Inspired by this thought from Kevin DeShazo:
“Focus on your actions, your mindset, your intentions, your decisions. Lead yourself first.”
The more I reflect on that statement, the more I realize something simple but important:
Most people do not fall short because they lack talent.
They fall short because they slowly lower their standards.
Not all at once.
Gradually.
Quietly.
And eventually, what once felt unacceptable becomes normal.
Standards Shape Everything
Your standards influence:
how you work
how you respond
how consistent you stay
how disciplined you remain when nobody is watching
And over time, your standards become your identity.
That’s why self-leadership matters so much.
Because leadership is not built on occasional motivation.
It’s built on repeated behaviors.
The Danger of Comfortable Drift
One of the biggest challenges in life is that comfort slowly changes expectations.
You skip one routine.
Delay one goal.
Lower one expectation.
Make one excuse.
And none of it feels major in the moment.
But repetition changes standards.
That’s how drift happens.
Not through one major decision—but through small compromises repeated over time.
High Standards Require Accountability
The difficult part about self-leadership is this:
Nobody can maintain your standards for you.
Other people can encourage you.
Mentors can challenge you.
Friends can support you.
But eventually, discipline becomes personal.
At some point, you either hold yourself accountable or you slowly accept less from yourself.
That’s where growth either accelerates—or stalls.
You Don’t Rise to Goals
A lot of people set goals.
Far fewer build standards.
And there’s a difference.
Goals are directional.
Standards are behavioral.
Goals say:
“I want to achieve this.”
Standards say:
“This is how I operate every day.”
That distinction matters.
Because when motivation disappears, standards remain.
And in difficult seasons, your standards determine whether you keep moving or start negotiating with yourself.
Raise the Standard Again
Sometimes the biggest adjustment you need is not a new goal.
It’s a higher standard.
A return to consistency.
A return to intentionality.
A return to doing the small things well again.
That might mean:
protecting your routines
managing your time better
eliminating distractions
improving your focus
following through on commitments
becoming more disciplined in private
None of those things are flashy.
But all of them matter.
Self-Leadership Is Built Daily
Lead yourself first.
Not occasionally.
Daily.
Because the standard you accept today eventually becomes the life you live tomorrow.
And the people who continue growing are usually the people who refuse to let comfort lower what they expect from themselves.
So take inventory.
Where have your standards slipped?
What have you started tolerating that you once would have corrected?
And what needs to change starting today?
Because growth rarely begins with a massive breakthrough.
Most of the time, it starts when you decide to raise your standard again.
No comments:
Post a Comment