women's fiction for romance lovers
Tuesday March 16th 2010

Inspiration – Laura Drake – Maslowe and Hersey Kisses

DSC00663Some of my best ideas come to me while I’m riding my bicycle. I had an epiphany during a gorgeous Southern California ride yesterday. One of those moments when several pieces fall into place for a major “Aha” moment – I love it when that happens!

For anyone who is not familiar with Maslowe, here’s the Reader’s Digest version:

In the 1930’s Abraham Maslowe put forward his “Hierarchy of Needs” concept to explain behavior. His theory was that you strive to move toward the top of the list that follows:

Self-actualization
Esteem needs
Belonging needs
Safety needs
Physiological needs

This is summed up in one of my favorite songs, “Constant Craving” by K.D.Lang.

But I digress. You can’t move up the ladder until the lower need is met, as anyone who’s been on the lowest rung can attest to (been there myself at one dark period of my life.)

My husband and I were talking the other day on a completely different subject. We were watching one of those obnoxious “Weight Loss Breakthrough” ads on TV, and he didn’t understand why people were so lazy; why they couldn’t lose weight and keep it off (he has more drive than most – he lost 50 lbs 5 years ago.)

Last piece to the puzzle; I’m a Weight Watchers member, and the talk this week was about creating goals to achieve weight loss.

Okay, stay with me here, because my theory works for anything you want to achieve, not just weight loss.

We’ve all heard the goal-setting advice; break a large goal into steps, and achieve those, and you’ll finally get to your ultimate goal/need. Great. On paper. But if you’re like me, when you choose a large goal like losing 40 lbs, learning to knit, writing a book, whatever…you have pictured in your head what the ultimate goal will do for you. You’re standing on stage, holding up the Oscar to the applause and adulation of the crowd.

Okay, I set smaller goals, but ultimately my eyes are on the applause, and my acceptance speech, and the smaller goals aren’t enough to get me excited. Yeah, I’m making progress, but smaller goals also point out the amount of road I have left to get to my ultimate desire.

I think this is why we fail. After awhile, you just burn out. The effort just doesn’t seem worth it, and we move on to the next thing we want. But there are two problems with that. First, the goal you’ve abandoned is the one you want most, or it wouldn’t have been your first effort, right? Secondly, in spite of excuses you make to others, deep down, you know you’ve failed, and it hurts. You feel guilty, which lowers your self-esteem and makes the next goal harder to achieve, because you don’t really trust yourself to do it.

After all, you let yourself down before, right?

One of my goals is to get stronger on the bike. We’re going on a bicycle vacation in Utah this summer, and it involves mountains. Okay, so I’m riding, trying to figure out how to get consistent with my training – I get lazy when I get home from work, and find other things to do that don’t involve sweat and pain.

Suddenly, I’m distracted by a mockingbird’s song. I notice that the temperature is perfect. I look up, and the rolling hills have changed since the last time I rode this route; tawny grass stretches away forever. I’m so absorbed by the joy of being alive and being out in nature that I don’t even realize I’ve toiled up a major hill – it didn’t hurt at all!

That’s the Hershey Kiss part. Is it the high I’ll get on the podium? No, not even close. It’s just a moment’s sweetness on the tongue. Okay, I’m mixing metaphors, but you get the gist – it’s about focus. You need to really take the time to revel in the small goals. Wallow in them. They are the rest spots on the stairs to the podium. If you don’t, you’re going to burn out and quit.

Besides, just ask an older actor with an Oscar on their mantel; they’ll tell you the evening was great, but what mattered to them was the journey. Like Lennon said, “Life is what happens while we make other plans”.

The Hershey Kisses are the joy of life! Savor them; I wish you many.

Laura Drake

Reader Feedback

7 Responses to “Inspiration – Laura Drake – Maslowe and Hersey Kisses”

  1. Edie Ramer says:

    Laura, so you’re saying I should buy Hershey Kisses and that will help me reach my goals? I can do that! ;)

    Actually, I do enjoy the journey. I love writing and word-smithing. I savor the good sentences. That’s why I can’t write fast and sloppy anymore. I read slow and focused, and I love what I write. Well, most of it. It makes a difference.

  2. Kath Calarco says:

    Burn out is a problem, especially when setting writing goals on a daily basis. Some feel if they’ve gone a long time without writing they’re some sort of failure. Others take breaks in order to refill the pond.

    Goals are good, as long as they’re used like spices, I have found. I try to keep mine realistic for my journey, and if I don’t reach them, oh well. Failure is my friend in that it means I’ve made an effort. My biggest “goal” is to not let failure defeat my purpose.

  3. Kath Calarco says:

    P.S. WOW! I just realized why I recognize Maslow. I learned about his theory recently in Sociology. Looks like I need to review because now I don’t remember much about him, and it was only a few months ago that I learned about him. :)

  4. Diana Layne says:

    The little joys you find along the way, that’s another way of being grateful. And gratitude makes you more aware of those little joys. One sort of does not exist fully without the other.

    I’ve learned so much about being grateful this last year, even when–or maybe especially when–my day is falling apart if I take the time to make a note for all I’m grateful for it completely changes my focus. I seem to be harping on this lately but it has been truly life changing for me. Being grateful is more than just a once a year thing.

    So yes, take time to celebrate–be grateful–for all those small goals you achieve and it definitely makes the journey all the sweeter!

    Best of luck with your training–a bike vacation sounds awesome!

  5. Great post, Laura! Such an important observation for a life of peace and joy – and forward movement! :)

  6. CurtissAnn says:

    Oh, my, just the inspiration I need right now. I want to get regular again with my writing, get my new home in order, enjoy my grandchildren–okay, I want it all. I will celebrate each point I’ve achieved. You go, Laura, on that bicycling vacation!

  7. Laura Drake says:

    CurtissAnn – Who said you can’t have it all? Go for it!

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