Pillar #1 of Awesome Risk Taking: Embrace Uncertainty

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This is pillar #1 of a 5 pillar series that I’m writing for adventurous risk takers looking to change their lives by taking more chances.

Anyone can do something crazy, but it takes a little more finesse to do it great and the steps aren’t as well known as you might think.

Be sure to sign up for free updates to keep up with the lessons and get some unpopular but very effective knowledge about turning your scary ideas into reality.

Embrace Uncertainty

If there’s anything that paralyzes people over and over again, it’s the fear of the unknown. Yet, when it comes to living the lives we truly want, the only path there is to follow is never very well defined.

The natural response of your lizard brain (the part that always tells you to be careful) to uncertainty is immediate fear and rejection. It doesn’t want you to change. The tricky part is that this fear and rejection doesn’t usually broadcast itself in some dramatic display of emotion that you’d only see in a movie. It’s much sneakier and far more subversive.

Here’s what it’s more likely to look like:

  • Just 10 more minutes on Facebook
  • One more show and then I’ll go to work
  • I’m too tired to go out and meet people tonight
  • One more day of junk food and then I’ll start my diet

The lizard brain has been a very strong component of our psyches for a long time and it knows all the best tricks to keep you from trying anything that isn’t a sure bet. It knows that it doesn’t have to convince you to give up your idea altogether, it only has to talk you out of doing something crazy right now – to put it off for just a bit longer.

  • I’ll work on my music tomorrow. Right now I’m really enjoying this TV show.
  • I’ll straighten out my finances tomorrow so I can quit my job. Right now I need to come up with a witty Twitter update.
  • I’ll look for a mentor later. I’m really engrossed in this book right now.

It’s a brilliant trick, really, because it can be repeated every day and we’re happy to oblige it. That’s what’s comfortable.

I fall victim to my lizard brain all the time. I face it every time I sit down to write an article. Even this one! Right now!

The only way to beat it is to flip the whole comfort ideal on its head and start working backwards. We have to seek out and embrace uncertainly at all costs. We have to look for opportunities to take risks in everything we do.

Rather than look for more of the same ways to stay comfortable, we have to constantly search for new ways to become uncomfortable. You see, the best way to know that your lizard brain is beating you is by not even realizing that it’s there. When all is calm, he’s resting peacefully.

Checking Facebook, watching TV and reading magazines keeps your lizard brain very happy. Rest assured, though, that he’ll wake right up as soon as you confront him with some crazy idea like selling your art, starting a business, or climbing a mountain. He won’t just wake up, though. He’ll be pissed off.

Sal is pissed off.

Sal is my lizard brain and he’s mad that I’m writing this. In fact, he’s really mad because he knows it’s about him. The best advice I’ve ever gotten about confronting your lizard brain came from a great mentor, Pam Slim. She said the best way to confront the lizard is to give it a name and think of it more as a teammate than an adversary. Boy was she right.

I named mine Sal Mander and made him my pet and it’s made all the difference in the world. I’m sure that sounds ridiculous, but that’s the whole point. By externalizing it and making him my imaginary pet, I can talk to him and thank him for his concern about my welfare – just like you’d pat your dog on the forehead for guarding the door at night.

I can picture Sal sitting on the table across from me, very frustrated that I’m writing about him. And that’s exactly how I know that this is what I should be doing. The more upset Sal is, the more nervous and uncertain I am. And, thus, the more likely that what I’m doing actually has some merit. I can use Sal like a tool to gauge the value of my projects.

The more you try this, the more you’ll realize how fun it can be to face the unknown and try things that aren’t in your comfort zone.

And that’s what embracing uncertainty is all about – not just recognizing or accepting that you have to put up with it to get what you really want, but finding the joy and pleasure that can come from the pursuit itself, because here’s something they never teach you in school: the pursuit has to be fun, because the destination doesn’t matter.

No matter what we’ve been told, nothing in life is guaranteed, even if it seems safe and comfortable. As long as that’s true, we might as well be working on something that makes a difference to us and to others.

Are you embracing uncertainty?

~~~~~

 

23 Responses to Pillar #1 of Awesome Risk Taking: Embrace Uncertainty
  1. ConsciouslyFrugal
    June 7, 2010 | 9:41 am

    Ha! Sal Mander. ahahahahahhahahahah Ohhhhh. Hilarious.

    I love this, particulary in making that “lizard brain” (what I call my “internal censor”) a team member instead of a foe. Because you’re right–Sal et al are only trying to protect us. When we can respect that and work with it instead of raging against it (how often does negativity breed anything positive?), growth is so much easier.

    But seriously, the name? Hilarious. I need to think of a clever name for mine!

    • Tyler
      June 7, 2010 | 10:38 am

      Consciously Frugal – I was hoping someone would catch that. :) Thanks for reinforcing the point, too. There’s no way to shut your lizard brain up, so you might as well learn how to talk to it.

  2. Martin
    June 7, 2010 | 12:59 pm

    Nice. Look forward to the rest of the series. Runners will almost always say that the hardest part of a run is just stopping what you are doing and putting on your running shoes. Once you start, you can do the thing that is hard to do. Of course, stopping the comfortable stuff to start the uncomfortable stuff is the difficult thing.

  3. Tyler
    June 7, 2010 | 1:09 pm

    Martin – that’s the beauty of the snowball effect. Find the absolute easiest thing you can do to start heading the right direction and do it. It eventually starts building on itself.

  4. Ken Carlson
    June 7, 2010 | 1:43 pm

    Tyler-

    Great article. Absolute truth here. Just discovered your website from a RT from @pamslim

    Impressive goals and I can’t wait to read pillars 2-5

  5. Melissa Dinwiddie
    June 7, 2010 | 1:46 pm

    Aw, what an awesome post! My lizard brain takes over more than I’d like to admit, though I’m finding ways to change that. Each little step forward is more snow on the snowball.

    I love the naming idea. Maybe picturing “Gerda Gecko” will help me in my own attempts to do what I *really* want to be doing, instead of watching my energies spiral down the time-sink…

  6. Tyler
    June 7, 2010 | 4:19 pm

    Ken – Thanks for stopping by and I’m really glad you like it.

    Melissa – “Gerda” will always try to take over, but learning how to talk and reason with her rather than ignore her will be way more effective in getting her to pipe down enough to “get on with it.” Thanks for the reply.

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  8. Giordano
    June 8, 2010 | 8:03 pm

    I am already in love with this series, looking forward to the rest of the pillars. Oh, and by the way, I named my lazy lizard “Diego”. Keep up the good work and great content!

  9. Ash
    June 9, 2010 | 7:04 am

    LOVE.

    Now I’m going to have to come up with a creative name myself. Shoot. Perhaps Ernesto? Rex? Alejandro, a la Lady Gaga? Though maybe a female would make more sense. Hmmmmmmmmm…

    You’re getting this website off to a great start. Glad to see you experiencing success! Keep it up.

  10. Tyler
    June 9, 2010 | 8:38 am

    Giordano – Diego, good one!

    Ash – Thanks for stoppin’ by. I’m fond of Lady Gaga. The more ridiculous you make it, the less crazy you feel when you talk to yourself :)

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  12. Marie
    June 15, 2010 | 6:31 am

    love this so much! I just quit my “safe” job to move to Europe and pursue my Master’s degree in something I’ve always wanted. I’m definitely embracing the uncertainty!

  13. Carlo
    July 8, 2010 | 1:43 am

    Tyler – Your website is EXACTLY what I need right now. My lizard brain has taken over my life! It’s especially brutal since I have a wife and 2 young daughters. It’s been a constant cycle of trying to catch up, trying to keep pace. It’s exhausting.

  14. Megan Bachman
    July 10, 2010 | 9:57 pm

    I am having my pre-30′s life crisis. Just got broken up with and still finding the meaning of life. Working in Afghanistan; working for the mighty buck!

    I thoroughly enjoy reading your blogs. As I have just stumbled on them today. I look forward to reading all your material. You’re spot on man! I don’t much care for my lizard friend!

    Megan

  15. Keri Peardon
    July 23, 2010 | 3:34 pm

    I don’t know if I have a lizard brain, so much as a lizard ass. I’m like one of those lizards that likes to lay on a stone perfectly still and sun itself for hours at a time. LOL.

  16. Tracey
    July 23, 2010 | 4:48 pm

    I have a personal dislike of lizards…they scare the heck out of me…but thinking of one and actually realizing I have one, who really is a scary thing, is going to make me come to terms with my lazy “I’m too tired” excuses that he throws out at me daily. I keep thinking he is the Midnite Marauder……always keeping me from my dreams.
    Not anymore he isn’t………………

  17. claudia
    October 28, 2010 | 9:32 am

    Great idea- naming your lizard brain…too funny!!

    I love the idea of embracing uncertaintly…heck, if it’s going to be there anyways in life, might as well make friends with it, no?- and even if you never make ‘friends’ with it there’s always the ‘keep your friends close and your enemies closer’ philosophy…so either way, embrace it!!

    Anyways, most of the time the ‘fear’ of doing something is much bigger than the actual doing it…it’s just easier to see in retrospect, when you get to the ‘phee-yuu- I DID IT!’

    Claudia

  18. Northern
    December 12, 2010 | 5:01 am

    I see my brain as having two voices, one can be described as a ‘I’ll do it later’ lazy type voice whilst the other is the motivator, if he were a person he would be 7ft, 20st of pure muscle with a deep gruff voice that could beat you into submission with a look.

    Suppose you could match my lizard brain to the lazy voice, alas this usually makes my decisions but the motivator is getting louder and louder.

    First time poster by the way.

  19. Shashi Wigley
    December 13, 2010 | 10:01 pm

    I just named my lizard brain :) Now time to put in him place (beneath my feet). Thanks Tyler

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