About the Episode:
The pain of staying the same has to get worse than the pain of change. This is truth. This is fact. When you’re looking at why you can’t change or why you tolerate situations that hurt you, the answer is simple – it doesn’t hurt enough yet. Most people see change as this massive painful thing without realizing the pain they’re currently in is infinite while the pain of change is temporary. Your choice to stay where you’re at right now is allowing the hurt to continue forever. The pain of change? That’s just a blink in time. A month. A year. It ends. Then you’re free. When you visualize staying in the exact same place years from now, feeling the exact same way, missing out on who you were called to be – that’s the true travesty. Turn up the heat on your pain. What you do not hate, you will tolerate. Start hating where you’re at right now and you’ll finally cross that threshold where real change happens.
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Episode Topics:
- You’ll finally understand why you keep tolerating situations that hurt you.
- You’ll discover the exact threshold where change becomes inevitable.
- This episode will completely shift how you view the “pain” of making changes.
- You’ll learn the psychological hack to accelerate your decision to change.
- This might be the wake-up call you need to stop wasting more time in situations that don’t serve you.
What’s shaken? Hey, I’m Rick Jordan. Today we’re going all in you say you want to change, or maybe someone else told you it’s like, I’ll change. I’ll change for you. And I’ve talked about how the change doesn’t change doesn’t last unless it’s really for themselves. I’ve listened to that episode A little while back. But today we’re going to talk about that threshold where change actually happens. This is something that was recently brought back to my attention, and is so true, because I see this in multiple areas of my life where I just don’t see change, whether it’s in myself or somebody else, and you start to think it’s like, why am I continuously doing this to me, right? If it’s something like me, or why do I continuously tolerate something going on around me? And I start to, I mean, really, the problem always comes back to you anyways, it really does, right? And most other people are like a reflection of you in those areas. But when you you see this thing, you’re like, Man, I want to change. Or you’re like, geez, I just wish that they would change. And I’m going to start to use a different word for change at some point in time, because change can be actually kind of confrontational. Change can be scary.
Change can cause people to become defensive, especially when they think that change is being substituted for that other C word called control, when really that’s not what you’re talking about, right? But really what you’re looking for is you’re just looking for something different, right? You’re looking for something different than what is actually going on right now, or to react some way different, or to be in a different situation, or see somebody behave in a different way, or treat you differently. That’s really what you’re looking for, you know. Or maybe see somebody who it just causes you hurt to see what they’re allowing themselves to go through. You’re like, why won’t you just make a different choice? You know? And you’re seeing this person go through all of these horrible scenarios. And there was a phrase from a coach in my industry that, and it was a story about landscapers, right? I mean, just a really, really benign story, but it applies to so many different things. When I heard this statement for the first time, and this is what we’re talking about today, because it applies to so much more, like literally everything in life, any kind of change, whether you want to make it or not right, the pain of staying the same has to get worse than the pain of change. This is truth, this is fact and anything. This is how people work. This is how you work. The pain of staying the same has to get worse or way more bad. Who cares about the proper English than the pain of the change, of making that change? Now you’re saying, you know, why can’t I change? Why do I continue to tolerate this, or why does this keep happening and everything? There’s a big reason for that. The big reason why you won’t change, or why you’re looking at somebody else and they won’t change is because it doesn’t hurt enough yet. That’s just fact. Because when they’re able to tolerate or you’re able to tolerate a situation or a person, or whatever. It’s not that painful, and it doesn’t hurt that much, but you’re looking at change because you really don’t want to be in that scenario. You really don’t want to be around that person, maybe. And you’re taking a look at this, and it’s like, you know what? But it’s okay. I think I can get through this. I think I can handle this right? And you’re thinking, it’s like the hurt that you’re tolerating and trying to cope with every single freaking day is something that you’re like, I can take it. And the only reason you can take it is because you’re thinking the pain isn’t bad enough yet, but it’s really that the pain isn’t worse staying there than what you think the pain of the change is going to be. Now, some of this can come from just not knowing, right? Because maybe you have an idea of what the pain of making that change will be, or maybe you’re, you’re tallying up this checklist in your head of things you have to do to be able to make that change.
And you’re like, Man, that’s just too much. It’s overwhelming, but that, but you see it, it’s surface value, that’s all you’re looking at. Is you see it at surface value, because you’re never really going to know until you get there. That’s just fact. You will never know exactly the amount of pain that it’ll cause to make that change until you get there. Now here’s another fact about this too, because this might lessen the pain. And if you’re looking, if you’re someone who’s looking to make a change, whether that’s in a job, if that’s in a relationship, if that’s in a marriage, if that’s in a situation, whatever, if you’re sitting there and you’re hurting and you’re just thinking, Man, I really want something different, but it’s not that bad. Because what I see, as far as a change, is going to be a whole lot worse. First off, that’s a story, because you’ve never gone through it. Second, this is fact, your choice to stay where you’re at right now is allowing the hurt to continue forever, forever, whereas the change, the pain of making that change, is already less just by this simple fact in that the time of making that change is way shorter than forever. It’s like a blink in time. It might be just a day or a month, or maybe the duration of whatever that changes how long it takes to make and go through the process. Is a year of shifting jobs, of burning that relationship, of moving on to something better. Maybe it’s a year. Maybe you need more education to shift that job.
Maybe you need to go find, I don’t know. So just some other pathway with a marriage, maybe you need to just think about a different relationship, or maybe try some other people that are out there that pain of change is actually a short period of time, a very short period of time, compared to forever, where you’re staying right now. That’s fact, when you’re looking at the change, it is already it is already less hurt than the pain of staying where you are right now, just by the simple fact of time, so where you’re at right now, you’re just thinking, No, it doesn’t hurt enough, start to become aware, start to think, well, that’s if I make the change. That’s just a small time period, because, you know what? Even the change ends, there’s an ending to the change you want to make. And the chain change ends, and now you’re in a completely different situation than what you are right now. Now you’re in a completely better situation, a better job, a better relationship, a better life than what you are right now. That change is finite in the amount of time, and then you’re in what you actually want versus right now, wherever you’re staying put because you think that it doesn’t hurt enough yet is actually going on forever, no end in sight, no end in sight. So now here’s what I want you to do.
Visualize yourself in the future, right? Imagine three months a year, 10 years, whatever, right? And you’re in the same place that you are right now. Haven’t changed, and you’re still feeling the same way. Realize how much you’re missing out on, realize how much more you could have accomplished, realize how much more impact you could have made, how much more happiness you could have felt, and how frustrating it is to realize you never committed to the person that you are called to be. That’s the gap as you visualize that start to get uncomfortable and raise the level of pain where you’re at right now by thinking about all those things, what you’re missing out on, what you could have accomplished, who you could have been with, how much more impact you could have made, how frustrating it is to realize that you never committed to the person you were meant to be. That’s the true travesty in this start to turn up the heat on your pain where you’re at right now. I think it was Malcolm X. It says what you do not hate, you will begin to tolerate. So start to hate where you’re at right now. That will increase the pain for you to make the change, because the change itself is way easier than staying where you’re at right now you.