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Do you feel like you have more potential than you're expressing?
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Like there's this gap between who you are and who you could be?
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That can be a frustrating place to be.
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Luckily, one of the most prominent psychologists of all time studied this exact problem.
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And he came up with some pretty fantastic ideas for solving it.
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Back in the day, mainstream psychologists like Sigmund Freud and B.F. Skinner focused
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most of their time on mental illness.
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When Abraham Maslow came along, he was one of the first psychologists to instead focus
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primarily on happiness.
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He studied the greatest people of his generation, folks like Eleonore Roosevelt and Albert Einstein,
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and in the process coined the phrase “the self-actualizing individual.”
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Maslow argued that “What human beings can be, they MUST be.”
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So, he wasn't talking about a mere wish or desire.
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No, according to Maslow, you have a NEED to “self-actualize” — to express your latent
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abilities and live your full potential.
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Just like your lungs need oxygen, your mind needs self-actualization, or it will suffocate.
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Deprived of it, you might not gasp for air, but you will experience other painful symptoms
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like stress, anxiety, or even depression.
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If you want to feel truly fulfilled, you need to realize your potential.
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You have to ask yourself what truly makes you come alive, and then do those things.
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If it helps, you can start by reflecting on questions like these:
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What did I spend time doing as a kid?
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What activities absorb me so much that I forget to eat and sleep?
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If money wasn't an issue, what would I spend my time doing?
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Then, it's all about taking consistent action toward realizing those things.
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But don't feel like you have to make a huge change overnight.
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As always, small and consistent steps in the right direction is the best approach.
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Take the tiny first step and then build the momentum necessary to carry you where you
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want to be.
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Also, note that the self-actualizing process doesn't necessarily have to be about finding
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a more meaningful career.
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It's an individual process that can just as easily be about becoming a great parent
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or friend (or something else entirely).
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That's why Maslow asks the question the way he does:
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What must YOU be?
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According to Maslow, you have two options at any given moment.
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You can either: Step forward into growth.
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Step back into safety.
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I like to think of it as a voting game.
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Every time I take a step forward, I cast a vote for self-actualization.
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And each time I step back into safety, I cast a vote against it.
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Here are some examples: I wake up in the morning.
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If I get up immediately, that's a positive vote.
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If I snooze, that's a negative vote.
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It's time to hit the gym.
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If I go there, that's a positive vote.
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If I stay at home watching TV, that's a negative vote.
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I feel the need to pursue an interest.
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If I take the first step, that's a positive vote.
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If I ignore the feeling, that's a negative vote.
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These are, of course, just a few possible situations.
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The truth is, every single moment is a chance to step forward into growth or back into safety.
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And here's why paying attention to your votes is so important: At the end of the day,
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they will determine how fulfilled you feel.
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If your negative votes outweigh your positive by 10,000, you'll experience some level
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of stress and boredom.
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And, as a result, you'll likely turn to comfort foods, alcohol, TV, or something else
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that temporarily alleviates those feelings.
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But if your positive votes instead outweigh your negative by the same number, you'll
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experience happiness and contentment.
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There won't be a need for alleviating negative feelings, so you can use that time to take
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even more action toward self-actualization.
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Your positive votes make things spiral upward.
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And your negative votes make things spiral downward.
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So, if you want to feel fulfilled, what you need to do is step forward into growth, instead
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of back into safety.
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Again, and again, and again.
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Here's what we've covered in this video: According to Abraham Maslow, you have a NEED
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to “self-actualize.”
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Otherwise, your mind can't breathe.
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To feel truly fulfilled, you need to realize your potential.
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You need to find what you're passionate about and take small steps in that direction.
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In any given moment you can step forward into growth or step back into safety.
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Pay attention to your votes because they will determine how fulfilled you feel.
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Positive votes make things spiral upward.
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Negative votes make things spiral downward.
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Now, before we part ways, a friendly warning is in place.
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Dr. Maslow also said: “If you deliberately plan on being less than you are capable of
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being, then I warn you that you'll be unhappy for the rest of your life.”
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I mean, yikes!
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Luckily, he also encouraged us not to be perfectionists about it: “It seems that the necessary thing
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to do is not to fear mistakes, to plunge in, to do the best that one can, hoping to learn
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enough from blunders to correct them eventually.”
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So, before you move on to whatever you're doing next, I encourage you to cast a positive
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vote right now.
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Then, as you go about your day, remember that each new situation is a chance for you to
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step forward into growth.
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Make a game out of casting as many positive votes as you can.
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Before you know it, all those small self-actualization actions will start adding up.
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Your mind will get the oxygen it needs, and you'll feel fulfilled, energized, and excited.
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Sound good?
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Let's plunge in!