by Alan Cohen
Alan
Cohen is the author of many popular inspirational books, including The
Dragon Doesn’t Live Here Anymore
and his new guide to conscious relationships, Don’t
Get Lucky, Get Smart.
Join Alan for his life-changing Life Mastery Training in Fiji, July
20-26, 2008. For information on this program or others, or to receive Alan’s
free daily inspirational quote and monthly newsletter, visit www.alancohen.com
email info@alancohen.com or phone 1 800
568-3079.
In a remote region of the
Andes, two tribes were feuding. One tribe lived high in the mountains and the
other in the lowlands. One day the highlanders raided the village of the
lowlanders and kidnapped a baby. The next day the lowlander tribe assembled a
rescue team to climb the mountain to find and retrieve the child. But the
lowlanders did not know the trails and they were not skilled at mountain
climbing. They struggled to make their way up the mountain, but after a half day
of climbing, they could not ascend anymore. Discouraged and disappointed, they
packed their gear to return.
Suddenly, to their amazement, the rescue
team saw the baby’s mother coming down from the mountain, holding her baby in
her arms. Baffled, they asked her, "How were you able to scale this steep
mountain and rescue your child, when we were unable to do so?"
She answered, "It wasn’t your
baby."
Motivation and Intention
If you want something enough, you will find
a way to do it. If you are not very motivated, you will either not attempt to
reach a goal, or if you do your efforts will be half-hearted and you will attain
no measurable results. Motivation and intention are far more significant
elements of success than circumstances.
Do not assess your possibilities on the
basis of the beliefs or unsuccessful efforts of people less motivated than you.
Their results are less a function of reality, and more a result of their beliefs
and intentions. Nor do you need their permission to do what you want and need to
do. The mother who retrieved her child did not ask the search party if the
mission was possible nor did she request their permission. She just knew what
she needed to do and she did it. The compelling documentary Man
on Wire chronicles the brazen feat of Philippe Petit, a visionary circus
performer who, in 1974, strung a wire between the two towers of the World Trade
Center and, without asking anyone’s permission, walked between the skyscrapers
eight times. Petit and several cronies planned the stunt for years with an
Ocean’s 11 level of craftiness and detail. They cased the World Trade Center
for months, fabricated phony I.D.’s to gain access to study the building’s
design, found an inside agent in whose office they stored their equipment, and
hid overnight under a tarpaulin with guards walking past them just feet away. At
one moment a guard saw the intruders scaling a back staircase with their
equipment, but for some odd reason he overlooked them. Once atop a tower, they
shot an arrow across the 200-foot span to begin to secure the 450-pound wire.
While Petit’s feat was extraordinary, what it took to pull if off seemed even
more astounding. After his tightrope walk Petit was arrested for trespassing,
but he was released when he agreed to put on a show for kids in the
neighborhood.
How could Petit get away with such a
Mission Impossible? The answer is simple: It was his baby. He conceived the idea
in the waiting room of a dentist’s office, where he read a magazine article
about the planned construction of the World Trade Center. When he saw the sketch
of two towers looming 1368 feet over Manhattan, the idea grabbed him and would
not let him go until he accomplished it. Petit ate, drank, thought, slept, and
dreamt the idea for years. That’s what a vision baby feels like.
You, too, have a baby you love and believe
in. It may not be as outrageous as Philippe Petit’s, but it is life-giving to
you, and bigger than your history or fear. It speaks to you in your quiet
moments and stirs you when you think about it. You are hungrier for it than
safety, comfort, or the status quo. That’s the depth of cry of your baby that
will drive you to fetch it.
A young man asked Ernest Hemingway,
"Should I become a writer?" Hemingway answered, "If anything can
stop you, let it." If other people’s opinions, or scientific data, or
fear can put you off from retrieving your baby, don’t even bother starting the
climb up the mountain. But if you care less about what others think and more
about what you feel, start your journey. If adversity does not put you off, it
will strengthen you. If old friends fall away, you know you are on the right
track. When new ones show up, you have a confirmation. And if you need no
recognition from the world, but simply take deep reward from your adventure, it
is worthy indeed.
Les Brown said, "Wanting something is
not enough. You must hunger for it." Wayne Dyer echoed, "Motivation is
when you take hold of an idea. Inspiration is when an idea takes hold of
you." Quit trying to do something, and let something do you. There is a
Power in the universe seeking to express through you. If you let it, doors will
open that you could not imagine how to open yourself. Your goal may seem
mountain high to accomplish, but if you love your baby enough you will find a
way to bring it home.