BOOK SUMMARY 164
One Big Thing
·
Summary written by: Andy Budgell
“Step
back and look at all that you’re doing. What are you doing well and what not so
well? What excites you and what doesn’t? What reflects your genuine calling,
expertise, and brand, and what doesn’t? What will actually take you into the
future? What could you potentially be the best in your field at accomplishing?”
One Big Thing, page
20
Phil
Cooke, author of One Big Thing: Discovering What You Were Born To Do,
has had an interesting and unique career, “From producing media programming in
more than forty countries to directing prime-time television, being a business
partner in a production company that produced Super Bowl commercials, to
advising nonprofit and humanitarian organizations around the world, to being
one of the few working producers in Hollywood with a PhD.” He’s located his One
Big Thing, his driving purpose in life, and he’s here to help you find yours.
The way he sees it, there are two big questions when it comes to discovering
your One Big Thing:
1. What am I supposed to do with my life?
2. How do I get noticed?
Cooke
says that the “intersection of those two questions is what this book is about.”
But
don’t expect to be spoon fed the answers. Cooke acknowledges that if you’re
looking for a quick fix, or “five easy steps” to locating your purpose, this is
the wrong book for you. “This book won’t give you all the answers, but it will
help you start asking the right questions.”
Let’s
get to asking some of those questions, shall we?
Golden Egg
Hit Your Purpose
“Your destiny is a moving target, and that’s
why I prefer to use the word purpose or, as you’ve seen, your One Big Thing.”
One Big Thing, page
10
There
are those people who seem to be born knowing exactly what their purpose in life
is. And then there’s the rest of us. We struggle to find that One Big Thing
that excites us, that we wake up energized and raring to do. This isn’t just
the concern of the recent graduate, or that loser friend that can never seem to
get his act together. This can be the CEO who was thrust into a role that
wasn’t really for her. That doesn’t mean she’s not good at what she does.
Indeed she could very well be great, but it’s not her One Big Thing, and it’s
not her passion.
It’s
never too late to discover your One Big Thing, that niche that you could
command like no one else. The following two GEMs will help you to identify your
purpose, and what to do if what you thought was your purpose doesn’t really
work out.
GEM #1
Feedback
“What have you done that made people notice?
What brings you affirmation, encouragement, and compliments from friends and
coworkers?”
One Big Thing, page
92
Sometimes
the people around you, whether it’s a co-worker, a friend, or a family member,
can see the path that you should be on more clearly than you can. This is
something I know to be true. In university I was struggling with which
direction I wanted to go. I had begun school with the intention of majoring in
psychology, but I quickly learned that that discipline wasn’t for me. I sort of
sat in limbo for a time, just taking classes that appealed to me. When I
discussed this separately with two friends, they both told me that I should
major in English. They pointed out that I seemed to flourish in English
courses, and had a natural aptitude for it. How come they could see this so
clearly, while I agonized over my decision? I’m not sure, but I’m glad they
did!
But
Cooke also asks that you consider the “credentials” before jumping in with both
feet. “My advice is to weigh any outside influence in the balance of who and
how qualified they are. While your writing teacher, business mentor, or
experienced friend should be listened to and their advice acted on, keep in
mind that coworkers and family members sometimes operate out of jealousy or
ignorance. When your writing teacher recommends you keep the day job until you
improve your writing, that’s worth listening to. But when your neighbor
criticizes your decision because she thinks you need a ‘real’ job, then keep
moving forward.”
What
do people tell you that you do better than anyone else? Perhaps that will put
you on the right path to finding your One Big Thing!
GEM #2
Know When To Move On
“A Picasso always looks like Picasso painted
it. Hemingway always sounds like Hemingway. A Beethoven symphony always sounds
like a Beethoven symphony. Part of being a master is learning how to sing in
nobody else’s voice but your own.”
Hugh MacLeod quoted in One Big Thing, page 87
You’ve
focused on the niche that you thought you could conquer, but it hasn’t quite
worked out, so what do you do? You graciously move on.
To
illustrate this point, Cooke uses George Lang, a man who desperately wanted to
become a violinist, as an example. He dutifully practiced, but when he heard
Jascha Heifetz perform the violin in concert, he knew he would never be as
good. So he decided to be “the Heifetz of something else.” And he did. He
ascended the heights of the restaurant industry, eventually owning New York
City’s famed Café des Artists and lending his expertise as a food critic and
correspondent for CBS News. The violin wasn’t for him, but food and restaurants
were.
“I
loved Lang’s brutal honesty in that interview,” Cooke writes. “His realization
that he would most likely never achieve his original dream didn’t cause him to
give up, grow bitter, or live in a delusion. He had the courage to face his
limitations with brutal honesty and his clarity of vision enabled him to become
just as influential in another area.”
Know
when it’s time to move on. Recognize that you’ve plateaued, that you won’t get
any better. It’s more admirable to move on than to be second best.
Finding
your purpose, or as Phil Cooke calls it, your One Big Thing, can be one of the
most challenging things you will ever do, but once you’ve located it, it can be
the most rewarding things you can ever accomplish. One Big Thing:
Discovering What You Were Born To Dowon’t give you all of the answers—you’ve got
to put in the work—but it will help to start a discourse within yourself and
put you on the right path…
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