Breaking Barriers: The Path Beyond Your Comfort Zone

Welcome to the 26th edition of North Star Blueprints! In this weekly newsletter, we embark on a journey of personal and professional growth, offering observations, strategies, and inspiration to help you navigate life’s challenges and reach new heights of success. This edition will provide a summary of the daily insights I posted throughout the week, packed with valuable tips, thought-provoking ideas, and actionable advice on how to keep pursuing your goals, understanding challenges and opportunities, leaving your comfort zone, breaking through plateaus, and never settling for less, in the hopes of helping you to unleash your better self.

August 12: Nothing Happens Overnight

“The master failed more times than the beginner has even tried” – Stephen McCranie

Often times we tend to overlook how much an expert has practiced getting to where they are. Look at the Olympics – athletes make it look so easy, but behind every run, swim, and routine, there are thousands of hours’ worth of repetitions. Or that masterful presentation you’ve seen, it’s so easy to think that the speaker was born with their skills, when in reality they put incredible effort to hone their abilities.

In our pursuit of mastery and results, the most important lesson to remember is that repeated effort and experience far outweigh mere research and preparation. We must remember the reality that improvement comes through persistent trying and learning from failure. While studying and planning lay a foundation, it’s the hands-on experience, the real-world attempts, that eventually drive true progress. This highlights that every setback we face is but a part of a larger process of growth and refinement.

To excel in any field, you must be willing to put in the repetitions, persist through challenges, and continually apply what you’ve learned in practice. The path to mastery is paved with the lessons learned from each attempt, making the act of trying again and again essential to achieving lasting success.

Next time you face a “failure” or a setback, remember that it’s a normal part of the process, a necessary part of the process. Pick yourself up, dust yourself off, and get back to it!

There is a short video I used to watch quite often growing up (see below), it’s 17 years old now but holds the same effect as it did back then. A reminder to us all that even the most successful people are forged by failure.

August 13: Not Every Challenge Needs to Convert into an Opportunity

“Don’t spend time beating on a wall, hoping to transform it into a door” – Coco Chanel

Yesterday’s insight focused on continuing to try, even if you fail at first. However, it’s also important to distinguish opportunities from dead-ends… there are times when we need to rethink our approach or path, and find a better suited one.

Sometimes, we can become so fixated on a goal or a chosen path, convinced that with enough effort, we can turn an impossible situation into a success. However, there are moments when we need to step back and assess whether the challenge, we’re facing is truly surmountable or if it’s simply a wall that wasn’t meant to become a door. In other words, recognizing when persistence turns into stubbornness.

Letting go doesn’t necessarily mean giving up. It means acknowledging that perhaps we don’t yet have the right tools, timing, or perspective to change the challenge into an opportunity. Instead of relentlessly trying to force a solution that isn’t meant to be, we might find that by looking around, there are easier, more effective paths available to us. Sometimes, the answer lies not in breaking through the wall but in finding a door that already exists, waiting for us to discover it.

Keeping your mind open to all outcomes and opportunities, exercising flexibility and creativity, and not letting your ego or the sunk cost fallacy stand in the way, will help you to see clearly and understand whether you need to redirect efforts toward a better approach.

August 14: Leave Your Comfort Zone

“A ship in a harbour is safe, but that is not what ships are built for” – John A. Shedd

The quote above is one of my all-time favourites, and is a great reminder that while staying within our comfort zone may provide security and prevent risks, true growth and fulfillment come from venturing out into the unknown and facing whatever may come our way.

A ship’s purpose is to sail the seas, to explore, and to endure the elements, just as people are meant to pursue their dreams, take risks, and experience life in all its dimensions. Staying safe in the harbor, while tempting, ultimately limits your potential and deprives you of the adventures and accomplishments that await beyond the familiar shores.

There is nothing more comfortable than lying in bed watching a good movie. Sleeping in instead of going to work, or skipping a hard workout to go out with friends. I get it – putting in effort, taking risks, planning and executing are not easy tasks, they really test us. After all, even atoms tend to fall to their lowest energy state whenever possible… it’s just a law of nature and our biology to conserve energy and stay safe.

Nonetheless, don’t let it stop you. It’s hard to leave your Comfort Zone, even harder to continue because you’ll have to face the Fear Zone, but what lies beyond is worth all the effort. Your actions don’t have to be grandiose, your strides don’t need to be long, all you need is consistency and time. And one day, today’s unimaginably far Growth Zone, will become your new Comfort Zone.

August 15: Breaking Through Pleateaus

Plateau (noun): A period or state of little or no growth or progress, typically following a period of advancement. This can apply to various areas like fitness, personal development, or work, where despite consistent effort, improvement levels off.

We’ve all been through this at some point, in some arena of our lives – we’re making constant progress, motivation is high, results exceed expectations, and growth seems unbound! Suddenly, everything slows down and we’re no longer able to reach new heights, it feels almost as if we’ve hit a ceiling and can’t get past it. The dreaded plateau…

Success is never linear, no matter what you do. Just as downward trajectory levels off at some floor level, so does an upward trajectory eventually reaches a ceiling. The question is, how do we maintain our resolve and push through that plateau to continue reaching new heights?

I find it helpful to draw from lessons in weight training, where progress can stall despite consistent effort. In the gym, progress often slows due to repetitive routines, lack of variation, or overtraining. Therefore, overcoming plateaus requires adjusting routines, increasing intensity, or focusing on recovery. However, most importantly, you must stay consistent and maintain what you have already achieved. It’s very common for people to quit or significantly slow down once they reach a plateau, instead of breaking through it, they abandon all progress made. Don’t fall into this trap.

I’ve learnt that the strategies above from the gym, also apply to life’s challenges. Feeling stuck often indicates a need for change. Whether it’s adopting new habits, shifting perspectives, or setting fresh goals, growth requires adaptation.

Plateaus are natural pauses, so recognizing you’re in one is an important first step. Knowing that progress will slow allows you to shift your focus on how to push through. Since little to no progress is expected during this time, success should be redefined. Rather than aiming for forward movement, success should be measured by maintaining your current gains. The key is to just avoid stopping, otherwise we will go backwards. We must not stop.

Once you’re committed to staying course and maintaining, start thinking what you can do to approach your objective differently. Just as you would with the gym, try to change your routines (e.g., work in different hours), adapt a new style of work (e.g., work on a laptop in a park, rather than a desktop in your room), or step back from it all for a weekend (e.g., if you live in the city go camping, if you live in the suburbs, go downtown to get inspired). Plateaus are normal. Just continue doing the actions that led you to this place to begin with. The answers to the next level will come. In the meantime you must stay consistent and not give up.

August 16: Choose to Move

“If you don’t like where you are, move, you are not a tree!” – Jim Rohn

Change is the only constant in nature. Moving means change. And change is inherently hard. Nonetheless, changing your path can sometimes be the best thing for you. After all, some of the most profound transformations begin with the simple act of deciding to move.

Whether it’s leaving a job that drains your energy or is no longer fulfilling like it used to be, ending a toxic relationship, or even relocating to a new city, the decision is all yours. Staying rooted in situations that no longer serve you limits your potential. Our time on this Earth is limited, so make sure you always choose to do what’s best for you.

Thank you for joining me on this journey of growth and discovery. I hope these insights illuminate your path forward as you pursue your aspirations with purpose and determination. See you in next week’s edition!