{"id":3631,"date":"1962-04-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1962-04-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1962-vol-43-no-4-something-about-ambition\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:40:29","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:40:29","slug":"april-1962-vol-43-no-4-something-about-ambition","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1962-vol-43-no-4-something-about-ambition\/","title":{"rendered":"April 1962 &#8211; VOL. 43, NO. 4 &#8211; Something About Ambition"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\"> Many young people leave school and university                     this year as potential trail blazers, eagerly in quest of                     a trail to blaze. How are they to decide what way to go?<\/p>\n<p>Successful living depends upon the choice they make and the                     intensity of their determination to follow their star.<\/p>\n<p>Those who have profited to the fullest extent of their educational                     opportunity will find important and rewarding employment.                     Business men are looking for young people with enough drive                     to take some burdens off their elders&#8217; shoulders. Research                     is adding new commercial products and opening up new markets.                     There is no lack of opportunity for those young people who                     have prepared themselves by education to move in, perhaps                     to specialize, and to climb with a company and a product.<\/p>\n<p>Some will be content to be workers rather than leaders,                     but even if they have made up their minds not to be top dog                     they have decisions to make. If they are to serve others they                     should still have ambition &#8211; the ambition to serve the firm                     to which their service will be most useful. By advancing it                     and its interests they will expand their own lives.<\/p>\n<p>Of this be sure: ambition is no simple willingness to receive.                     It is a positive, purposeful, creative aim, an urge for the                     energetic doing of something definite.<\/p>\n<p>There&#8217;s magic in having a goal, but if your ultimate objective                     has not yet risen into your consciousness, do not because                     of that neglect preparation. You need not fix upon one subject                     to study in the hope that some day it may turn out to be the                     right one. Spread yourself. One youth who was undecided about                     his proper field held a half dozen jobs while studying by                     correspondence. He reached the top in a field never contemplated                     at the beginning, and found that every one of his four home                     study courses had contributed to his success.<\/p>\n<p>Choose your job so that, as you follow it industriously                     and learningly, it may develop into a career in which you                     can use your greatest talent. It takes resolution of a high                     order to resist the temptation of inflated starting wages                     in jobs which lead to no worth-while goal.<\/p>\n<h3>What is ambition?<\/h3>\n<p>Success and fame are weak words to sum up ambition. Success                     in what? Fame for what? These are but the by-products                     of real things. True realization of your ambition will not                     reside in status symbols like carpeted office floors and a                     two-car garage, but inside you. When you know you have                     done what it was in you to do, it does not matter whether                     you are in a sparsely furnished attic or a luxurious penthouse.                     Nothing can rob you of the happiness of successful achievement                     in an important sphere of work.<\/p>\n<p>On the surface there appear to be different levels of ambition.                     Is the urge to excel in science higher than the urge to make                     a joyful noise in a jazz band? One leads toward Einstein&#8217;s                     theory of relativity and the other to a golden platter. You                     must paint your ambition picture to reflect your abilities.                     The virtue in ambition lies in striving to be, not merely                     to appear, the best.<\/p>\n<p>To make such an ambition effective there are some things                     you need to know and do. Your personal inventory is a counting                     of resources and a dramatic rehearsal in imagination of the                     decisions and actions to be taken to augment them.<\/p>\n<p>Here is a useful check list: (1) know what will be required                     of you in the career you have chosen; (2) know what success                     means; (3) know what defeat means; (4) tabulate your powers;                     (5) tabulate your weaknesses; (6) outline a course of starting                     and proceeding; (7) make yourself acquainted with the benefits                     attending various choices of how to go about it.<\/p>\n<p>In pursuing an ambition, we cannot bulldoze our way, but                     must adapt ourselves intelligently to the conditions which                     surround us and turn them to our advantage.<\/p>\n<p>This adaptation calls for foresight and appraisal, a pause                     once in a while to look things over. Pride in our skills and                     abilities may urge us to rush our fences, but we recall that                     even the greatest athletes in catching a baseball or kicking                     a goal use what we call &#8220;a moment of pause&#8221; to set themselves                     for the play. This is the moment known to photographers when                     even a slow film will catch what seems on the screen to be                     an action shot.<\/p>\n<p>Not all that people call ambition is worth the effort. The                     itch to hear ourselves spoken of produces only fool&#8217;s gold.                     There is no deep or lasting satisfaction in being acclaimed                     for something small or transitory. We should not be satisfied                     with wide notoriety when we might win real fame.<\/p>\n<p>A healthy ambition is not greedy for conquest and luxury                     and show, but is the source of great actions arising from                     great minds. There was a philosopher once who drew a lesson                     from a humble example. He said that people who are over-eagerly                     ambitious are like a dog with a tin tied to his tail &#8211; the                     faster he runs the rattle of the tin urges him to still greater                     speed, but he is not going anywhere in particular.<\/p>\n<p>How different was Charles Darwin&#8217;s ambition! He resolved                     to make a contribution to his subject. Out of that determination                     came great advancement in biological science and the theory                     of evolution.<\/p>\n<h3>Opportunity<\/h3>\n<p>There is more argument about opportunity than about any                     other feature of ambition. We must not allow ourselves to                     become disheartened by those who moan about the lack of opportunity.                     There is always a new frontier for the person who has an open                     mind and a willing hand.<\/p>\n<p>Here is the law of opportunity as formulated by Dean Johnson,                     author of <em>Business and the Man<\/em>, a volume in the Alexander                     Hamilton Institute Modern Business library: &#8220;Opportunity offers                     itself to men in proportion to their ability, their will for                     action, their power of vision, their experience, and their                     knowledge of business. Inversely, opportunity is concealed                     from men in proportion to their slothfulness, their reliance                     upon others, their passion for imitation, and their ignorance                     of business.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The moral is: once you know what your ambition is, get busy.                     Some people say to themselves that they can get something                     for nothing and that if they are smart enough they will get                     a great deal for nothing. Such a fallacy does not become true                     no matter how many people profess it. Mass madness remains                     madness still.<\/p>\n<p>King Lear said it pithily in Shakespeare&#8217;s play: &#8220;Nothing                     will come of nothing.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Anyone who values day-to-day present comfort more                     highly than the attainment of a purpose should shy away from                     ambitious thoughts. The ongoing person knows that he will                     likely get some splinters in his hands while climbing the                     ladder of success. He is willing to pay that price.<\/p>\n<p>Vital to the spirit of achievement is a purpose. Your most                     profound characteristic must be this: you are heartily in                     earnest. Force of purpose will generate the will to labour                     earnestly and perseveringly, and so enable you to become whatever                     you set your mind upon becoming. Enthusiasm creates zest:                     without it you are living only half a life.<\/p>\n<h3>Determination<\/h3>\n<p>Out of zest arises determination. The quality of an ambition                     exists not so much in its height as in its intensity. In other                     words, success begins with a fellow&#8217;s will.<\/p>\n<p>The place of determination in achievement is illustrated                     by an ancient Norse crest. It carried a pickaxe as an emblem,                     and the motto: &#8220;Either I will find a way or make one.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Being determined does not mean going through life with jutting                     jaw and tensed muscles. All that it means is giving form and                     drive to your dreams. We must, once in a while, escape into                     the land of dreams &#8211; if due precautions, chiefly with regard                     to the return journey, are taken. A day-dream can be                     a refreshing and inspiring thing. Just remember that you must                     come back to translate the dream castle into stone and mortar.<\/p>\n<p>The habit of applying ourselves to the job of building becomes                     easy in time, when it is bolstered by purpose and expectation.                     We need a feeling of &#8220;mustness&#8221; about our immediate tasks,                     so that we settle down to do steadily what is in hand without                     allowing the intrusion of other things. Try tackling even                     little jobs in a spirit of mighty accomplishment.<\/p>\n<p>Determination and concentration require energy to give them                     body. Mere resolutions engender a sort of sickness in the                     mind unless they are promptly embodied in act and deed. They                     are like maxims of conduct, of no value unless put into practice;                     or like music, silent unless performed; or like seeds, sterile                     unless planted and cultivated.<\/p>\n<p>This principle of the necessity to work does not apply only                     to the humbler tasks in life, but to the professional and                     scholarly things too. The garlands and prizes go to those                     who decipher inscriptions, solve equations, put together a                     formula that slays disease germs.<\/p>\n<p>Such triumphs do not come of pretentious bustling activity.                     You may be a dynamo of energy, but you need to learn what                     to drive with it and where to go.<\/p>\n<p>There are no certificates or trophies for people who cover                     only part of the course. Jim Corbett, who was world heavyweight                     champion in 1892, said the most important thing a man must                     do to become a boxing champion is: &#8220;Fight one more round.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>To see the difficulties in a task without shrinking from                     them or giving way to alarm is the way to succeed. A man cannot                     fulfil his ambitions if he allows himself to be discouraged                     by the first person who says &#8220;It can&#8217;t be done&#8221;. He needs                     an inner discipline to enable him to cling to the purpose                     he is convinced is desirable and possible, brushing aside                     all entangling superfluity and depressing obstruction.<\/p>\n<h3>Continue to learn<\/h3>\n<p>Above all, guard against the dangerous opinion that you                     know enough. Do not fixate upon a lowly job just because you                     cannot go on to higher formal education. Broaden your knowledge                     and understanding under your own steam.<\/p>\n<p>If you have been lax in recent years, the time has come                     for you to get out the books again. The pursuit of knowledge                     is lifelong. After learning an answer, wisdom cocks its ear                     to listen for another question.<\/p>\n<p>Youth is not altogether a matter of chronological age. The                     outstanding characteristic of youth is the temperamental predominance                     of courage over timidity, and this often exists in a man of                     fifty as much as in a boy of twenty.<\/p>\n<p>The mature adult does not look upon learning as work but                     as a perpetual source of satisfaction. The more education                     he acquires, the better equipped he is to meet the important                     obligations of contributing toward the sound development of                     his children, through whom some of his cherished ambitions                     may be realized.<\/p>\n<p>The studying that is done from books is not the only sort.                     We learn also from experience, if we are perceptive enough                     to profit by bumping our heads against life&#8217;s corners.<\/p>\n<p>To the ambitious person the daily job is a series of discoveries                     of his potentialities. He observes acutely, relating elements                     of earlier experiences to what is turning up today.<\/p>\n<p>He will expand his yearning for excellence so that he pursues                     knowledge for its own sake. More than two thousand years ago                     the ancients symbolized learning by a torch passing from hand                     to hand down the generations, always on the move. That lighted                     torch was not a symbol of knowledge gained, but of imagination                     carrying the bearer into new continents of knowledge.<\/p>\n<p>No spirited mind ever remains within itself. It is always                     reaching out, asking questions.<\/p>\n<p>Out of these questions and answers will come principles,                     which are far more valuable than techniques to the ambitious                     man. Old customs and systems are dissolving around us like                     sand castles in the rising tide of new things, but we still                     need &#8211; indeed, we need more than ever &#8211; principles to guide                     us.<\/p>\n<p>We need not be philosophers who deal in abstractions and                     propose utopias, but every man must be a searcher after the                     knowledge that enables him to develop a sense of values by                     which to judge and test and use the gifts of material civilization,                     to like and to dislike what he ought.<\/p>\n<p>Some of the knowledge upon which to build a way of life                     will come, not from our own experience but from the experiences                     of others.<\/p>\n<p>A great many people are not satisfied unless they have gone                     over every foot of the road themselves, remembering every                     stone, every effort. Other men and women, some much wiser                     and many equally foolish, have sought the solutions to problems                     like ours yesterday and a thousand years ago. We burden ourselves                     needlessly if we fail to profit by what they learned.<\/p>\n<p>When you have studied their lives, and related their experiences                     to yours, you have as it were assayed and stamped with the                     seal of your approval the knowledge they gained, so that it                     is no longer theirs, but yours.<\/p>\n<p>Finally in this roster of ways to progress, you will be                     wise to protect your good name for the future against the                     disrepute of bad or inferior company today.<\/p>\n<p>Take help and encouragement wherever you may get them, and                     give them whenever the opportunity offers itself. After turning                     first to yourself to find out what qualities you have for                     solving a problem, then go to a friend for help. Willingness                     to seek and accept advice is one of the characteristics of                     successful men. But be sure that the person in whom you confide                     has the qualities to throw new light on the question at issue.<\/p>\n<p>As to the other side of the coin, seize every chance to                     coach a fellow student or to explain an operation to a fellow                     worker. Nothing makes a person learn more thoroughly than                     the discipline of teaching.<\/p>\n<h3>Some hindrances<\/h3>\n<p>Every man of ambition must expect to encounter reverses,                     but he will continue to look forward with a sense of expectancy.                     Difficulties show men what they are made of.<\/p>\n<p>Errors may be used to reach truth. How? By elimination.                     One of his colleagues said to Edison after a disheartening                     run of experiments that failed: &#8220;It&#8217;s too bad to do all of                     that work for nothing.&#8221; &#8220;But it&#8217;s not for nothing&#8221;, said Edison.                     &#8220;We have got a lot of good results. Look: now we know 700                     things that won&#8217;t work.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The first rule for coping with frustrations is to expect                     your full share of them. They are incidental to daily living.                     They are like the sand-traps on a golf course, put there                     so that you may prove your skill.<\/p>\n<p>Of course, things can get so bad that the situation seems                     actually ridiculous. On such occasions you need recuperative                     power, to roll with the punches, to pick up the pieces and                     start over again.<\/p>\n<p>Faint-heartedness holds out small hope of accomplishment.                     The timid and hesitating are likely to find everything impossible,                     chiefly because it seems so to them, while the courageous                     and determined man reminds us of General Titus Lartius in                     Shakespeare&#8217;s <em>Coriolanus<\/em>. He declared that he would                     lean upon one crutch and fight with the other rather than                     stay behind.<\/p>\n<p>Not physical fear, but fear of failure, may undermine a                     man&#8217;s drive toward his goal. He evades putting himself to                     the test. He doesn&#8217;t take his fear out and examine it. He                     develops into a ritualist, doing everything in the way he                     has done it before without getting into trouble.<\/p>\n<p>It would be foolish to be unaware of dangers when they exist,                     but it is seldom that a danger can be dealt with as adequately                     by fear as by rational action. Analyze the danger, calculate                     the chances, and then deal with the situation. Recall the                     orders given the little boats at the evacuation of Dunkirk                     &#8211; one of the most gallant naval operations ever carried out                     &#8220;steer for the sound of the guns.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Getting started<\/h3>\n<p>Now that we have glimpsed some of the principles underlying                     the expression of ambition, we have reached the starting line.                     Whether you are in your first year in high school or your                     final year of formal education or your twentieth year in employment,                     now is the time to put your best foot forward.<\/p>\n<p>Doing nothing at this moment has consequences just as surely                     as doing something has, but of an opposite and not so pleasing                     nature.<\/p>\n<p>If you have resolved upon doing something toward reaching                     the height of your ambition, you have already taken a long                     stride toward it.<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps you are a slow starter, but do not be downcast.                     Men mature physically and mentally at different rates of speed.                     With the passing of every year your ability to do things will                     increase, and new impetus will be given your progress.<\/p>\n<p>You may seize upon small ways of demonstrating your talent.                     One of the shrewdest is to acquire specialized knowledge in                     your job which enables you to stand out among people in your                     office or workshop and thus attract the attention of superiors.<\/p>\n<p>While you have one eye on your books, to learn from them                     everything that is worth-while, keep the other eye on                     things as they are developing outside the books. Don&#8217;t be                     like the elevator operator who said: &#8220;&#8216;I know more now than                     I get paid for. I don&#8217;t want to learn.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>The obligations of success<\/h3>\n<p>Increasing success brings increased power, and it is in                     the wise use of power that happiness is found.<\/p>\n<p>You need to carry with you on the road toward your ambitious                     goal a spirit of great-mindedness. You will not seek                     success at the expense of others, but will, on the contrary,                     exercise your instinctive sense of obligation to your associates.<\/p>\n<p>Great-mindedness takes note of debts which are debts                     of honour. There is the debt you owe for your nurture when                     you were young, and for your education: your repayment consists                     in making the most of the opportunities these give you.<\/p>\n<p>Through all your career you will remain modest. However                     soaring your ambition, you must not lose touch with earth.                     Many writers down the ages have referred back to the giant                     of ancient times, Antaeus, whose strength was increased every                     time he touched the ground.<\/p>\n<p>Conceit is a foolish belief in one&#8217;s power or ability. Like                     little brooks, which make more noise than mighty rivers, conceited                     people are loud boasters rather than prolific producers. An                     example of modesty was given us by Marcus Cato, the Roman                     consul. When asked why he had no statue he said: &#8220;I would                     much rather be asked why I have not one than why I have one.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>As another argument against arrogance and conceit, consider                     the fact that they render their victims vulnerable. In the                     days of chivalry a wise knight entered a tilting tournament                     with a bare helmet, or at most a bunch of flowers which would                     not hold spears. Those who were vain enough to wear metal                     crests showing their high place in society were giving their                     opponents advantage, because spear points found a ready lodging                     in the embellishment.<\/p>\n<h3>This, then, is ambition<\/h3>\n<p>Being ambitious does not mean retiring from the normal things                     of life. Do not let your single-mindedness &#8211; which is                     an advantage insofar as attaining success is concerned &#8211; go                     so far as to deprive you of the colour, flavour, poetry, passion                     and the infinite variety of life. But keep your elbows free:                     don&#8217;t get caught up in a crowd of unimportant occupations                     and passing interests.<\/p>\n<p>This is not to say that your ambition is something that                     can live in a back room of your life, but only that it must                     not absorb all of life.<\/p>\n<p>When the relationship between you and your ambition is a                     healthy and happy one, you will find these conditions: you                     learn with enthusiasm what you need to perform your role;                     you discipline your impulses to keep them from getting in                     the way of wise action; you do your job better than you would                     need to do it in order to satisfy your boss; your attitude                     toward work is not that it is an imposition but that it is                     something beneficial for which you have affection; you will                     be great-minded in the knowledge that you are paying                     your way; you will participate happily in the human scene.<\/p>\n<p>If you face life like that, there are a thousand paths open                     to you which have never been trodden, and you can go ahead                     in the sure knowledge that you will become what you have it                     in you to become. You will not be satisfied with mediocrity,                     but even if you fail of your highest purpose you will have                     the satisfaction of knowing that you did your best.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[42],"class_list":["post-3631","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-42"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>April 1962 - VOL. 43, NO. 4 - Something About Ambition - 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-1962-vol-43-no-4-something-about-ambition\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"April 1962 - VOL. 43, NO. 4 - Something About Ambition - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Many young people leave school and university this year as potential trail blazers, eagerly in quest of a trail to blaze. 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How are they to decide what way to go? Successful living depends upon the choice they make and the intensity of their determination to follow their star. 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