A man of his time, Theodore Roosevelt did engage with and push the limits in all areas of his life. Yes, he was a supreme egotist, but he is correct in that success often comes from focusing on the elements of total engagement and commitment. It also applies to the idea of the spiritual warrior in our time. In my humble opinion, the alchemy of possibility might not develop otherwise.
I cannot predict where fate and fortune will will rise up to meet me. I try to never underestimate the value of hard facts and realistic evaluations, but unforeseen helpful elements, and what feel sometimes like outright miracles, cannot occur unless you are there, totally engaged in the process. Hopefully, the process contains more than one person. Multiple people allows multiple talents for perspective, and more windows for solutions to enter, as long as they don't fight. For me, compassion is the element that holds people together and soothes the pain of the inevitable disappointments and bumps in the process. It also fosters space for things to shift and perspectives to grow, sometimes producing the very thing that emerges and determines the success of the final outcome. As for claiming credit, it is not a worthy goal. Celebrate, but then be free of it. One of my favorite guiding quotes is "You can accomplish anything if you don't care who gets credit for it. " I hope I quoted that correctly.
I have some experience with the "great devotions and enthusiasms " part. As a maker, craftsman, artist, and doer, enthusiasm has led me into a lot of personal creative projects I wanted to do. But it is fleeting. It is that delicious, egotistic, illusory rush that gets you started. We need it, or a lot of us might not do or learn anything. But then it deserts you when limits of reality time, energy, and obstacles assert themselves. Then it is about follow through. Then it is a battle with the demons of self-doubt, maybe desperation, and the struggle to be in the moment and keep meeting whatever unexpected reality presents itself, and asking myself the question about what needs to come next. Asking questions is critical. Often, what calls and needs to be done is not what I "want" to do, but for the greater good it may need to be done. Then "Great enthusiasm" has nothing to do with it. Devotion to constancy is what carries me. Sometimes a good night's sleep brings the shift in seeing that is needed. Knowing that ventures have succeed in the past reinforces the determination to keep moving forward. And sometimes you have no choice. There is an end, and you must meet it. Like the fighter in the ring, sometimes I feel beat up and I am totally spent and exhausted at the end.
On Dec 23, 2025 Lynn Miller wrote :