Jack Canfield was the guy who made Albert Ellis easy to understand for me.
Jack is the Harvard educated author, motivational speaker, and seminar leader who co-created the Chicken Soup for the Soul series of books. Jack started as a high school teacher and co-authored a book for high school teachers on ways to develop self-esteem in students. He successfully marketed his book in the National Enquirer and created his first fortune by sheer will-power.
I met Jack Canfield in 1993 when I was contracting for a major training company. Jack was hired as the “big gun” speaker for our annual conference. It was a joy to meet him. Jack taught a very simple equation for success and happiness—
E + R = O
Event plus Response equals Outcome.
Event– Things in life we have no control over (bosses, weather, kids, customers, everything external to us)
Outcome– What happens in life. (Results, your life, the end, success or failure)
Response– The only thing in life over which we have control.
Jack’s bottom line is this:
If you want better results (outcomes) create better responses, because you can’t change events. (You’re not in control of ANYTHING except your response… get used to it)
Albert Ellis was a Columbia University PhD in clinical psychology. Albert Ellis’ REBT is probably the most influential psychological concept present in the therapy community today. In a poll of psychologist and therapists Ellis was ranked as #2 All Time Most Influential Psychologist right behind #1 Carl Rogers and ahead of #3 Sigmund Freud.
Ellis died in 2007 and published over 60 books. Most of his works were written for PhD students and practicing clinicians. He attempted to make his theories easy to understand. That didn’t work. He developed the ABC of REBT (rational emotive behavior therapy).
To understand ABC of REBT you need a PhD or JD or LLD or Lucky Charms decoder ring or a really patient professor.
A = Activating Event (things that happen)
B = Belief System (hidden from view)
C = Consequence (results in life)
Ellis said we often make decisions about things in an irrational thinking style and don’t get the consequences we want because of mistaken beliefs (that we don’t know or can hardly understand). I’m paraphrasing, of course.
In short:
You’re not in control of anything except your belief system, which you don’t understand.
Both scholars are essentially saying the same thing:
There is very little we control in life. Control over external things is an illusion.
I bring this up because this weekend I forgot what I know. I forgot to “Let it Be Easy”. I still think I can control the world. I can’t. I’m not in charge. I’m only in charge of my response and belief system. That’s it. Nothing else.
I’m not advocating an abdication of responsibility… I don’t believe some sort of hyper-Calvinism that says all the world is predetermined and predestined and “whatever will be will be”. I’m suggesting that I must recognize what I do have control over and manage that effectively. When I get control of my responses and what I believe, I’ll have reached more success than I can imagine!
I guess my mistakes keep me grounded in my humanity and work to keep me humble…. Learn. Grow. Teach…. Where have I heard that before?
Of course, your mileage may vary.
[…] the trajectory of life changes thing…. And the universe has different plans…. And I know I’m not in charge. So I choose feeling blessed and a great sense of gratefulness…. So I’m waiting the […]
LikeLike
[…] My title means life isn’t certain. When I think I know about the “zig”–Life gives me a “zag”. I do lived a blessed life…. And as I’ve read and said… “I’m Not in Charge“. […]
LikeLike