Clever analogies — Life as a game

I love this article by Steve Pavlina. It’s so wise and so true and so encouraging. It’s good to read when you’re feeling  a bit defeated or bored or directionless.

Life — The Ultimate Game

by Steve Pavlina (this is my shortened version of Steve’s article; click here for the full version)

When designing a game, a good game designer will present the player with a solid collection of compelling choices.  As long as the choices remain compelling, the game has a chance of being fun.  But if the choices are boring, confusing, pointless, or broken, it’s unlikely a fun game will emerge.

Consider classic games like poker, chess, and go.  Compelling choices abound.  Now consider tic tac toe.  When you’re a child, the choices may seem compelling, and the game can even be fun.  But as you mature, the choices become boring and obvious, and the game quickly loses its appeal.

What’s the purpose of a game?  The purpose of a game is to enjoy the experience – to have fun.  Another reason for playing games is to grow, since games can be wonderful teachers.  Having fun and growing sounds like a nice way to spend real life, doesn’t it?

What makes for a good game player?  To answer this question, you’ll probably imagine someone who’s a good sport, who makes an effort to play his/her best while respecting that all players need an opportunity to enjoy the experience, including would-be competitors.  A good player takes time to develop his/her skills.  S/he takes the play of the game seriously, but not so seriously as to become overly attached to outcomes.  A person who’s overly attached to outcomes is what we call a sore loser or sore winner.

If life is a game, how good a player are you?

Do you play full-out for the enjoyment of the experience?  Do you care about your performance and take time to hone your skills?  Are you a good sport?  Do you embrace the whole game, or resist some part of it?

Isn’t it silly that so many of us get caught up in the subgames of life and totally lose sight of the larger game?  Have you ever built a level 50 character in some fictional world, overflowing with wealth and radiant superpowers, while your real life character wallows around level 5, apathetic, out of shape, and barely able to pay the bills?  Lots of us have fallen into this trap at one time or another.

What other subgames have you mistaken for the complete game of life?  The education game?  The career game?  The financial security game?  The family game?  The physical fitness game?  The spirituality game?  There are endless subgames that can divert our attention from making progress in the far more expansive game of life itself.  These subgames are interesting and valuable in their own right, but they’re only pieces of the larger puzzle.

What do you think of a world-class actor who turns to drugs and alcohol?  What about a world leader whose own spouse despises her?  How about a massage therapist who never learns to manage his/her finances?

No virtual reality can compete with the compelling decisions that real life offers every single day.  The choices before us are infinite, and the consequences are interesting enough to motivate us to choose carefully.  The game of life has a very strong design.

Despite being presented with the most wonderful game imaginable, most of us decline to play.  We sit on the sidelines, worrying about the complexities of the world instead of embracing them.  We only dabble in parts of the game.  Very few ever consciously commit to mastering the whole game.

Why?

Your current level of engagement with life depends on how you evaluate yourself relative to the game of life.  Are you bigger than the game, or is the game bigger than you?

When you play a game that’s bigger than you, you feel overwhelmed.  It’s too much to handle, and you soon give up.  I remember when I tried to play chess when I was only 7 years old.  I got frustrated because I couldn’t understand it.  The game seemed bigger than me.  So I never wanted to play.  Chess was someone else’s game.  If you think life is bigger than you, you probably don’t want to play either.  The game becomes one giant inconvenience.

On the other hand, when you play a game that’s smaller than you, you remain in control.  If the game is too much smaller, however, it becomes boring, like tic tac toe.  Games that are too small have little appeal because the challenge isn’t there.  There just aren’t enough compelling choices.  Some people have fallen into this pattern, mastering the game’s novice setting and never realized there are other difficulty levels to experience, including intermediate, advanced, and master.

The sweet spot is when the game is nearly equal to you.  It’s the perfect match for who you are.  You learn the rules, you take time to understand the gameplay, but you know that mastery will be a lifetime process.  Online role-playing games try to maintain this sweet spot, so their players will keep renewing month after month.  They have to make the game easy enough for beginners while continuing to challenge the expert players.  Social attachments play a key role as well.

When you feel that you and real life are equally matched, you’ll experience the sweet spot of human life.  This is where the game is the most fun and rewarding.  You become fully engaged, and life events are valued for the juice of the experience.  You might describe this state as being in flow, the zone, wonder, or fascination.

What happens in a game when you experience a setback?  If you’re a good sport, you’ll see it as added challenge.  Good players don’t whine when the chips are down.  When the game gets tough, good players rise to the challenge.

I perform at my best when I maintain the perspective that life is the ultimate game, filled with compelling choices and interesting consequences.  Instead of resisting seemingly negative events, I treat them as an added challenges.  For example, if I experience a financial setback, it’s not a big deal because money is nothing but a game world resource.  It’s just game gold, something that can always be replenished with hard work and creativity.  And figuring out how to earn more gold is a fun challenge, full of compelling choices.

Good players don’t rest on their laurels when everything goes their way either.  What happens when the game becomes too easy, when the choices start to seem dull and uninteresting?  Then it’s time to ramp up the challenge again by venturing into new territory.  For example, financially things have gotten pretty easy for me, and I’m earning far more gold than I need for my family.  Sure it’s nice to have some reserves, but spending the rest of my life stockpiling gold would be boring beyond belief, not to mention a waste of an interesting resource that could be put to good use.  Find ways to provide even more value.  Take the game to the next level.

It’s unfortunate that people so easily forget that life is supposed to be interesting, challenging, and fun.  If your life is filled with compelling choices, consider yourself blessed.  Make some decisions, experience the consequences, and grow from there.  It’s all good.

The only way to lose the game of life is not to play.  When you actively play the game, you gain skill and experience (and hopefully gold as well).  Keep playing, and you’ll eventually build yourself a level 10, level 20, level 30 character.  Just make sure that when you hit level 30, you aren’t still fighting level 10 monsters.

What would an experienced player say to a character who sits on the sidelines, complaining incessantly about how hard it is to earn gold, how evil the monsters are, how unfairly experience points are doled out, how nobody is a good teammate, etc?  I imagine the response would be something like, “Nooooooooooobbbbb!  Quit whining and go play!”

If you find yourself in a human body, you came here to play the game of human life.  Don’t sit on the sidelines whining like a noob.  The truth is that if you lose all your gold, if your teammates dump you, or if your character gets infected by the plague, it’s all part of the game.  Every setback initiates another round of compelling choices.  The game isn’t supposed to be fair — it’s supposed to be fun and interesting.  Whether or not you have a fun and interesting experience largely depends on what kind of player you are.

Did you think you were supposed to succeed in every attempt to battle monsters, secure gold, or find good teammates?  Of course not.  That isn’t how the game works.  On plenty of occasions, you’ll charge onto the battlefield filled with motivation and positive intentions, and you’ll get slammed.  That’s supposed to happen.  It’s part of the game.  The game is supposed to be challenging.

How boring life would be if all of your attempts succeeded the first time… and instantly!  A game that includes setbacks, delays, and randomness is a lot more fun.  It keeps you playing longer and with greater motivation.  Thank goodness our desires don’t manifest immediately, or we’d be bored to tears.  It’s the effort and uncertainty that makes life so rewarding because the ultimate reward is the experience of playing, not the gold we collect.

The game of human life may eventually end when you die, but in the meantime enjoy yourself while you’re here.  Life is supposed to be fun.  Get out there and go play!  Tackle some of those compelling choices you’ve been avoiding, accept the consequences, and grow from there.

My growth-mindset manifesto

The Ideal Me displaying the growth mindset:

Downplaying natural ability:

I don’t think I’m especially talented or smart – and I don’t have to be.

Direct link between effort and results:

Success doesn’t come easily for me. I usually have to work hard for any success I get.

I usually can accomplish what I want to if I put the effort into learning how to do it. This applies not just to learning skills but also to overcoming serious character flaws. I believe I am a nicer person today because I’ve worked hard to create a nicer me.

Sometimes I  look at  all I’ve  achieved and am amazed, because I never  thought I’d come this far.  I know there’s a strong link between the effort I’ve put in and the success I’ve got.

I’ve really enjoyed myself when I’ve been working hard to get the difficult but important things working for me.  So all that work pays off in two ways: it makes me happy and brings me success.

I look forward to growing lots more skills and character strengths. I don’t know what my potential is, but I’m looking forward to finding out!

Constantly learning:

I am always open to suggestions and looking out for information on how I can improve how I do things.

I want to learn something every day. If I haven’t learned anything new, I feel I’ve wasted the day.

Whenever I learn something new I feel great.

Just because some people can do things seemingly effortlessly, with no or little training, this doesn’t mean that I can’t learn to do some of those things well enough with training and practice.

I never think “Can I learn this skill?“. Instead, I think “How can I learn this skill?

Always stretching myself:

I am always looking for new ways to stretch myself – especially when life feels a bit too easy.

When learning something new or finding myself in a situation I  haven’t been in before, I  don’t beat myself  up if I don’t  perform well. I just remind myself I’m a novice at this stuff and I’ll learn what to do eventually if I keep at it and trying different strategies.

Embracing negative feedback:

I’m keen to improve myself. I seek any feedback I can get on my performance.

I love praise, but I also keep my ears open for criticism and take it on board if I think it’s valid.

I used to be super-sensitive to criticism and hated making mistakes — but not any more.   I now see a mistake as an opportunity to say, “Well, that didn’t work. What should I try next?

I’m not frightened to find out my deficiencies. Why should I?  I know I can probably overcome them if I want to.

Motivated by challenge:

I love a challenge! I try to rise to the occasion. In fact,  there  have been surprisingly  few  challenges  in my life that  I’ve  failed at, once I  fully committed myself.

Sure I know I’ll have lots of set-backs,  but  I also know if I stick at it when  the going get tough, usually things will work out OK.

If someone tells me I can’t do something — well, that just gets me going even more. I dig in my heels and try harder!

The day I hear myself say, “This is so challenging. I love  it!”, I will know I’ve  made it as a person truly committed to growth.

Handling set-backs bravely:

Sometimes I get disheartened when things aren’t working out, despite my best efforts. But I quickly bounce back, and that initial set-back just makes me more determined to try other strategies that might work.

I don’t ever think of quitting.  I just say, “Hmm…this is turning out harder than I thought. I’ll have to knuckle down and try even harder.”

If I do fail, despite all my determination not to, I don’t let that failure define who I am.  I see myself as being bigger than this single failure. I see what I can learn from the experience, and then I move on.

My preferred company:

I like to hang around people who stretch my thinking and challenge me to try new things and become a better person. I much prefer friends who challenge me to friends who just tell me how clever and wonderful I am and stroke my ego.

My definition of failure:

If ever I feel a sense of failure in my life it’s when I’ve let situations slide when I know I could have stepped in and stopped them from developing into serious problems.

Another way I feel I  let myself down is when I give up on important goals before giving them my best shot.

For me, it’s almost unbearable to want something so badly and to think that I had the chance to achieve it but didn’t do anything about it. The “could have beens” in my life are heart-breaking.

My definition of success:

My idea of sweetest success is when something’s been almost too hard for me but I’ve tried really, really hard and explored all sorts of solutions, and then have finally succeeded.

On my deathbed, I want to say:

I really explored myself. I didn’t just do the easy stuff – I took on the hard stuff as well.  I gave my all to the things I that were important to me.”

These ideas are based on the growth mindset description in the book Mindset: the new psychology for success by Carol Dweck.  I’ve written my growth-mindset manifesto in the present tense using the personal pronoun to cement the concept firmly  into my consciousness!

How I apply this idea:

1. Every month or so, I read through this growth mindset creed for a bit of positive indoctrination.

2. Every week or so, I try to recall as many of the ideas as I can. That forced recall helps lock in the learning.

3. Every day I look out for opportunities to practise the growth mindset.

How you can apply this idea:

1. Buy Mindset: The new psychology of success and read it.

2. Write up your own growth mindset manifesto.

3. Memorize the main ideas.

4. Test how much you can recall every day; when you’ve remembered it just about perfectly, drop back to every few days.

5. Apply the growth mindset wherever you can in your everyday life.

6. If the growth mindset works for you, tell others. Give a copy of the book to your loved ones. It’s a life-transforming idea.

Mindset – the new psychology of success

The opening paragraphs from Carol Dweck’s book Mindset — the new psychology of success:

“One day, my students sat me down and ordered me to write this book. They wanted people to be able to use our work to make their lives better. It was something I’d wanted to do for a long time, but it became my number one priority.

My work is part of a tradition in psychology that shows the power of people’s beliefs. These may be beliefs we’re aware of or unaware of, but they strongly affect what we want and whether we succeed in getting it. This tradition also shows how changing people’s beliefs – even the simplest beliefs – can have profound effects.

In this book, you’ll learn how a simple belief abut yourself – a belief we discovered in our research – guides a large part of your life. In fact, it permeates every part of your life. Much of what you think of as your personality actually grows out of this “mindset”. Much of what may be preventing you from fulfilling your potential grows out of it.

No book has ever explained this mindset and shown people how to make use of it in their lives. You’ll suddenly understand the greats – in the sciences and arts, in sports, and in business – and the would-have-beens. You’ll understand your mate, your boss, your friends, your kids. You’ll see how to unleash your potential – and your children’s.”

 

Reading Mindset – the new psychology of success immediately changed the way I thought about myself. After just a few pages I told myself:

“From now on and forever more, I am going to display the growth mindset!” 

And I have!  

I’m not perfect at it, but I’m getting better and better.

To keep me on track, I’ve written my own growth-mindset “manifesto”! I read it every month or so and every few days  test myself to see how much I can remember. I want to make the growth-mindset second-nature for me.

The growth mindset says that, for me to succeed, I don’t have to be talented; I just have to try really, really hard!  If I commit to something and try really hard at it  and keep exploring new strategies, I’ll probably succeed — or at least I’ll end up getting something good  out of the exercise, even if it wasn’t what I was expecting.  A strong relationship does exist between hard work and success. 

The growth mindset tells me I am an evolving creature who is supposed to keep learning all my life.  It tells me it’s fun to learn new things and to tackle the hard projects in life.

It’s such a simple message – but so liberating.  And backed up by a huge body of research by Dweck and others that proves that the growth-mindset works.  

How exciting: just a tiny tweaking of our thinking and whammo! — a huge leap in our personal effectiveness!