Winston Churchill’s Top 6 Fundamentals for a Successful Life

“Courage is what it takes to stand up and speak; courage is also what it takes to sit down and listen.”

“We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give.”

Winston Churchill is probably no stranger to anyone. He was an inspirational British leader during the Second World War.

He was also a writer, historian, poet, artist and the only British Prime Minister to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature.

Here are a few of my favorite fundamentals from Churchill on how to improve your life.

1. Focus on what you are doing right now.

“It is a mistake to look too far ahead. Only one link in the chain of destiny can be handled at a time.”

“It is always wise to look ahead, but difficult to look further than you can see.”

When you start to look too far into the future then any task or project can seem close to impossible. And so you shut down because you become overwhelmed and start surfing the internet aimlessly instead. That is one of the reasons why it is good to plan for the future but then to shift your focus back to today and the present moment.

Then you just focus on taking the first step today. That is all you need to focus on, nothing else. By taking the first step you change your mental state from resistant to “hey, I’m doing this, cool”. You put yourself in state where you become more positive and open, a state where you may not be enthusiastic about taking the next step after this first one but you are at least accepting it. And so you can take the next step. And the next one after that.

The thing is, you can’t see the whole path anyway and it will shift and reveal itself along the way. That’s why the best of plans tend to fall apart at least a bit as you start to put it into action. You discover that your map of reality doesn’t look like reality.

2. Be concerned about action.

“I never worry about action, but only about inaction”

Yes, taking action can lead to failure, rejection or making mistakes. There is always a risk for that. But if you stay in inaction then you are pretty much guaranteed that nothing will change or improve.

How can you improve your action habit though? Three tips:

  • Reconnect with the present moment. This will help you snap out of over thinking and just go and do whatever you want to get done. It is one of the best tips I have found so far for taking more action since it puts you in a state where you feel little emotional resistance to the work you’ll do. And it puts you in state where the right actions often just seem to flow out of you in a focused but relaxed way and without much effort.  One of the simplest ways to connect with the present moment is just to keep your focus on your breathing for a minute or two. Check out 7 more tips in 8 Ways to Return to the Present Moment.
  • Lighten up. One way to dissuade yourself from taking action is to take whatever you are about to do too seriously. That makes it feel too big, too difficult and too scary. If you on the other hand relax a bit and lighten up you often realize that those problems and negative feelings are just something you are creating in your own mind. With a lighter state of mind your tasks seems lighter and becomes easier to get started with.
  • Start small. To get from a state where you just feel like sitting on your chair and doing nothing much to one where you take action over and over you can do this: start small. Getting started with your biggest task or most difficult action may seem too much and land you in Procrastinationland. So instead, start with something that doesn’t seem so hard. One of my favorites is simply to take a few minutes to clean my desk. After that the next thing doesn’t seem so difficult to get started with since I’m now in a more of a “take action” kind of mode.

3. Be an optimist.

“The pessimist sees difficulty in every opportunity. The optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty.”

“Attitude is a little thing that makes a big difference.”

“I am an optimist. It does not seem too much use being anything else.”

Focusing on what helps you sure makes a huge difference compared to if you keep focusing on what is wrong in every situation or what makes you more of a victim. It’s like living in two different worlds.

How do you make the shift to a more optimistic attitude? Well, it takes time. But gradually you can change it. Four of my own most favorite tips are:

  • Take care of the basic fundamentals. This is for me the most important thing you can do to maintain and strengthen your positive attitude. How you eat, sleep and workout is huge factor. A good lifestyle, how you live your life on normal days determine how you feel, think and how much energy you will have.
    For example, exercising and keeping my testosterone levels pretty high consistently – I do that by focusing on free weight exercises that target many and big muscle groups – is a very simple way to get a lot of positive emotions to flow through my body automatically. A good workout always seems to do the trick.
  • Positive influences. Fill your mind and emotional system with positive input from people, music and programs/books. Other people’s thoughts have a big influence and emotions are contagious. Limit your time with negative people. Reduce TV or magazines that may make you feel worse about what you don’t own or your body. Or just create fear and negativity within you (for instance a lot of news shows). Limiting negative influences can make it a lot easier to keep the positive attitude up.
  • Set the context for your day. What you do early in the day often sets the context for your day. We have a tendency to want to be consistent with what we have done before. You can use that your advantage in few ways. You can for example do the hardest thing on your to-do list first. When it is done you’ll feel good about yourself and it makes the day feel easier and you’ll have less inner resistance to getting the rest of the tasks of the day done.
  • Act as you want to feel. Act as if you are feeling positive. After a few minutes you will actually feel it for real. So smile. Use positive language. And so on. It feels weird at first but it really works.

Just practicing these four things in a consistent way can make a huge difference in your life.

4. Be persistent. Don’t give up.

“Continuous effort – not strength or intelligence – is the key to unlocking our potential”

“If you’re going through hell, keep going.”

Since society often tells us to look for quick fixes it’s easy to make the mistake of giving up to soon. After you have failed perhaps 1-5 times. That’s the “normal” thing to do. But what could have happened if someone just kept going after that? And for each failure learned more and more about what works?

I think people often make a mistake of giving up too early. Your mind probably has a reasonable time-frame for success. This might not correspond to a realistic time-frame though.

It’s useful to take a break from advertised perspectives and let more realistic perspectives seep into your mind. Learn from people who have gone where you want to go. Talk to them. Read what they have to say in books or online. This will not give complete plan but a clearer perspective of what is needed to achieve what you want.

Now, that’s not to say that you should never quit. But it can be helpful to keep going on your current path for a while longer.

And that’s not to say that you should do the same thing over and over in exactly the same manner. It’s better to do and get an experience. Take the lessons you can learn from that real life experience. And then adjust how you do things as you try again.

It obviously helps immensely if you find what you really like to do. And what you really, really want. Then you’ll find the inner motivation to keep going, to get what you want and to build on inner strengths like persistence.

5. Don’t lose the enthusiasm.

“Success is going from failure to failure without losing enthusiasm.”

It’s very easy to get down on yourself and your results when things don’t go as planned. What was once enthusiasm can quickly become apathy and pessimism.

But how do you do keep up the enthusiasm after things have gone wrong and you just feel like giving up? Well, as I mentioned in the previous fundamental, it certainly helps to have something you really like doing and something you really want.

And the tips found in fundamental # 3 such as keeping your energy up, acting as you would like to feel and keeping away from negative influences work very well here too. A good additional tip is simply to ask better questions in “negative” situations. Instead of asking yourself why this or you suck ask yourself questions that empower you.

Questions like:

  • What can I learn from this?
  • What is the hidden opportunity in this situation?

6. Remember, most troubles never happen.

“When I look back on all these worries, I remember the story of the old man who said on his deathbed that he had had a lot of trouble in his life, most of which had never happened”

One final, quick thought. But a very important one. Most things you fear will happen never happen. They are just monsters in your own mind. And if they happen then they will most often not be as painful or bad as you expected. Worrying is most often just a waste of time.

This is of course easy to say. But if you think back and remind yourself of how little of what you feared throughout your life that has actually happened you can start to release more and more worry from your thoughts.

This makes it a lot easier to start doing more of what you really want in life. And to move through your day to day life with a lighter, happier and more optimistic attitude.

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About the Author

Henrik Edberg is the creator of the Positivity Blog and has written weekly articles here since 2006. He has a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Gothenburg and has been featured on Lifehacker, HuffPost and Paulo Coelho’s blog. Click here to learn more…

Comments on this entry are closed.

  • Hey, Henrik!

    I love Churchill, both because of the wonderful quotability of his wisdom and because of the example he was of what we now quote. What an amazing life he led of courage and service and persistence in the face of huge barriers of opposition to what he confidently knew was the correct course of action to take against a great evil before virtually anyone else agreed.

    Henrik, I especially like what you added to his comment about optimism. You recommended we “Act as [we] want to feel.” I am a true believer in the idea that we can act ourselves into being.

    Feelings are more the product of what we think and do than what we think and do is a product of what we feel. It almost seems counter intuitive, but it’s really not. It makes perfect sense.

    Our feelings are largely the result of how we interpret life, the significance we attach to things, the way we internalize and define our circumstances and the things said and done by others. In other words, they are all the result of thought. Action is, in one sense, our thoughts put to motion. Action reinforces thought and reflects our thinking at any given time. Feelings are the emotional expression, then, of how we think and what we do. I love thinking that all I have to do to feel differently is change what I’m doing and change how I’m thinking!

    Thanks for another thought-provoking and inspiring post, Henrik!

  • My favourite quote has to be:
    “I am an optimist. It does not seem too much use being anything else.”
    If there is no chance of success you may as well give up yet many of us live as if we were obliged to fight a lost battle.

    We should not have won the Battle of Britain and if it had been fought only for honour we probably would have lost. That gives me heart because Churchill spoke from experience not merely as a philosopher.

    Thank you for this inspiring article.

  • “1. Focus on what you are doing right now.”

    Out of the 6 points, this one touches me the most. Not because of the title, but because your explanation. The best you can do is focus on the first step … making the plan or whatever. The reality will reveal itself along the way.

    Thanks for sharing!

  • good thoughts. dig the quotes. like your related thoughts, insights.

    inaction is not an option.

    i find the thought, “this moment is perfect” grounding and makes me smile every time.

  • #2 is key.

    Nothing happens unless you take action. Everybody looks at failure as something bad, something to be avoided at all costs. This isn’t going to help people.

    I’d like to think of failure as a step closer to success. I like to fail as long as I am failing out of ambition.

  • Great choice Henrik. Winston galvanised a nation to pull together, fight on when much appeared lost, and never lost the faith that ultimate victory would be won. He turned the darkest days into the brightest of tomorrows. He proved that success often means hanging in there and to never stop believing.

  • Thanks, Henrik! These are great tips and quotes for anyone. I’m bookmarking this post to keep them in mind!

  • Thanks for drawing from the life of such a great man to inspire us once again Henrik. I have Winston’s 6 volume set on the 2nd World War from his perspective….I love it that even before victory was achieved Winston knew that the good guys were going to win – and even when.

  • Winston Churchill is someone who i would not mind to have had as mentor. As well as many other people. Ever since reading success through a positive mental attitude churchill never ceases to amaze me with his knowledge.

    great post.

  • BE AN OPTIMIST! All of us have the ability to be positive in our thoughts and actions. Thanks for sharing this inspiring blog about Churchill. Keep writing Henrik and inspiring lots of people. Kudos to you!

  • It’s highly interesting that some of the most inspiring core principles of success are so timeless, that after nearly 70 years they still often determine the difference between success and failure.

    The most interesting insight, which I often share during my talks in schools, is that most fears never become reality. Ask yourself every day: If I know I couldn’t fail today, what would I do instead?

  • Most people spend their time pursuing happiness. Happiness is not to be pursued; happiness is the result of living a purposeful, value based life. There is a distinction to be made between fun and pleasure, on the one hand, and happiness on the other. Churchill understood the power of living a meaning, purposeful life, and the importance of making a difference. True happiness is experienced by living your life from the inside out, not by the accumulation of wealth and material goods.

  • Hi Henrik!

    Thanks for this reminder:

    “The thing is, you can’t see the whole path anyway and it will shift and reveal itself along the way. That’s why the best of plans tend to fall apart at least a bit as you start to put it into action. You discover that your map of reality doesn’t look like reality.”

    I needed reminding that our plans do need to be flexible and that it is ok for them to fall apart a bit at times as I take action. The important part is taking action, reviewing results, and then revise the plan.

    Thanks,

    Karen

  • “I never worry about action, but only about inaction” I love this quote it is constant reminder that I need not to worry about doing everything perfect. But continue to take action and opportunity will begin to present itself to you. Thanks

  • “We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give.”

    It all about giving all of ourselves through out work of art. Painting pictures for all to enjoy and find safe haven within. I think we all can do this, but few will. Winston Churchill was RIGHT, if we GIVE of ourselves, we WIN!