When you start out, you enjoy a short-term period of rapid growth. You lose
your
first couple of pounds, you make your first sale, you say your first sentence
in
a foreign language, or you drive the first mile on a motorcycle.
After the initial gratifying period, things get harder. You no longer improve
so quickly, or even worse –
you feel stuck, unable to push through the obstacles.
In his book, Seth Godin says that if something is worth doing, there’s
probably a dip to experience.
The dip creates scarcity, which in turn leads to
exceptional value possessed by the few people who endure it.
The longer you endure the dip, the closer you are to success. Yet, most
people who have found themselves in the dip give up before they can get out of
it.
In
some cases, they make the right decision. They save time and effort they
would otherwise spend on something they shouldn’t have been doing in the first
place.
In other cases, they throw away all the progress they have made so far.
How do you decide whether you should give up or keep going? There are
several questions to ask.
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