Success is the optimal balance of talent, time and treasure, and how we use and understand each.
By Robert A. Scott, President, ѿTV
Reading the bio’s of the 2009 David Award honorees, and thinking about thosehonored in the past, I reflected on the meaning of success. These men are recognized foraccomplishments in their professions and in the community. They are heralded assuccessful. But what is success?
Most people seem to think of success in terms of achievement in the realms ofstatus, wealth, or power – – in relation to others. I wonder, though is this dimension, “inrelation to others,” necessary to understand success? I think not.
For me, success is the optimal balance of talent, time and treasure, and how weuse and understand each in terms of status, power, and wealth.
By “talent”, I mean how we use the gifts of mind, body and spirit we have as aresult of heritage, nourishment, practice, motivation, happenstance, and luck. No scholar,athlete, artist, or community leader of note is born successful. It takes circumstance andinitiative to develop talents to their fullest.
By “time”, I mean time for others as well as self. A single-minded focus onhoning skills, enhancing abilities, and accumulating knowledge may result in themaximum development of talent, but may also result in a life devoid of the pleasures thatcome from relaxation, conversation, companionship, and community involvement. Timeis a scarce resource, just as talent is; neither should be squandered.
By “treasure”, I mean that with which we start and that which we gain. Just as wecan lose sight of important dimensions of life by focusing on achievement through talentalone, or by being selfish in the use of time, we can lose perspective – – and sometimesintegrity – – by focusing solely on the accumulation of wealth. Those who measuresuccess through the size of bank accounts or the brand of cars and yachts, who keep scoreby counting currency, may know the cost of everything but the value of nothing.
This is not to say that we should ignore financial rewards, or that money issomehow bad. No, it is to argue for balance in how we organize our lives.
In my view, the successful life is one that achieves symmetry in the attentiongiven to the use and understanding of talent, time and treasure for one’s own fulfillmentof life’s dreams, and realizes that status, power, and money are measures used by otherswithout regard to our own standards. Who matters more? Them, or you? For the DavidAward winners, the answer seems clear.
Networking Magazine, February 2009. (The “David Award” is presented to ten men eachyear selected for outstanding community service and professional accomplishment.)
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