You’ll likely push through a lot of obstacles to get to your next great beginning. That calls for perseverance—unless your being obstinate. But how can you know when you should persevere or quit?
George Eliot (aka 19th century novelist Mary Ann Evans) provides this episode’s Inspire Me quote:
“Failure after a long perseverance is much grander than never to have a striving good enough to be called a failure”
Do I give up? Or keep going?
That question is bound to come up in any worthy pursuit. Leary and Armin discuss the cultural value that perseverance has become. Quitting anything is equivalent to failure. Yet, there are times when we should call it quits on our pursuit—in a healthy way—lest we become stubborn. The trick is knowing when.
At the heart of the problem lies resistance, for it’s in the times we face resistance where we must make the decision to soldier on or to change directions. Listen to Episode 18 for more about resistance.
Leary points out that every pursuit goes through three stages: a birth, a death, and a resuscitation. Whether you persevere through the death stage to the resuscitation phase is dependent on whether your focus is entirely on the dream or the Dream Giver. Often, God may use an opportunity to redirect us to something better. When our focus is only on the outcome we envision, stubbornness ensues.
In his helpful little book, The Dip, Seth Godin writes:
“Persistent people are able to visualize the idea of light at the end of the tunnel when others can’t see it. At the same time, the smartest people are realistic about not imagining a light when there isn’t any.”
and offers three questions that we can ask ourselves we wonder if we should continue or quit:
Leary offers two additional questions to consider:
If you are in this situation where you need to determine whether you should press on or quit, take this episode’s Challenge Me:
Resources mentioned or related to this podcast that may be helpful to you: