movie star can be discovered working
at a soda fountain (they still have those?).  The person
who is going to change the world will have to work at it.

—————————————————-
Donovan Baldwin is a Dallas area writer. He is a University
of West Florida alumnus, a member of Mensa, and is retired
from the U. S. Army. He is the owner of
http://texasprepaidcellular.com .

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