We became close friends, and he told me eventually that heâd lost his wife, the love of his life, a half-decade before we met â the kind of loss, he said, that you never get over. It was a story that made his positive outlook seem all the more remarkable to me: here was someone who had been through tragedy, and yet still made it a priority to do good things with his time and his money. He seemed to truly care about other people.
Often, heâd tell me what he saw as the secret to his success: âI just try to avoid being unsuccessful,â he said. He studied what made someone (avoidably) unhappy, broke, or unmotivated â and then he avoided making the same mistakes.
I knew in my bones that he was right. Too often, we adopt a plug-and-play attitude: âIf I do x, Iâll be successful.â But if success was easy and predictable, we wouldnât be seeking advice on how to achieve it. Instead of studying whatâs worked for other people, Iâve followed my friendâs advice, paying close attention to the habits that hold people back from reaching their goals.
Here are 10 of the most common self-imposed barriers. If you find yourself bumping up against one, use them as a signal to reevaluate, reflect, and reverse course.
Always being distracted
In his book Essentialism, time-management consultant Greg McKeown describes running into a former classmate who was between jobs and looking for career advice. Midway through the conversation, the man looked down at his phone and began typing.
âTen seconds went by,â McKeown recounts. âThen 20. I simply stood there as he continued to text away furiously.â After a couple minutes, he gave up and walked away.
I think of this story whenever I feel pulled in many different directions, as a way of reminding myself to focus on the moment Iâm in and the people Iâm with. If that old classmate of McKeownâs had reminded himself the same thing, he might have made a connection or gotten a tip that led him to a job.
Only talking the talk
âIâm training for a marathon.â âIâm starting a business.â You know whatâs better than announcing something on social media? Doing it.
In his 2010Â TED talk, âKeep You Goals to Yourself,â entrepreneur Derek Sivers argued that broadcasting your plans can be counterproductive rather than motivating. People will often applaud you simply for stating your intention, he said, and somewhat counterintuitively, that applause can sap your will to actually follow through on the plans youâve just outlined.
âWhen you tell someone your goal and they acknowledge it, psychologists have found that itâs called a âsocial reality,ââ Sivers explained in his talk. âThe mind is kind of tricked into feeling that itâs already done. And then because youâve felt that satisfaction, youâre less motivated to do the actual hard work necessary.â
Thereâs nothing wrong with sharing your joy. But try to hold your tongue until youâve got good news, not just good intentions.
Spending time with the wrong people
The friends you surround yourself with can encourage you to be your best self, or they can bring out your worst tendencies. Do you have a goal to get healthier, for example? Hang out with people who will encourage you to make those changes in your life. Want to utterly fail in that goal? Spend time with ones who revel in their own bad habits. People feed off each otherâs energy.
Always focusing on the negative
As my friend showed me years ago when he told me about his grief, you can focus on the positive without pretending life is easy. You can have a realistic perspective without pointing out the bad in everything you see.
We all know the person who complains about everything. âUgh, it poured this morning, and my shoes got soaked.â Yes, that sucks. No, you canât change the weather. You can put on a new pair of shoes.
Having a bad day is okay â everyone gets irritable once in a while. But if you always hate everything, youâre having a bad life. Itâs that simple.
Procrastinating
In college, I once asked a professor to extend a deadline for an essay. His reply: âIâm perfectly happy to extend your deadline by a week. The only thing Iâm asking you is, will your essay be better if you hand it in a week from now?â
We both knew the answer was âno.â I worked my ass off to finish it on time.
Only delay things when youâll do a better job with that extra time. Do it now, or do it better later.
Not listening to others
Being a good listener can steer you in the right direction, but in the long term, it also helps you maintain close valuable relationships.
Everyone can give a hug, but not everybody calls just to ask, âHow are you?â Put in the time. Ask, listen, care, repeat.
Giving in to laziness
We all have moments where weâre tempted to cancel plans. Sometimes, the effort of leaving the house can feel Herculean, even for something âfun.â
But new and novel experiences are what makes life beautiful. When you give in to laziness, youâre not fully participating in your own life â which also isnât fair to your friends, family, partner, and the other people who want to share it with you.
Not being curious
It used to be that if your dad was a farmer â and you were a man â you became a farmer. Women didnât get to choose what they wanted to be. And the ability to learn things beyond your immediate world was limited, if not impossible.
Today, access to information is easier than itâs ever been. Obviously, there are still structural barriers that limit what people can do, but those who take advantage of this access to information â who read books, who ask questions, who follow their curiosity â have more power to envision, and shape, their futures. Itâs hard to dream about what you donât know.
Not being nice
Just be a nice person. If you have difficulty defining what a ânice personâ is, youâre likely a jerk.
Giving up
âThe most certain way to succeed,â Thomas Edison once said, âis always to try just one more time.â Success, however you define it, never came from not trying. And often, it comes after first failing time and time again.
Author of 7 books, including Think Straight, Darius Foroux writes about productivity, habits, decision making, and wealth-building.Â