People of every culture and every period have recognized the value of perseverance. If plants and animals could articulate the key principles they live by, perseverance would be chief among them.
The I Ching is the world’s oldest book and the mother source of almost all Eastern thought and culture. Hexagram 32 is variously translated as “Duration” or “Perseverance,” and it eloquently expresses the value of a meaningful sort of endurance, recognized as a key virtue by the ancient Chinese. From the Wilhem/Baynes I Ching:
“Duration. Success. No Blame.
Perseverance furthers.
It furthers one to have somewhere to go.”
“Duration is not worn down by hindrances. It is not a state of rest, for mere standstill is regression. Duration is rather the self-contained and therefore self-renewing movement of an organized, fully integrated whole, taking place in accordance with immutable laws and beginning anew at every ending . . . So likewise the dedicated man embodies an enduring meaning in his way of life, and thereby the world is formed.”
The I Ching also defines perseverance as embodying “an enduring meaning.” It is not merely getting by, nor does it mean frantic busyness or focused, disciplined effort toward unworthy goals. Perseverance only counts if you are persevering in something that counts. When people lack this sort of implicit perseverance — a will to overcome difficulties and inertia to generate meaning and life-affirming value — I find little enthusiasm to help them and instinctively avoid their company. For example, I know a young man who is highly talented, charismatic and benevolent but lacks Warrior discipline and meaningful goals. He’s the kind of person who says “no worries” a lot. But from my vantage, he needs some worries and could greatly benefit from the right sort of anxiety. He’s great at carefree appreciation of life and is kind to friends, but to me, his life seems flaccid and self-indulgent. He has no fire in the belly to contribute significantly to the world. I find his carefree approach to be lackadaisical and irksome. I would rather be around someone much less talented who is struggling to achieve worthy goals.
Although worthy goals are crucial, the I Ching advises that in pursuing them, it is best to be path-oriented rather than goal-oriented. For example, I have a goal of my work reaching a larger audience. The more I focus on that goal, the more doubt I experience because I have yet to achieve it. Where I make progress and feel best is when I put that goal out of mind and focus instead on the creative process. I persevere in doing the work and accept that I only have so much influence on how it is received and by how many.
Here are some classic ways that we undermine our perseverance:
1. We set up a deadline or linear progress map for success and fall into defeatism and self-pity when the territory is different than our imagined map.
2. We compare our situation to those of others who seem to have succeeded more quickly or completely than we have. This is called “upward comparison” and research has correlated that tendency with unhappiness, while “downward comparison” — compassionately and with gratitude comparing our situation to those less fortunate — is correlated with happiness.
3. We surrender to inertia. As Jung said (I’m quoting from memory), “Man’s greatest passion isn’t sex, power or money; it’s laziness.” In his Yoga Sutras, written around 150 BC, Pantajali said (again, I’m quoting from memory), “Energy is like a muscle; it grows stronger through being used.” If you have a big dream, a good rule of thumb is that it will probably take at least two hours of focused work every day to achieve it.
4. We surrender to darkness. We’re stressed, anxious, exhausted, depressed, or in a state of emotional turmoil and feel we can’t stay on the path. We quit or self-sabotage in various ways by self-medicating, surrendering to distraction, etc., and sacrifice the path of meaning.
Consider this an auspicious time to examine your relationship to perseverance.
For those with time to read more, here are some quotes on perseverance:
“Until one is committed, there is hesitancy, the chance to draw back — Concerning all acts of initiative (and creation), there is one elementary truth the ignorance of which kills countless ideas and splendid plans: that the moment one definitely commits oneself, then Providence moves too. All sorts of things occur to help one that would never otherwise have occurred. A whole stream of events issues from the decision, raising in one’s favor all manner of unforeseen incidents and meetings and material assistance, which no man could have dreamed would have come his way. Whatever you can do, or dream you can do, begin it. Boldness has genius, power, and magic in it. Begin it now.”
— Goethe, as paraphrased by John Anster
“The road to success is dotted with many tempting parking places.” — Anonymous
“When the world says, ‘Give up,’
Hope whispers, ‘Try it one more time.'” — Anonymous
“When you come to the end of your rope, tie a knot and hang on.” — Thomas Jefferson
“It’s not that I’m so smart, it’s just that I stay with problems longer.” — Albert Einstein
“Perseverance… keeps honor bright: to have done, is to hang quite out of fashion, like a rusty nail in monumental mockery.”
— William Shakespeare, Troilus and Cressida
“The drops of rain make a hole in the stone not by violence but by oft falling.”
— Lucretius
“Don’t be discouraged. It’s often the last key in the bunch that opens the lock.”
— Anonymous
“The great majority of men are bundles of beginnings.”
— Ralph Waldo Emerson
“Saints are sinners who kept on going.”
— Robert Louis Stevenson
“One may go a long way after one is tired.”
— French Proverb
“As a means to success, determination has this advantage over talent – that it does not have to be recognized by others.” — Robert Brault
“Difficult things take a long time, impossible things a little longer.”
— Anonymous
“Don’t let the fear of the time it will take to accomplish something stand in the way of your doing it. The time will pass anyway; we might just as well put that passing time to the best possible use.”
— Earl Nightingale
“Many of the great achievements of the world were accomplished by tired and discouraged men who kept on working.”
— Einstein
“Age wrinkles the body. Quitting wrinkles the soul.”
— Einstein
“Paralyze resistance with persistence.”
— Woody Hayes
“No need for hope to get started, nor for success to persevere.
— William the Silent
“Diamonds are only chunks of coal,
That stuck to their jobs, you see.”
— Minnie Richard Smith, Stick to Your Job (1947)
“Waste no tears
Upon the blotted record of lost years,
But turn the leaf, and smile, oh! smile, to see
The fair white pages that remain for thee.”
~ Ella Wheeler Wilcox, from Poems of Passion (1883).
“Men fail much oftener from want of perseverance than from want of talent”
— William Cobbett
“Success is sweet and sweeter if long delayed and gotten through many struggles and defeats.”
— Amos Bronson Alcott
“Man is a goal-seeking animal. His life only has meaning if he is reaching out and striving for his goals.”
— Aristotle
“[S]itting down by the roadside to cry is no way to get the cart out of the mud. Shoulder to wheel, and on you go.”
~ William Frederick (W.F.) Wallett, The Public Life Of W.F. Wallett, The Queen’s Jester: An Autobiography (1870)
“People who are unable to motivate themselves must be content with mediocrity, no matter how impressive their other talents.” — Andrew Carnegie
“I always tell my kids if you lay down, people will step over you. But if you keep scrambling, if you keep going, someone will always, always give you a hand. Always. But you gotta keep dancing, you gotta keep your feet moving.” — Morgan Freeman
“There is a comfort in the strength of love;
‘Twill make a thing endurable, which else
Would break the heart.”
— William Wordsworth, from Lyrical Ballads with Other Poems, Vol. 2 (1800).
“He who has a strong enough why can bear almost any how.”
~ Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche, The Twilight of the Idols (1888).
“Success consists of getting up just one more time than you fall.”
— Oliver Goldsmith
“Most people never run far enough on their first wind to find out they’ve got a second. Give your dreams all you’ve got and you’ll be amazed at the energy that comes out of you.”
— William James
“Like river strong — hold on thy course,
Seeking thy goal with forward tide
That naught can stop, or turn aside.”
— Sir William a’Beckett, from The Earl’s Choice and Other Poems (1863).
To strengthen your perseverance skills I recommend:
The Way of the Warrior
Pathfinding/Day Mapping
and other documents in the Warrior Stance Section of this site