Close Ad

simon sinek

Simon Sinek: I'm Now Stuck in Afghanistan
Goalcast Originals

Simon Sinek: I'm Now Stuck in Afghanistan

Simon Sinek - Devote Yourself Simon Sinek tells his story about his trip to Afghanistan and how a near death experience made him realize the true value in devoting yourself to others. Transcript: The base came under a rocket attack. We had three rockets hit 100 yards off our nose. And everything on my trip went wrong, so I’m now stuck in Afghanistan for at least four days and no way to reach my family and say that I’m going to be out of, I’m going to arrive home four days after I told them I was going to get home. They just won’t hear from me. It’s not like I can call them and be like, hey I’m going to be late. I’m in Afghanistan, you know. And I remember every fiber of my being sinking. I just remember just all the energies leaving my body. I remember the feeling distinctly. I remember where I was standing, the whole picture is clear. And I remember I became preoccupied with one thing and one thing only, my happiness, my success, not my success, my safety and my comfort. That’s all I cared about. And I remember there was a public affairs officer who said, “I can get you on a plan to Kyrgyzstan but you don’t have the right visa.” To which I said, “You get me on that plane.” Like, I don’t talk to people that way. And I could see myself becoming this person that I don’t know. Speaker 2: “Self preservation.” Right. And I realized even back then, even at the time, that I was becoming that boss that we’ve all had that only cares about their success, their promotions, they’re advancement and doesn’t care who has to twist themselves in knots to get them what they want. That was me. I didn’t care who had to go out of their way, or twist themselves in knots to get me what I wanted. My safety, my comfort, my happiness. And here I am stuck, in this 24 hour compressed period. And I remember the paranoia. I was convinced, I mean convinced, that there was going to be another rocket attack. And I was convinced it was going to land on me. I was convinced that my parents would find out that I was in a war zone, when an Air Force officer went and knocked on my parent’s door. I was convinced of it. And so I’m trying to solve my problem, I’m lying in bed trying to figure it out, make this horrible feeling go away. I’m in the purpose business, so I know that when you have a sense of purpose it gives you this calm and I didn’t have a purpose, I was just there as an observer. So I tried to invent one. I’m like “you’re here to tell their story and come back and share what you learned.” And it made me feel good for like a minute, five minutes. And this happens in companies as well. They try and articulate some nonsense vision or mission or purpose or why, whatever they want to call it. And it doesn’t work. It lasts for a couple weeks. Doesn’t really inspire. It’s inspiring in the meeting and that’s it. That’s what I was going through. And so I lay there, tried every trick I had, and I gave up. I just, I gave up. I ran out of options and I ran out of choices. And resigned myself to the fact that I was stuck. And so I figured that if I was going to get stuck, I might as well make myself useful. Because I’ve got four days and nothing to do. So I decided I would volunteer. I decided that I would offer to speak whenever and wherever they wanted me to. I decided that, I’d met some amazing people, that I would volunteer to help them. I would sweep floors, I would carry boxes, I didn’t care how menial the labor was, as long as I could be of use. As long as I could serve those who were serving others. Upon making that decision, this overwhelming calm came over me. The fear went away. The paranoia was gone instantly, I even had a sense of excitement. I was actually excited to serve those who served others. I felt amazing. And this is what I learned. I learned that a true sense of purpose doesn’t come from what we can do to get. It comes from what we can do for others. That true sense of purpose is the opportunity to serve those who serve others and the calm and confidence and courage that it takes to live a life or build a business, comes when we devote ourselves not to our own success, but to the success of others.

Simon Sinek: Two Ways To See The World
Mindset

Simon Sinek: Two Ways To See The World

Simon Sinek - Go After Whatever You Want Simon Sinek shares a personal story about going for what you want and putting aside the excuses in order to get it. Transcript: "There were some free bagels and they had picnic tables set up. On one side was a group of volunteers. On the table were boxes of bagels and on the other side was a long line of runners waiting to get their free bagel. I said to my friend, "Let's get a bagel." He looked at me and said, "The line is too long." I said, "Free bagel." He said, "I don't want to wait in line." I was like, "Free bagel." He says, "Nah, it's too long." That's when I realized that there's two ways to see the world. Some people see the thing that they want, and some people see the thing that prevents them from getting the thing that they want. I could only see the bagels. He could only see the line. I walked up to the line. I leaned in between two people, put my hand in the box and pulled out two bagels and no one got made at me because the rule is you can go after whatever you want. You just cannot deny anyone else to go after whatever they want. I had to sacrifice choice. I didn't get to choose which bagel I got. I got whatever I pulled out, but I didn't have to wait in line. The point is you don't have to wait in line. You don't have to do it the way everybody else has done it. You can do it your way. You can break the rules. You just can't get in the way of somebody else getting what they want."

How To Make An Impact - Simon Sinek
Self-Development

How To Make An Impact - Simon Sinek

Learn - Simon Sinek Author and Leadership expert Simon Sinek describes the lack of patience young adults have towards making an impact at their entry-level jobs, once they have completed their university degrees. He goes into detail on how patience is the most important skill that young adults need to acquire to see that they make the desired grand impact at any job they work at. Transcript: "Everything you want, you can have instantaneously. Everything you want, instant gratification, except job satisfaction and strength of relationships. There ain't no out for that. They are slow, meandering, uncomfortable, messy processes, and so I keep meeting these wonderful, fantastic, idealistic, hardworking, smart kids. They've just graduated school. They're in their entry level job. I sit down with them and I go, "How's it going?" They go, "I think I'm gonna quit." I'm like, "Why?" They're like, "I'm not making an impact." I'm like, "You've been here eight months." It's as if they're standing at the foot of a mountain, and they have this abstract concept called impact that they want to have in the world, which is the summit. What they don't see is the mountain. I don't care if you go up the mountain quickly or slowly, but there's still a mountain. What this young generation needs to learn is patience, that some things that really, really matter, like love, or job fulfillment, joy, love of life, self-confidence, a skillset, any of these things. All of these things take time. Sometimes you can expedite pieces of it, but the overall journey is arduous, and long, and difficult, and if you don't ask for help and learn that skillset, you will fall off the mountain." - Simon Sinek