Breaking
Through Uncertainty --- Welcoming Adversity
by Jim McCormick
We
all question our ability at times. Uncertainty
plagues us. It is even more intense if the ability
we are questioning relates to something we have
never tried or not succeeded at in the past.
Set
backs are common, but we rarely welcome them.
We are inclined to respond negatively to adversity.
It may be time to revisit that reflexive response.
I
had an experience recently that caused me to reconsider
whether a negative response to adversity is always
justified when I was confronted with a life-threatening
situation.
It
was mid-morning on a warm and pleasant Saturday.
I was in the midst of my first skydive of the
day. It was my 2,123th jump since having taken
up the sport fifteen years ago.
After
about one minute of freefall and 5,000 above the
ground, I parted ways with my fellow jumpers to
get far enough away from them to open my parachute
safely. I initiated opening around 3,000 feet
above the earth.
My
parachute opened with some twists in the lines
between the parachute and me. This is not that
uncommon. What was different this time was that
I was not able to clear the twists.
The
twists in the lines caused my parachute to take
on an asymmetrical shape. Receiving asymmetrical
inputs, the canopy did what it is designed to
do and initiated a turn -- that's how it's steered.
The problem occurred when the turn quickly became
a rapid, diving downward spiral that was spinning
me a full 360 degrees about once every second.
This was a problem.
I
looked up to assess my canopy and saw something
I don't often see - the horizon clearly visible
ABOVE the trailing edge of my canopy. This meant
my canopy and I were now on roughly the same horizontal
plane. In that I could see the horizon behind
it, I was actually above my parachute and it was
leading our fast spinning parade rapidly towards
mother earth.
My
first need was to acknowledge that I was not going
to be able to solve this problem. This is not
as easy as it seems. Having successfully completed
over 2,100 jumps without having to resort to my
second parachute, it was hard for me to believe
I had really encountered a problem I could not
solve. I had a natural inclination to assume I
could fix this problem as I had all those in the
past.
Sound
familiar? It's always easy to lapse into denial
when confronted with a problem. Until we acknowledge
the problem and our possible inability to solve
it - or to use the methods we have used in the
past - we don't have a chance of making things
better.
Fortunately,
the urgency of this situation caused my hard-headed
nature to yield much quicker than usual. That
decision probably took a second or two.
The
next step, having accepted the need to follow
a different course than in the past, was to determine
the course. Fortunately fifteen years of training
and practice before every day of jumping took
hold.
I
looked straight down at the two handles on either
side of my chest - one to release me from my malfunctioning
canopy and one for deploying my reserve parachute
- and realized I needed to quickly get them in
my hands. I could not help but notice when I made
eye contact with them, as had been ingrained in
me during my First Jump Course way back in 1988,
that by now the rapid spins had turned me back
to earth and there beyond my toes was once again
the horizon. This was bad!
Time
was of the essence at this point not only because
I was now rapidly progressing toward the horse
pasture below me, but also because the centrifugal
force I was starting to experience would soon
make it impossible to get my hands to those two
handles.
With
my hands now securely on the handles, I was confronted
with a bothersome question, "Now, which one
goes first." The wrong order could cause
my reserve parachute to deploy into my spinning
main parachute which would result in an incurable
entanglement.
Fortunately,
ingrained training once again took over and I
pulled them in the right order. First the handle
on the right side which released me from my spinning
main parachute followed by the handle on the left
side to deploy my reserve parachute.
This
brought on a wonderful experience. My malfunctioning
black, teal and magenta canopy was replaced with
a bright, yellow never before used reserve parachute.
What a lovely sight! And all this by 1,700 feet
- plenty of time to spare.
Many
years ago, I read a book about the challenges
and responsibilities of Secret Service agents.
One of the sad aspects of that profession is that
agents who never have the chance to validate their
years of training by responding to a threat sometimes
struggle severely in retirement. They are faced
with not knowing - with certainty - how they would
respond when faced with the paramount challenge
their career can deliver. For this reason, agents
who have faced such a challenge successfully are
admired within the culture of the Service.
That
Saturday morning, I had the privilege of facing
a similar, life-threatening and I now realize
life-defining challenge. I faced what Secret Service
agents call "the dragon."
For
all of us the greater dragon is not the external
threat, whether it be an assassin's bullet, the
unforgiving and fast approaching earth or another
challenge. The real dragon is the self-doubt we
carry within us.
For
those few splendid moments after landing safely,
I was able to put my foot firmly on the neck of
the dragon ... and it felt great.
Keep
this in mind the next time you are confronted
with adversity. On the far side of the experiences
the adversity presents, there could be a valuble
gift - a renewed confidence and certainty.
Jim
McCormick draws on his engineering
degree, MBA and experience as a Chief
Operating Officer of an international
design firm to help organizations
improve performance. He is co-author
of Motivational Selling,
editor of 365 Daily Doses of Courage
and author of the forthcoming book
Seize Opportunity - A
Practical Guide to Taking Advantage
of Opportunities. Jim
is also a three time skydiving World
Record holder and was a member of
an international expedition that skydived
to the North Pole.
More
information is available at 970.577.8700
and http://www.TakeRisks.com
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