Decision vs Hesitancy

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This is a true story about a man named William H. Murray who was captured and spent time in a prison camp during World War II. He was a writer and a mountain climber before the war. He wrote his first book on toilet paper and stuffed it in a thin mattress in the POW camp. His writings were discovered by his captors and burned. He was beaten but picked up his pen and wrote again. He kept writing.

When he was released from prison he returned to his hometown. After regaining his strength, he began mountain climbing again. Edmund Hillary decided he wanted to summit Mt. Everest and he started to put his team together. He went looking for William Murray.

Nobody had yet summited Mt. Everest. Hillary told Murray he wanted him on his team. There were no sponsors. Each climber paid their way. Murray knew he would love to do this; however, he asked a very typical question. In his writings, he shared, “I asked how much is it? How much do I have to have? When confronted with the price, I said oh, I can’t go, and they went without me.”

Hillary put together the expedition and they began the climb. If you are a mountain climber, hitting the summit isn’t the only thing you love. You love the whole experience. That’s what you love to do; it’s where you come alive. Hillary and his team had a great expedition even though they didn’t summit Everest.

A couple of years went by, and Edmund Hillary wanted to try again. He went and found Murray and said, “We all want you on the team. Come with us this time.” Murray said, “I did exactly the same thing. I said how much is it and when confronted with the price I said I can’t do it.”

Again, the number is more than he thinks he can do. Again, he declines based on conditions. Hillary went up the mountain again, made it farther, and learned more.

A few years later, Hillary approached Murray again and said, “Listen, we’re going to go one more time. I think we’re going to summit this time because last time when I got off Everest, I looked at her and I said, ‘I will climb you because you’re not getting any bigger and I am. I have more information now. I’m getting bigger.’”

When William Murray wrote about this in his book, Absence of Evidence, he said it took all the courage he had to ask a different question. Instead of “how much is it?” he asked, “How much is the deposit?” When he heard that number, he knew it would take everything he had to make the deposit. His desire was so great that he made the decision to put down the deposit knowing it was nonrefundable.

In his book he said, “When I was told what the down payment was, I knew I could put together the down payment. I had no idea how to go from there, but I said, all right, I’ll put the down payment down.” Which he did.

Later, in his writings about it, Murray wrote, “Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.”

Think about that.

Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. It’s absence of awareness.



We all can do the thing that we have dreamed up. Just because we cannot see any way to do it does not mean we cannot do it. It just means we are not aware enough to be able to see the things we can do that will get us there.

Murray shared this insight: “When I said nothing had happened, I had put the passage money down. It seemed like nothing had happened, but I was completely wrong. Even though I hadn’t left my house, I was already halfway there.”

How can he be already halfway there if he hasn’t left his house? He was committed to doing this thing and that changed him. He said, “I wasn’t going to spend that money or invest that money and not pay attention to it. I’m doing this.”

In his book, Murray goes on to famously describe what happened to him, with him and for him as a result of his commitment to the climb:

“Until one is committed, there’s hesitancy, the chance to pull back always ineffectiveness. There’s one elementary truth, the ignorance of which kills countless plans and splendid dreams. The moment one definitely commits oneself, then providence moves too. There are issues, from that decision, all manner of unforeseen assistance, aid and support that one would have never dreamed would have come their way. I have learned great respect for one of Goethe’s couplets: ‘Whatever you can or dream you can, begin it, because boldness has magic and power and genius in it.’”

You have a splendid dream. You can feel it. But there is one elementary truth; the ignorance of which, will kill your dream—a good dream, a worthy dream, an alive-making dream. That truth is this…

Until one is committed, there is hesitancy.

The system with the least diversity conducts the most energy. Hesitancy is a wavering diverse energy. Our energy is going back and forth instead of having focus and coherency toward our goal. The moments add up when we are wavering, and another year goes by. We do not get that year back.

We need to decide for our dream.

We may need to make that decision every day. We cannot be wishy washy or think, “I’ll see if it works out.” We need to make a “I’m doing this no matter what decision” because that will change us. Then we will be receptive to new ideas that will help us reach our goal.

Decide for your dream and do what you can with what you have. Take a bold step toward your dream today.

If you ‘d like help getting clear on your dream, I’d like to offer you a Complimentary Discovery Session. Learn more here   https://www.cynhannah.com/discovery-session/

The tomato behind The Three Tomatoes.
Cheryl Benton, aka the “head tomato” is founder and publisher of The Three Tomatoes, a digital lifestyle magazine for “women who aren’t kids”. Having lived and worked for many years in New York City, the land of size zero twenty-somethings, she was truly starting to feel like an invisible woman. She created The Three Tomatoes just for the fun of it as the antidote for invisibility and sent it to 60 friends. Today she has thousands of friends and is chief cheerleader for smart, savvy women who want to live their lives fully at every age and every stage. She is the author of the novel, "Can You See Us Now?" and co-author of a humorous books of quips, "Martini Wisdom." Because she's lived a long time, her full bio won't fit here. If you want the "blah, blah, blah", read more. www.thethreetomatoes.com/about-the-head-tomato

Cheryl Benton

The tomato behind The Three Tomatoes. Cheryl Benton, aka the “head tomato” is founder and publisher of The Three Tomatoes, a digital lifestyle magazine for “women who aren’t kids”. Having lived and worked for many years in New York City, the land of size zero twenty-somethings, she was truly starting to feel like an invisible woman. She created The Three Tomatoes just for the fun of it as the antidote for invisibility and sent it to 60 friends. Today she has thousands of friends and is chief cheerleader for smart, savvy women who want to live their lives fully at every age and every stage. She is the author of the novel, "Can You See Us Now?" and co-author of a humorous books of quips, "Martini Wisdom." Because she's lived a long time, her full bio won't fit here. If you want the "blah, blah, blah", read more. www.thethreetomatoes.com/about-the-head-tomato

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