The Uncommon Life

Uncommon sense for an unconventional life – A blog by Kent Healy

How I shortchanged myself for a 3.98 GPA – and what I would have done differently

written by Kent Healy

20 Oct 2011

Common: Asking numerous ‘how’ questions (How can I get better grades? How can I make my résumé look better? How can I earn more money?) without first answering ‘why.’

The following is a guest post from a fellow member of the TUL tribe from the beautiful country of Singapore. He’s got some intriguing ideas to share. So with no more further ado, let’s welcome Daniel Wong.

Uncommon: We all feel proud when we achieve something remarkable. Without a doubt, asking ‘how’ to get a specific result enables us to accomplish more, and to ‘climb the ladder’ more efficiently. This question of ‘how’ helps us think about ways to overcome obstacles and attain our goals – this is all fair and good.

But in order to lead an uncommon life, ‘why’ should always precede ‘how.’ Why is this goal so important? Why did you feel motivated to set this goal in the first place?

Asking ‘why’ before asking ‘how’ ensures that the ladder (the direction you’re travelling in) is leaning against the right wall before you myopically start mounting the summit. Few things are more upsetting than being dissatisfied about the view from the ‘top.’

In the dictionary of life, ‘why’ comes before ‘how’

This is a phenomenon that I’m very familiar with. I was the salutatorian of my high school of a graduating class of 850 students and I went to Duke University on a full academic scholarship. While at Duke, I was inducted into three academic honor societies, and I recently graduated summa cum laude with a 3.98 GPA. Looking back, I never once received a grade lower than an A- throughout high school and college.

I accomplished what most students dream of – what the ‘system’ urges all good students to yearn for – but for most of my academic career, it only led to heightened feelings of insecurity and emptiness.

I had asked many effective ‘how’ questions: How should I prepare for this exam? How do I get into my teacher’s good books? How do I choose classes that will lead to easy A’s? And I received great answers. The problem was one of priorities – or lack thereof.

I had neglected to ask ‘why’ and consequently fooled myself into thinking that more accomplishments would eventually lead to fulfillment.

Happiness for all the wrong reasons

I’ll be the first to admit how difficult it is to question the fact that working towards ‘more’ or ‘better’ will not make you happy. This explains our obsession, as a society, to do ‘more’ and ‘better’ in school – and to own a bigger house, and drive a nicer car. We think to ourselves, ‘If I become the valedictorian, I’ll be happy. If I own a beach house mansion in the Hamptons, I’ll be happy. If I drive this year’s Porsche, I’ll be happy.’

But this is very rarely the case. People who lead uncommon – and profoundly meaningful – lives understand that ‘why’ always trumps ‘how’ or ‘what.’ Purpose must precede action.

The gravity of success

‘Success breeds success’ is a common saying. It’s true, but the implications go beyond the clichéd meaning of the phrase. As a recent graduate, I’ve reflected on my 16 years of formal education, and I’ve realized that success has the potential to imprison us within the alluring notion of ‘more.’

Success offers the experience necessary to accomplish more success of a similar or identical nature – it becomes easier and more quickly attained. There is also a growing pressure to continue to succeed (many times on an even larger scale) despite the fact that the success pursued might be unjustified. While there are benefits of these aforementioned tendencies, the danger is that we will refrain from exploring new areas of interest – those in which we have not yet demonstrated a burgeoning ability.

Personally, this has meant avoiding activities such as dance, theater, art and literature. I was so focused on maintaining my status as a ‘successful student’ that I shortchanged myself by ignoring my natural (but subdued) interests in activities that jeopardized my track record. I became a prisoner to my desire for ‘more’ success; an upholder of my own status quo. Unknowingly, the result meant settling for second best, a life lived on the terms set by others.

The only way to escape the gravity of an ill-defined definition of success is confronting routine actions with an often uncomfortable question: Why? So simple, but so underutilized; so revealing; so liberating.

Happiness is not found in end results but purposeful action. It’s the difference between being purpose-driven versus performance-driven. As Kent wrote here, an uncommon life is possible only if ‘success’ is personally designed, not socially determined.

Your thoughts?

Do you agree or disagree? Would love to get your thoughts in the comment section below.

About the author: Daniel Wong is a recent college graduate who currently works as a project engineer. He is passionate about helping young adults maximize their education, career and life. He is the author of The Happy Student: 5 Steps to Academic Fulfillment and Success, which will be published by Morgan James Publishing by early 2012. You can read his blog at Living Large and find him on Twitter.

Be uncommon,

- Kent

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15 Responses to How I shortchanged myself for a 3.98 GPA – and what I would have done differently

  1. Matt Flamini: December 19, 2012 at 11:24 am

    Aristotle said this 2.4 thousand years ago. Cleverness, the ability to accomplish a task, is nothing without prudence, that is so say, the knowledge of what tasks are worth undertaking.

    Reply
  2. Michael: November 19, 2012 at 9:07 am

    Success n Happiness is a state of mind after
    completing the journey of a task we set for
    self. Once sucess is accomplished, our
    restless spirit will embark on another
    challenge/journey so one will continue to
    grow as an individual ‘cos to remain still
    & ‘wallow” in our success will ultimately
    lead to atrophy of our spirit. Hence, looking
    back it is the journey that is equally, if not
    more fulfilling than the destination/success
    Itself.

    Reply
  3. Daniel Wong: October 27, 2011 at 5:22 am

    Maureen, that’s great advice: “Anything worth doing is worth doing right.”
    It sounds like you definitely made the right decision– it probably took lots of courage!

    Reply
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  6. Gut Milch: October 22, 2011 at 11:27 am

    I am not friends with those who fail to ask why, a rule I set for myself since middle school. It is pointless to try to know someone who isn’t trying to know his/herself.

    At least life isn’t entirely wasted for you. Assuming you’ve only been out of college a few years, you’ve only lost roughly a third of your lifespan :)

    Reply
    • Kent Healy: October 23, 2011 at 2:05 pm

      Gut, you raise an interesting idea: “It is pointless to try to know someone who isn’t trying to know his/herself.” There is certainly a difference between those who ask questions to deepen their understanding of life and themselves and those who do not. Every action should be qualified.

    • Daniel Wong: October 27, 2011 at 5:19 am

      It sounds like you’re a person of very strong convictions, Gut! I respect that. Yes, it’s definitely never too late to start asking the “why” questions– life is less about who finishes first or last in the race… it’s about whether you finish the race well.

  7. Ann: October 22, 2011 at 2:52 am

    Failure can be very liberating

    Reply
    • Daniel Wong: October 22, 2011 at 11:33 pm

      I completely agree with that, Ann. It was only when I gave up on trying to “maintain” my success that I experienced that liberty.

      What has your experience with failure and liberation been like?

  8. Maureen Ely: October 21, 2011 at 2:57 pm

    Hi Kent,
    The title of this blog caught my eye and I had to comment. A few years ago I went back to school in my early 50′s for a BA degree, not only did I earn a 3.94 degree with honors, but I have the loan to prove it! Now I have this debt that never leaves me alone and that I have to keep deferring because of lack of sustainable employment. Ne’er did I think during the process that my GPA wouldn’t even matter when I was done…

    Reply
    • Daniel Wong: October 21, 2011 at 4:49 pm

      Maureen, that’s a very impressive accomplishment!

      Very few people would have had the courage and perseverance to get their BA in their early 50s. And I’m sure it took a lot of hard work to get that GPA too. (Clearly I speak from experience…)

      All the best with the career/job-related stuff– I’m sure the the wonderful character traits you’ve developed will serve you well. :)

  9. David: October 20, 2011 at 12:42 pm

    Yes I agree, Chasing happiness is a flawed vision in so far as , if we are to be happy when we achieve/gain something-we immediately set a new goal and raise our standards, thus placing happiness again -at arms length!

    Reply
    • Daniel Wong: October 20, 2011 at 7:49 pm

      I completely agree with you, David! I heard behavioral economist Dan Ariely talk about the whole notion of the ‘hedonic treadmill.’ I think you might find that concept interesting.

      And I believe that all of our pursuits and goals are a lot less about what we do, and a lot more about who we are becoming through all of that doing.

    • Maureen Ely: October 24, 2011 at 11:36 am

      Hello David(s)
      Thank you for your replies. Anything worth doing is worth doing right. I knew I had to do something for the rest of my working years. I am still waiting to see if this was the answer as getting a better position in the business world went 180 degrees while I was educating…

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