My personal lexicon: ambition
May. 31st, 2009 11:27 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Sometimes I wonder out loud if I should be more ambitious, and the response is usually "silly
flexagon, you ARE ambitious!".
Then I'm like "Oh yeah? Show me my goals then" and they're all "Look at all the stuff you do" and things devolve from there.
I think I've figured this out. I think I really only count it as ambition when there are long-term specific goals that assume/demand a lot of progress. For example, a plan to go to (and get through) med school is ambitious. Training to run a marathon, when one can currently only run 5 miles, is ambitious. Planning to get promoted in a year is ambitious, at a new job.
Stretching every day and working hard at stuff in one's current job description is just disciplined, not ambitious. (And I am disciplined, I won't fight you on that.) For the most part, I work on applying myself to things I can do, plus the next incremental step. Obviously that can take a person a long way, and the idea is to blink and look around every now and then to see where one is, and yet I would call no particular part of the process ambitious since it's all focused on the present and the immediate future.
Is my personal lexicon just way off from the way these words are used?
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Then I'm like "Oh yeah? Show me my goals then" and they're all "Look at all the stuff you do" and things devolve from there.
I think I've figured this out. I think I really only count it as ambition when there are long-term specific goals that assume/demand a lot of progress. For example, a plan to go to (and get through) med school is ambitious. Training to run a marathon, when one can currently only run 5 miles, is ambitious. Planning to get promoted in a year is ambitious, at a new job.
Stretching every day and working hard at stuff in one's current job description is just disciplined, not ambitious. (And I am disciplined, I won't fight you on that.) For the most part, I work on applying myself to things I can do, plus the next incremental step. Obviously that can take a person a long way, and the idea is to blink and look around every now and then to see where one is, and yet I would call no particular part of the process ambitious since it's all focused on the present and the immediate future.
Is my personal lexicon just way off from the way these words are used?
no subject
Date: 2009-06-01 02:41 pm (UTC)Yes there are things that can't be quantified, but I'd like to call bullshit on the thing about goals and quantifiable stuff too.
Just as a super-simple example, if I save $100/mo then after 10 months I'll have $1000. It doesn't matter a bit whether I had a goal of saving $1000, or I'm halfway to a goal of $2000, or if I was just saving on general principle with no goal in mind.
no subject
Date: 2009-06-01 03:18 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-06-01 04:45 pm (UTC)It may come as a surprise, how much does or doesn't feel worthwhile. And it's worth finding those things out about oneself, in my opinion.