I have been working with a practice owning financial planner and her business is doing well.
So far, so good.
However, she is what I would call ‘driven’. There are many positives to this – such as being focused, persistent, and the desire to create something meaningful.

Yet this drive to succeed was also coming at a price. For instance, she could be highly self-critical, and her drive was underpinned with feelings of guilt about never being and doing enough.
I could relate to this. How about you?
What makes your future look better than your present?
A common trap it’s easy to fall into is being seduced by the future. We imagine a vision of the so compelling, it seems better than the present.
When I asked my client the above question, she shared that realising her vision would be a worthy challenge, a great achievement, and create financial security.
I asked her what else?
She thought more deeply and began to realise that the future looked good because it would feel good. It would feel better than right now because she would be free of self-criticism and guilt and would then feel happy.
Why being happy now really matters
My favourite non-fiction author is Dr David Hawkins and he insightfully said:
“It is helpful to understand that if one is not happy with present circumstances, the chances are that happiness will still be elusive when conditions change to meet one’s current desire. That is, if happiness is elusive now, it will continue to be so in the future because the ability to locate the source of happiness has not yet been found.”
In other words, he is pointing to the fact that happiness is not a reward for achieving something. Even though we are culturally conditioned to believe it is.
Happiness is an innate state of being that we experience when our mind is settled and quiet (I highly recommend reading, ‘You are the happiness you seek’ by Rupert Spira).
Hold the steering wheel lightly
Often, being driven is about being in control.
We grip the steering wheel of life tightly because we think that trying to control events, circumstances, and outcomes is the right approach.
Yet the downside is that the desire for control has us living in fight or flight mode – and this cannot not seep into our actions, interactions, and way of being. Ultimately, it takes a toll on you mentally and physically.
A better way, and entirely possible, is to hold the steering wheel lightly.
When you allow yourself to relax into the ‘now’ it doesn’t mean your desire and performance will drop off and you’re less likely to achieve what you want.
In fact, you become more intuitive, responsive, and happier. Results come easier.
So, take a little time to notice where you may be gripping the wheel tightly. Notice the feeling behind this and gently allow yourself to be here now and enjoy the moment.
PS. Read about the little understood power of the present moment. Click here.