{"id":3629,"date":"1960-04-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1960-04-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1960-vol-41-no-3-on-following-through\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:49:08","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:49:08","slug":"april-1960-vol-41-no-3-on-following-through","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1960-vol-41-no-3-on-following-through\/","title":{"rendered":"April 1960 &#8211; VOL. 41, No. 3 &#8211; On Following Through"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\"> Everyone has been vexed at times by his                     failure to follow through on a good project or hunch or job.                     Many a brilliant plan has come to nothing because the person                     who thought it up lacked the spunk or spine to put it across.                     Many a fine idea has died at birth because its parent put                     off the job of starting to rear it.<\/p>\n<p>This is a good time of year for young Canadians, who in their                     thousands are graduating from high school and university,                     to take a look at what they need to do if they are to follow                     through to success and happiness in life.<\/p>\n<p>Merely to step upon the stage does not make a great actor                     or actress. To be given a chair at a desk does not make an                     expert business man. To be given a place at a factory bench                     does not make a skilful mechanic. A person may have had an                     impressive array of &#8220;Excellent&#8221; grades on his compositions                     in school, but when he sits down to write his first business                     letter he is still a novice. He may have majored in bricklaying                     at a technical school, but he still must serve his apprenticeship.<\/p>\n<p>This introduces the follow-through. The solemnity of                     graduation symbolizes the end of preparation: now is the time                     for energetic doing if one is to make life worth living. The                     machinery of theory and the stock of knowledge gained hitherto                     must terminate in the cutting edge of direct action.<\/p>\n<p>One is always starting from where one is now, but school                     leaving is a special milestone in youthful lives. It is like                     the Golden Milestone set up in the Roman Forum by Augustus:                     from it, roads lead to everywhere.<\/p>\n<p>One must have some destination one wishes to reach, and                     then step out. To day-dream about far-off places                     and great achievements can be inspiring, but you must come                     back to the reality of this starting place. Great men have                     not been merely dreamers. They have returned from their visions                     to the practicalities of replacing the airy stones of their                     dream castles with solid masonry wrought by their hands.<\/p>\n<p>Everyone knows that nothing significant is done by lotus-eaters.                     It was only after Adam and Eve had been expelled from their                     Eden Lotus-land, says Toynbee in <em>A Study of History<\/em>,                     that their descendants set about inventing agriculture, metallurgy                     and musical instruments.<\/p>\n<p>The sense of purpose which we call ambition is no mysterious                     gift. It is the imagination playing with future possibilities                     and telling us how to overcome the obstacles that lie between                     our starting place and their realization.<\/p>\n<p>Our ambition should be big enough to be a challenge to our                     powers. Only a shallow-brained person will aim at being                     the only figure among ciphers: one should seek to be eminent                     among people who count. Ambition should be big enough to give                     us room to expand. We should copy in this regard the custom                     of some parents, who buy their children&#8217;s clothes a size larger                     than fits at the moment, so that the children may have something                     to grow into.<\/p>\n<p>Impatience is not a great help to the ambitious man. Plutarch                     tells us in his memorable <em>Lives <\/em>that Brutus might                     have been the first man in the commonwealth if he had had                     patience but a little time to be second to Caesar. Take the                     next step; reach the next milestone; then raise your sights.<\/p>\n<p>How does one go about the business of reaching the desired                     objective? There are five things to do: fix your purpose,                     make sure that it is the right one for you, search out the                     ways by which you may reach it, study the details about these                     ways, and get busy.<\/p>\n<h3>A star to steer by<\/h3>\n<p>It is a good thing that we so often have a feeling of incompletion,                     that we reach the end of a period with the feeling that we                     are at the beginning of a new one. We traverse a long path                     toward a desired end, and arrive there, only to see another                     road passing into wider fields, and beckoning us to things                     more wonderful than we could have imagined at our starting                     place.<\/p>\n<p>An ambitious man, more than others, sits lightly in his                     chair. He is ready to spring into action when action is required.                     Activity and the challenge of difficulties bring out the best                     of a man&#8217;s qualities, because what he seeks is an opportunity                     to do his best. And if, at the end of his career, he feels                     that he has approximated in achievement the potentialities                     which he possessed, he is fully rewarded.<\/p>\n<p>It must not be expected that the road of life spreads itself                     in an unobstructed view before the person starting his journey.                     He must anticipate coming upon forks and turnings in the road.                     But he cannot hope to reach his desired journey&#8217;s end if he                     thinks aimlessly about whether to go east or west. He must                     make decisions purposefully.<\/p>\n<p>One necessary decision is to move forward; we cannot stand                     still. John Masefield, who ran away to sea when he was a boy                     and became poet laureate when he was fifty, wrote in one of                     his poems: &#8220;&#8230;all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer                     her by.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Progress may seem slight, and the horizon far away, and                     the port only a dot on our map, but so long as we complete                     a stage of the journey every year, steering by our star and                     making the most of wind and sail, we have cause for happiness.<\/p>\n<p>Many little things must be done to accomplish one big thing.                     If the Wright brothers had sat down at their planning board                     on December 16th, 1903, to figure out a scheme of world air                     transport, they would never have tackled the job. Instead,                     they tuned up their flying machine. Next morning they put                     it into the air and it stayed aloft for twelve seconds &#8211;                     the first heavier-than-air flight by a self-powered                     machine, the vital spark that kindled life in aviation.<\/p>\n<h3>Difficulty provides opportunity<\/h3>\n<p>The best way for a youth to think of opportunity is this:                     his greatest opportunities will be found in difficulty. When                     a task is troublesome, that gives him the chance to show his                     capability: when a decision is perplexing, that gives him                     the chance to show his superior judgment.<\/p>\n<p>Opportunity in business is provided by certain conditions                     which, if handled in the right way, will yield a profit. Something                     must be done to take advantage of the favourable occasion,                     because opportunity has no virtue unless it is buttressed                     by activity. It is no relative of luck.<\/p>\n<p>He is a weak man who depends upon luck for his success.                     Distinction is not bestowed upon us by some favouring goddess.                     It is gained through search and work and adaptation of a man&#8217;s                     powers to the conditions that surround him. Only when our                     calculations prove false, and wisdom can teach us no more,                     and our efforts have exhausted us without bringing us success:                     only then, said the wise Roman emperor Hadrian, is it excusable                     to turn to the random twitter of birds or the distant mechanism                     of the stars seeking lucky omens.<\/p>\n<p>It has been said of a man who seized his opportunities with                     success that he &#8220;stumbled on a good idea.&#8221; There may be some                     truth in the comment, but the whole truth is that the moment                     of inspiration would not have come to him if he had not prepared                     himself for it. Pasteur once wrote that &#8220;chance favours only                     the prepared mind.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Nobody in this world ever gets anything for nothing. The                     sciences of business, sociology, medicine and space travel                     have this in common: they are attempts to formulate a satisfactory                     balance between what is desired and the price to be paid for                     its attainment.<\/p>\n<p>Temporary defeats are a small price to pay for success.                     In the acid words of the artist in <em>The Picture of Dorian                     Gray<\/em>: &#8220;The stupid have the best of it in this world.                     If they know nothing of victory, they are at least spared                     the knowledge of defeat.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Adapting to change<\/h3>\n<p>It may be necessary to change our views in the process of                     following through to success. Among the most pitiful people                     are those who are trying to fight the twentieth century, to                     live in a past age. To resist change, to refuse to adapt to                     it, is like holding your breath: if you persist you kill yourself.<\/p>\n<p>In today&#8217;s society there is no fixed state, but only a changing                     pattern. Innovation and obsolescence make their mark in the                     short time the commuter takes to travel to work and back.                     The rate of change is so great that a human being of ordinary                     length of life will be called upon to face many novel situations                     which find no parallel in his past.<\/p>\n<p>But change is terrifying only to those who refuse to recognize                     it, who try to leave it out of account. At a crucial period                     in the history of science Albert Einstein showed that ancient                     ideas about the universe were not in any way sacred. Before                     that, Charles Darwin&#8217;s <em>Origin of Species <\/em>persuaded                     the world that the difference between species of animals and                     plants is not the fixed immutable difference that it appears                     to be. And, ages before Darwin, Homer showed continual flux                     and change to be the law of life.<\/p>\n<p>At the bottom of their final examination papers young people                     could very well write: &#8220;This is what looks true today, but                     tomorrow it may be something quite different.&#8221; To follow through                     is to search for new ideas, to proceed from clumsiness to                     skill, to avoid complacency and seek advancement, to look                     for a better way of doing things.<\/p>\n<p>This involves making choices. A man is mature and free in                     the proportion to which his life is governed by his own choices,                     for maturity and freedom do not consist in doing as one pleases,                     but in doing what one chooses.<\/p>\n<p>In sheltered childhood and adolescence we move in grooves                     according to custom and with parental guidance. Now, seemingly                     suddenly, we become aware for the first time of the burden                     of choice. We come into contact with people who try to persuade,                     cajole, seduce, shock or dazzle us into accepting their views                     and following their plans. It is important to listen to them                     &#8211; for how else can we know between what courses we are choosing                     &#8211; but we should retain mobility of thought.<\/p>\n<p>There is nothing more certain in life than that we must                     make decisions. If we debate long about what to do, history                     is going on behind our backs. Things are changing. Our decision                     may be out of date before we reach it. Crowned king at a time                     when one swift blow would have scattered his foes and united                     his friends, Saul stood, like Hamlet, midway between his duty                     and his task, and indecision slew him.<\/p>\n<p>Almost any decision that jogs us out of our abstract-ions                     is a good one. If we stay shut up in our thoughts we shall                     never grow, and growth is one of the tests of development.                     Having got one idea upon its feet we should swing our searchlights                     here, there and everywhere, seeking more ideas to beget new                     inspiration.<\/p>\n<p>Neither the extent of the knowledge we have gained up to                     now nor the capacity of our talent is one half so vital as                     our driving power. Enthusiasm turns ideas, plus interest and                     ambition, into whole-hearted effort that adds zest to                     life. We should follow every task with a sense of expectancy                     and all the ardour of which we are capable.<\/p>\n<h3>Courage for new starts<\/h3>\n<p>The man who wishes to make his follow-through effective                     will not do so by timid and tremulous ways. He needs to be                     able to stand up to buffeting and setbacks.<\/p>\n<p>People are born with different degrees of courage, but every                     natural disposition may be improved by training and exercise.                     There are different sorts of courage, too. When Athena, the                     goddess of wisdom and the liberal arts, bestowed courage upon                     Menelaus, it was not the courage of a lion, but of a fly &#8211;                     the most fearless in attack and the most persistent of all                     creatures small or great.<\/p>\n<p>One effect of going forward courageously is that a man does                     not need much armour on his back; he need not build many fortresses                     to which to retire. Battles are seldom won by running away,                     any more than hockey goals are scored by backchecking.<\/p>\n<p>There will be discouragements. In fact, it is generally                     true that life seldom gives us any more than just that degree                     of encouragement which suffices to keep us at a reasonably                     full exertion of our powers. Following through is a series                     of recommencements, some of them after defeats, so that &#8220;each                     tomorrow finds us farther than today.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>When Donald Campbell drove his boat at 260.35 miles an hour                     in 1959 the record-making run was the latest in a series.                     His father had brought him up on the principle that upon reaching                     one record he must get his sights on another. It was natural,                     then, when his <em>Bluebird <\/em>gave him the world&#8217;s water                     speed record at 202.32 miles an hour to call his team together                     and tell them he was tuning up for 250 miles an hour.<\/p>\n<p>In starting to follow through from school, or from a present                     job, make sure that the job you seek is one which will give                     you the best opportunity to do the thing you are most interested                     in doing. Then make a list of the qualities of work and recreation                     that will contribute to your successful follow-through,                     and use or develop them.<\/p>\n<h3>The quality of work<\/h3>\n<p>In weighing work against pleasure, Lord Beaverbrook advised                     in his book <em>Don&#8217;t Trust to Luck<\/em>, let the leaning                     be toward work. &#8220;A man will come to less harm by over-working                     than he will by over-playing.&#8221; Loafing is not fun to                     the man of spirit. He knows that the strenuous life gives                     him as rewards not only the necessities but the happiness                     he desires.<\/p>\n<p>A man may misrepresent himself to you in many ways. He may                     sparkle at parties though he be dour at home; he may be the                     soul of discretion in his service club but gossip meanly over                     the card table; he may have a front of culture but be niggardly                     in spirit. But he cannot deceive you in his work. There is                     the fruit of his life, of his hands, of his mind, by which                     he may be truly judged.<\/p>\n<p>A piece of work may be tested by three questions: (1) does                     it please the person who did it? (2) does it satisfy the person                     for whom it was done? (3) does it accomplish the purpose for                     which it was done? If these can be answered &#8220;yes&#8221; the job                     has added grace to the doer, the recipient and the work.<\/p>\n<p>The job we do should be a part of our follow-through                     in the direction of still more polished output. Again and                     again we are tempted to relax, to look upon some position                     we have reached as a place where we can feel secure. In it                     we have achieved a reputation, a satisfying amount of worldly                     success. Its appeal of sensuous ease tempts us to delude ourselves                     into believing that this is the point for which we started                     from the Golden Milestone.<\/p>\n<p>It is possible for us, on any plateau of achievement, to                     retire from competition and the noise of society, to weave                     ourselves a triumphal garland of inactivity, and to fly the                     banner of mediocrity. This is something for the person with                     ambition to guard against continually. To give in to the temptation                     marks the end of his follow-through.<\/p>\n<p>The story was to1d in <em>Technology Review<\/em>, the magazine                     of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, of a firm which                     sought a man of high ability and imagination for a new enterprise.                     A young man of excellent academic record was being interviewed                     for appointment to this position with all its exciting possibilities.                     The company interviewer outlined the great opportunities in                     the new development, and then asked the young man if he had                     any questions. The applicant asked, &#8220;What assurance can you                     give me of promotion?&#8221; The interviewer closed the interview                     right there. The young man evidently had no sense of follow-through.                     He wanted to be carried.<\/p>\n<h3>On getting started<\/h3>\n<p>Doing at once what there is to do inevitably increases the                     probability of success. While we may see dimly what lies at                     a distance, we must do what lies clearly at hand. As a proverb                     has it: &#8220;The best way to peel a sack of potatoes is to take                     one potato at a time and peel it.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Everyone knows people who are strong in this or that way                     &#8211; physically or mentally, in theory or in practice &#8211; who disperse                     their efforts over many objects and fail to achieve perfection                     in any. It is not so generally appreciated that a person who                     is weak may, by concentrating his powers on a single object,                     accomplish greatly.<\/p>\n<p>When should we start? On our present job or on one we hope                     to get? &#8220;Forthwith&#8221; is a good word that has gone out of style,                     but it has the imperative ring needed here. Plans are useless                     until steps are taken to realize them. They are like music,                     silent unless performed, though all the notes are there.<\/p>\n<p>Time does not pause for our delays. It waits for nothing                     before moving on to the next chapter, and it is in the present                     chapter that we must prove our right to be represented there.                     If you doubt your ability, get busy to test it. A prominent                     man gave this advice to a youth starting his business career:                     &#8220;Do the wise thing if you know what it is, but anyway do something                     &#8211; the wisest thing you know.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>This may seem to be reminiscent of Nelson putting his telescope                     to his blind eye as he sailed into the battle of Copenhagen,                     or of the ship&#8217;s captain at Camperdown who, unable to read                     a complicated signal, flung his signal book on the deck and                     ordered: &#8220;Up with the helm and get into the middle of it!&#8221;                     These may strike today&#8217;s reader as being old-fashioned                     maxims, but even in these days there are ancient principles                     which cannot be disregarded with impunity.<\/p>\n<p>What is advocated is not recklessness. Deliberation and                     analysis are, in risky situations, positive approaches to                     dynamic action. Tidy up your problem so that you can decide                     quickly and with certainty what to do. Analysis is the foe                     of vagueness and ambiguity and hesitancy.<\/p>\n<p>What is the cause of the foolish air some people have of                     always being shocked and surprised by the things that happen                     around them? It is lack of foresight. They have not made themselves                     aware of the changes that are taking place; they have not                     kept up to date; they are taken unaware by the consequences                     of causes they did not know existed. When a person has analysed                     the present, and looked ahead to appraise the worst that can                     happen in future, he is protected against shock and he is                     ready for the appropriate action.<\/p>\n<p>This is a constructive sort of preparation. You may have                     to invent or make the tools of progress, or even wrestle along                     without them. Aristotle was an astronomer without a telescope,                     a biologist without a microscope, a chemist without a laboratory,                     and yet for nearly 2000 years his conception of natural phenomena                     ruled science.<\/p>\n<h3>The uses of experience<\/h3>\n<p>A lot is said about learning by experience, and experience                     is a good thing, but if hard personal lessons can be avoided                     by studying the experiences of others, why not avoid them?                     He is an unhappy motorist who becomes an expert driver by                     his participation in many highway accidents; he is an unhappy                     business man who does not learn except by becoming many times                     bankrupt.<\/p>\n<p>The intuition which prompts the decisions and actions of                     many business men is the product of a large store of memories                     of previous experiences &#8211; their own and those of others &#8211;                     which can be linked in a meaningful way with the present situation.<\/p>\n<p>You cannot wait through the tedious processes of learning                     by personal experience how to answer the questions &#8220;What shall                     I do?&#8221; and &#8220;How shall I do it?&#8221; The principles on which you                     may base your answers in science, business or the arts are                     to be found by reference to the past just as much as in today&#8217;s                     trial and error.<\/p>\n<p>This does not mean that we are to live by the past, but                     only that we should look there for anything that will make                     our way more certain. Going onward is the only way to gain                     practical acquaintance with the full colour, flavour, poetry,                     passion and variety of life.<\/p>\n<p>By making use of the knowledge our forefathers gathered,                     and applying it in such a form as to fit today&#8217;s changed environment,                     we can face difficulty with stout hearts. Only a little bit                     more knowledge than others have, just a little bit more effort,                     merely a trifle more fixity of purpose and determination,                     can turn an apparent minus into a plus in business as in sport.                     At the Winter Olympics, the winner of the women&#8217;s giant slalom                     was only one-tenth of a second faster than the runner-up,                     and in the 1,000-metre speed-skating the difference                     between first and second place was only two-tenths of                     a second.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[40],"class_list":["post-3629","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-40"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>April 1960 - VOL. 41, No. 3 - On Following Through - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1960-vol-41-no-3-on-following-through\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"April 1960 - VOL. 41, No. 3 - On Following Through - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Everyone has been vexed at times by his failure to follow through on a good project or hunch or job. 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Many a brilliant plan has come to nothing because the person who thought it up lacked the spunk or spine to put it across. 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