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Why less passion is better for business
I just googled 'Passion in Business' and came up with
82,900,000 hits. And, according to the first several
pages of hits, everyone says that you must have passion
to succeed in business. 'Fuel your passion' is the watchword.
Why this quest for passion? Of course, passion can
feel wonderful, but do you really need it to succeed
in business? What happens when you don't have it? Surprisingly,
your business can do better with less passion. Why?
To understand, you have to get past the gobble-gobble-gobble
of everyone who says you're doomed if you don't fuel
your passion to see the deeper spiritual truths that
are in motion. But first, what in the heck IS passion?
According to the dictionary:
Passion: a powerful emotion or appetite, such as love,
joy, hatred, anger or greed.
Plus, the word evidently originally comes from the
Latin "passus" which is the past participle
of "pati" meaning 'to suffer.' It began to
be used more widely in the Western world when the Catholic
Church used it to describe Jesus' sufferings on the
cross: the passion of Christ.
Do you get it? 'Passion' is just another way to say
'strong emotional appetite.' And depending on strong
emotional appetites for too long, even if they start
out by feeling really good, tends to end in... suffering.
I want to let you know that you don't really need to
fuel your passion to succeed. Many times when I hear
someone talk about 'fueling their passion' they're really
talking about what I call the 'honeymoon' syndrome.
You see, when two people newly fall in love with each
other, they're in the throes of the 'honeymoon'- they
want to be around each other all the time, they can't
get enough of each other. Their emotions and pheromones
are going crazy- they're insatiable. It lasts a few
months, or, at most, a year.
Boy the honeymoon is fun. And it can help set the stage
for a wonderful long-term relationship. But if you're
depending on those crazy honeymoon emotions and appetites
to make it to your 50th anniversary... well, all I can
say is, I wish you luck.
Your business is no honeymoon. Your business, in order
to stand the test of time, and to grow into something
that can carry you, provide for you, and shelter you,
needs to get beyond the 'passion-only' honeymoon stage.
Recently one of the participants in my marketing class
was experiencing some very strong fear and overwhelm.
That's passion- but not helpful for the business. She
had been busy chasing certain business outcomes, and
the fear about it was too much. I recently went through
a similar spin.
Both she and I had switched over to the passion/appetite
fuel, and it was burning us up. We had to switch back
to the only fuel that lasts for the long term.
What is that fuel? And how do you switch?
Keys to Reining Your Passion
Love is the fuel- passion is the derivative.
There is a Sufi teaching: "Know that the human
has a quality that has no end to it, and this is covetousness,
and because the human is forever seeking, this is a
quality that is derivative of love... Love causes seeking..."
Covetousness is the passion-driven (read: appetite-driven)
derivative of love, and it just ain't as good as the
original. Begin to notice in yourself the difference
between your heart's longing for love, and your ego
coveting more money, or more clients. Take a moment
now- can you feel the difference in your own body?
Put your ego on a starvation diet.
If you can tell the difference between love and covetousness,
now keep one and throw out the other. Put off feeding
your coveting hunger- for a minute, an hour, a day.
This is the wisdom behind the spiritual practice of
fasting- abstaining from material sustenance. This abstaining
weakens your ego's hunger, and strengthens your heart's
contentment.
Don't believe me? Try it out. You don't have to do
a 40-day retreat in the desert- even just try skipping
a meal. Or even simpler: noticing a hunger you have,
and spending time with that hunger, instead of feeding
it. What happens for you?
Now, apply it to your business.
Instead of focusing on what you want- more money, a
bigger business- put those appetites aside. Instead,
take a moment with your heart and ask 'What is your
heart truly longing for?'
Once you get an answer to that question, ask your heart
another one: 'How can your business support this longing?'
Let yourself be willing to be surprised. And let me
know what comes up for you.
Author : Mark Silver
Mark Silver is the author of Unveiling
the Heart of Your Business: How Money, Marketing and
Sales can Deepen Your Heart, Heal the World, and Still
Add to Your Bottom Line. He has helped hundreds of small
business owners around the globe succeed in business
without lousing their hearts. Get three free chapters
of the book online: http://www.heartofbusiness.com
Keywords : love, joy, hatred, anger, greed, Catholic
Church, doomed, passion, honeymoon, emotions, Sufi teaching,
covetousness, spiritual practice, abstaining, strengthens
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