The difference between childhood and adulthood is responsibility. The world doesn’t expect a five-year old to work, pay bills, or make major life decisions. However, as the child develops, they begin to experience the weight of responsibilities. As people grow, life places responsibilities on them.
To be responsible means that you have a duty to yourself first, and then, others. The quality of your life or well-being is your job. You must understand how your decisions affect your outcomes and others. The concept of responsibility helps you understand your role in the ecosystem of life. Personal responsibility starts with this simple idea: if you want to change the world, start with you first; responsibility begins with you. Furthermore, success is difficult to attain or sustain when responsibility isn't understood.
To be successful, you must learn to take one hundred percent responsibility for the results that you get. People may argue that life happens and situations beyond your control can occur. True. However, what you do with the events of life is up to you. Life will throw curveballs at you, failures will happen, and the eventual outcomes would all depend on your quality of thinking. When you assume one hundred percent responsibility, three things happen to you. Let me explain.
You Learn Fast: Once you accept responsibility, you become a learning machine. Now, you no longer have the time to blame others. Instead, you spend your time learning how things work. One hundred percent responsibility makes your mind an effective sponge. Your senses are heightened to pay attention to details. You begin to recognise patterns, and your mind opens to new ideas.
You Strategise Better: The more you learn, the more you grow. The more you grow, the better plans you make. One hundred percent responsibility equips you to strategise intelligently based on your learnings. The blame game dulls the mind and hinders effective strategy. Personal responsibility empowers your mind to craft the strategies that would move you from where you are to where you ought to be.
You Make Better Decisions: In the process of crafting strategies, you make better choices when you decide that the buck stops with you. The blame posture takes the pressure of decision-making off you and makes you believe that it’s the job of others to make your choices – this is unhealthy. One hundred percent responsibility helps you convert your learnings into strategic decisions that get you the results that you want to see. Remember, you alter your outcomes by what you decide. Ultimately, it’s up to you.
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