You Can Be Successful But Don’t Be Your Successes

Who you are is not what you have done

Alex R. Wendel
Invisible Illness
Published in
4 min readJul 13, 2020

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Photo by Gustavo Fring from Pexels

Who you are is comprised of innumerable moments, passions, values, books read, conversations had, relationships maintained — platonic, romantic, and everything in between — and so much more.

Who You Are Is Not What You Have Done

It is easy to believe and apply the truth that we are not our failures, but we need to be reminded that we are not our successes either. Achievements are great and ought to be celebrated. That diploma, hang it up on the wall! That kickball trophy, display it proudly on the mantle! Your art, let the world see it!

The reminder is not that we shouldn’t take pride in our successes. The reminder is that these achievements and successes come out of who you are, the work you put in to get to these places, the passion behind why you want to share your story, and the values you have fought to keep in the midst of criticism and adversity. If we base our lives around our failures we will be miserable. If we base our lives around our successes, we will lose sight of ourselves.

You are who you are because of why you do what you do — not because you do it.

Maintaining a Sense of Self Through Successes

Maintaining your sense of self, who you are fundamentally or who you want to strive to become, is increasingly more difficult in our time. With advertising, marketing, and data tracking controlling what we see on our news feeds and commercials showing us the picture of perfection, it is easy to lose sight of our own actual interests.

For example, I had to do some (for me) complicated work in Excel which involved me searching for a few tutorials. Now, for the rest of the week, Google assumes I am an accountant and now all of my ads have nothing to do with me.

We will encounter competing views of ourselves in our relationships as well. People will place upon us an image of ourselves they wish we would be. This can be done from pure motives but it can nevertheless complicate our sense of identity. This can also be done from impure motives which will leave us feeling used as a means to an end. With so much around us competing for who we are, we need to take active measures to not fall into habits that are not in line with our values

We need to continue to invest in ourselves and in the values, passions, stories, relationships, interests, etc. that make us who we are. This is true in the midst of our setbacks and our successes. If we only focus our attention and energy on our successes, we can end up neglecting important, life-giving interests. Whether it is in writing, creating, inventing, coaching, or anything else we can measure, we need to be reminded that we are more than our successes.

Be confident in who you are, not just what you have done.

The Cost of Personal Neglect.

If we do not continue to pursue our values, the reasons why we create or work in the first place, we will be far more susceptible to burnout and fatigue. When we are measuring success, then, let’s measure it not in terms of numbers but in terms of whether or not we pursued our values during the creation and work. If we are focused on our values throughout the process, we will be prone to satisfaction rather than disappointment because we are focused on the present and not on the results that may or may not come about.

If we are only focused on the sum of our successes, we will always be prone to comparison, envy, or never feeling like we are enough. When we attach who we are to what we do, we can quickly lose our footing in the world. We need to be anchored in our values. We need to stoke the flames that drive us to succeed in the first place.

To succeed without striving to keep our values can leave us as a hollow shell, devoid of purpose, drifting from one empty fleeting success to another.

A Better Way Forward

Progress should be measured by where we have come from and not how far we have left to go. Progress should also be measured by how well we are striving towards our goals without overlooking the values that drive us towards these goals. If we want to continue to succeed we need to shift our focus away from both our failures and our successes and keep our focus on what motivates us to action in the first place.

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Alex R. Wendel
Invisible Illness

Reading and writing about our common human experiences. Look how great my dog looks dressed in flannel.