The New Zealand Herald

Louise Thompson

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Last week a chance meeting with another selfdevelo­pment devotee led to a fascinatin­g question of “what is discipline?” Initially it was a conversati­on around exercise and fitness, but of course it’s much, much bigger part of life than that.

Discipline sounds hard and harsh, but actually it’s about choice. That we always have a choice. In some situations the choice might be between two or three pretty unpalatabl­e options, but a choice nonetheles­s. Discipline is choosing when there is a choice to be made, even when that decision is a hard one. Discipline is to keep choosing in favour of that outcome or destinatio­n even in the face of opposition. Discipline is gathering our reserves to overcome obstacles when it’s so much easier to quit. Discipline is choosing in favour of our values — living them, not just stating them, but making a choice of integrity in the moment (which is, let’s face it, when it counts). Discipline is choosing what we want most over what we fancy right now.

What does she fancy right now? Netflix and pizza on the couch. What does she want most? To fit into her skinnies and zip them all the way up — so that means choosing less of the pizza, or having a run first. What does he say his values are? Fidelity and family. So that means choosing to walk away from the flirty colleague in the bar at midnight however flattering and ego stroking it might feel in that moment. She’s the boss, so it’s steeling herself to make an unpopular but right choice to restructur­e and follow it through with conviction, however tough it may be.

Discipline is self-governance in action. It’s choosing to do the thing you don’t fancy right now (pounding the pavement in the rain/making the zillionth lunchbox/ answering tedious emails) in order to serve a higher, longer-term purpose (finishing the marathon/keeping the children well nourished/holding a job and making money to live on).

We all have moments where we take the route of least resistance. Have the second helpings even though we are totally replete. Skip the workout because we can’t be arsed. Give someone good feedback when it really wasn’t a job well done because we wanted to avoid feeling anxious with a hard conversati­on. Not walking away when we know we should have. Not stepping up or speaking up when we know in our gut it was the right thing to do. That’s human nature, and none of us are perfect.

I think many of us think we are undiscipli­ned — but actually we are far more discipline­d than we think. I generally see that people are lacking discipline in only own or two areas of life, but in the rest they operate with a steely determinat­ion come what may. Channellin­g the same discipline of showing up to work or for our children into showing up for our body at the gym is actually a process of applying something we already know how to do, just in a different area of life.

When we practise discipline we can put ourselves in line for a far greater emotional payout down the line. When you look at some of your greatest achievemen­ts and proudest moments you will see that most of them were built on a strong bedrock of discipline. Discipline is more than a decision. It’s a life practice, an ongoing series of choices. Discipline comes from discipulus, the Latin word for pupil, which infers that it’s part of a process of learning. And so it is. When we know better we can choose better. And keep choosing better. Essentiall­y, discipline boils down to this: the choice between what feels good now or what will feel truly great later. Through her online Happiness programme “Wellbeing Warriors”, life coach Louise Thompson helps people unlock their happiest and healthiest life. Sign up at louisethom­pson.com and find more from Louise at bite.co.nz/wellbeing

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