25 Ways To Kill The Toxic Ego That Will Ruin Your Life
25 Ways
To Kill The Toxic Ego That Will Ruin Your Life
By: Ryan
Holiday
Taken
from: Medium
The artist
Marina Abramović has said that the moment we begin to believe in our own
greatness, that we kill our ability to be truly creative. What she is talking
about is ego — the way that self-absorption ruins the very thing it celebrates.
So how do
we keep this toxic ego and selfishness at bay? How do we prevent ego from
“sucking us down like the law of gravity?” The primary answer is simple:
awareness. But after that, it’s a matter of hard work.
In the
course of researching Ego is the Enemy I was exposed to many strategies for
combatting our arrogant and selfish impulses. Here are 25 proven exercises from
successful men and women throughout history that will help you stay sober,
clear-headed, creative and humble. They work if you work them.
1. Adopt
the beginner’s mindset. “It is impossible to learn that which one thinks one
already knows,” Epictetus says. When we let ego tell us that we have arrived
and figured it all out, it prevents us from learning. Pick up a book on a
subject you know next to nothing about. Walk through a library or a bookstore —
remind yourself how much you don’t know.
2. Focus on
the effort — not the outcome. With any creative endeavour at some point what we
made leaves our hands. We can’t let what happens after that point have any sway
over us. We need to remember famous coach John Wooden’s advice: “Success is
peace of mind, which is a direct result of self satisfaction in knowing you
made the effort to do your best to become the best that you are capable of
becoming.” Doing your best is what matters. Focus on that. External rewards are
just extra.
3. Choose
purpose over passion. Passion runs hot and burns out, while people with purpose
— think of it as passion combined with reason — are more dedicated and have
control over their direction. Christopher McCandless was passionate when he
went “into the wild” but it didn’t work well, right? The inventor of the Segway
was passionate. Better to have clear-headed purpose.
4. Shun the
comfort of talking and face the work. “Void,” Marlon Brando once said, “is
terrifying to most people.” We talk endlessly on social media getting
validation and attention with fake internet points avoiding the uncertainty of
doing the difficult and frightening work required of any creative endeavour. As
creatives we need to shut up and get to work. To face the void — despite the
pain of doing so.
5. Kill
your pride before you lose your head. “Whom the gods wish to destroy,” Cyril
Connolly wrote, “they first call promising.” You cannot let early pride lead
you astray. You must remind yourself every day how much work is left to be
done, not how much you have done. You must remember that humility is the
antidote to pride.
6. Stop
telling yourself a story — there is no grand narrative. When you achieve any
sort of success you might think that success in the future is just the natural
and expected next part of the story. This is a straightforward path to failure
— by getting too cocky and overconfident. Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon,
reminds himself that there was “no aha moment” for his billion-dollar behemoth,
no matter what he might read in his own press clippings. Focus on the present
moment, not the story.
7. Learn to
manage (yourself and others). John DeLorean was a brilliant engineer but a poor
manager (of people and himself). One executive described his management style
as “chasing colored balloons” — he was constantly distracted and abandoning one
project for another. It’s just not enough to be smart or right or a genius.
It’s gratifying to be the micromanaging egotistical boss at the center of
everything — but that’s not how organizations grow and succeed. That’s not how
you can grow as a person either.
8. Know
what matters to you and ruthlessly say no to everything else. Pursue what the
philosopher Seneca refers to as euthymia — the tranquility of knowing what you
are after and not being distracted by others. We accomplish this by having an
honest conversation with ourselves and understanding our priorities. And
rejecting all the rest. Learning how to say no. First, by saying no to ego
which wants it all.
9. Forget
credit and recognition. Before Bill Belichick became the four-time Super
Bowl–winning head coach of the New England Patriots, he made his way up the
ranks of the NFL by doing grunt work and making his superiors look good without
getting any credit. When we are starting out in our pursuits we need to make an
effort to trade short-term gratification for a long-term payoff. Submit under
people who are already successful and learn and absorb everything you can.
Forget credit.
10. Connect
with nature and the universe at large. Going into nature is a powerful feeling
and we need to tap into it as often as possible. Nothing draws us away from it
more than material success. Go out there and reconnect with the world. Realize
how small you are in relation to everything else. It’s what the French
philosopher Pierre Hadot has referred to as the “oceanic feeling.” There is no
ego standing beneath the giant redwoods or on the edge of a cliff or next to the
crashing waves of the ocean.
11. Choose
alive time over dead time. According to author Robert Greene, there are two
types of time in our lives: dead time, when people are passive and waiting, and
alive time, when people are learning and acting and utilizing every second.
During failure, ego picks dead time. It fights back: I don’t want this. I want
______. I want it my way. It indulges in being angry, aggrieved, heartbroken.
Don’t let it — choose alive time instead.
12. Get out
of your own head. Writer Anne Lamott knows the dangers of the soundtrack we can
play in our heads: “The endless stream of self-aggrandizement, the recitation
of one’s specialness, of how much more open and gifted and brilliant and
knowing and misunderstood and humble one is.” That’s what you could be hearing
right now. Cut through that haze with courage and live with the tangible and
real, no matter how uncomfortable.
13. Let go
of control. The poisonous need to control everything and micromanage is usually
revealed with success. Ego starts saying: it all must be done my way — even
little things, even inconsequential things. The solution is straightforward. A
smart man or woman must regularly remind themselves of the limits of their
power and reach. It’s simple, but not easy.
14. Place
the mission and purpose above you. During World War II, General George
Marshall, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize for the Marshall Plan, was
practically offered the command of the troops on D-Day. Yet he told President
Roosevelt: “The decision is yours, Mr. President; my wishes have nothing to do
with the matter.” It came to be that Eisenhower led the invasion and performed
with excellence. Marshall put the mission and purpose above himself — an act of
selflessness we need to remind ourselves of.
15. When
you find yourself in a hole — stop digging. “Act with fortitude and honor,”
Alexander Hamilton wrote to a distraught friend in serious trouble of the man’s
own making. “If you cannot reasonably hope for a favorable extrication, do not
plunge deeper. Have the courage to make a full stop.” Our ego screams and
rattles when it is wounded. We will then do anything to get out of trouble.
Stop. Don’t make things worse. Don’t dig yourself further. Make a plan.
16. Don’t
be deceived by recognition, money and success — stay sober. Success, money and
power can intoxicate. What is required in those moments is sobriety and a
refusal to indulge. One look at Angela Merkel, one of the most powerful women
on the planet is revealing. She is plain and modest — one writer said that
unpretentiousness is Merkel’s main weapon — unlike most world leaders
intoxicated with position. Leave self-absorption and obsessing over one’s image
for the egotists.
17. Leave
your entitlement at the door. Right before he destroyed his own billion-dollar
company, Ty Warner, creator of Beanie Babies, overrode the objections of one of
his employees and bragged, “I could put the Ty heart on manure and they’d buy
it!” You can see how this manifestation of ego can lead you to success — and
how it can lead to downright failure.
18. Choose
love. Martin Luther King understood that hate is like an “eroding acid that
eats away the best and the objective center of your life.” Hatred is when ego
turns a minor insult into a massive sore and it lashes out. But pause and ask:
has hatred and lashing out ever helped anyone with anything? Don’t let it eat
at you — choose love. Yes, love. See how much better you feel.
19. Pursue
mastery in your chosen craft. When you are pursuing a craft you realize that
the better you get, the humbler you are. Because you understand there’s always
something you can learn and you are inherently humbled by this fascinating
craft or career you’re after. It is hard to get a big head or become
egotistical when you’ve decided on that path.
20. Keep an
inner scorecard. Just because you won doesn’t mean you deservedto. We need to
forget other people’s validation and external markers of success. Warren
Buffett has advised keeping an inner scorecard versus the external one. Your
potential, the absolute best you’re capable of — that’s the metric to measure
yourself against.
21.
Paranoia creates things to be paranoid about. “He who indulges empty fears
earns himself real fears,” wrote Seneca, who as a political adviser witnessed
destructive paranoia at the highest levels. If you let ego think that everyone
is out to get you you will seem weak…and then people will really try to take
advantage of you. Be strong, confident and forgiving.
22. Always
stay a student. Put yourself in rooms where you’re the least knowledgeable
person. Observe and learn. That uncomfortable feeling, that defensiveness that
you feel when your most deeply held assumptions are challenged? Do it
deliberately. Let it humble you. Remember how the physicist John Wheeler put
it, “As our island of knowledge grows, so does the shore of our ignorance.”
23. No one
can degrade you — they degrade themselves. Ego is sensitive about slights,
insults and not getting their due. This is a waste of time. After Frederick
Douglass was asked to ride in a baggage car because of his race, someone rushed
to apologize for this mistreatment. Frederick’s reply? “They cannot degrade
Frederick Douglass. The soul that is within me no man can degrade. I am not the
one that is being degraded on account of this treatment, but those who are
inflicting it upon me.”
24. Stop
playing the image game — focus on a higher purpose. One of the best strategists
of the last century, John Boyd, would ask the promising young acolytes under
him: “To be or to do? Which way will you go?” That is, will you choose to fall
in love with the image of how success looks like or will you focus on a higher
purpose? Will you pick obsessing over your title, number of fans, size of
paycheck or on real, tangible accomplishment? You know which way ego wants to
go.
25. Focus
on the effort — not the results. This is so important it is appearing twice. If
you can accept that you control only the effort that goes in and not the
results which come out, you will be mastering your ego. All work leaves our
hands at some point. Ego wants to control everything — but it cannot control
other people or their reactions. Focus on your end of the equation, leave them
to theirs. Remember Goethe’s line: “What matters to an active man is to do the
right thing; whether the right thing comes to pass should not bother him.”
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