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By
Shawn Achor
What is the longest sequence of numbers a
person can remember?
How tall can a human being grow? How long can
a person live?
The Guinness World Records book lists many of
the greatest records set and the greatest potentials achieved.
But it’s a fossil record. It speaks only to
what has been done, not how much can be done, which is why it has to be
constantly updated.
Records are forever being broken, so it is
forever out of date.
How fast does a human have the potential to
run the mile today? We honestly don’t know.
That is why we hold our breath during every
Olympics.
Take the fascinating case of the British
middle-distance runner Roger Bannister. In the 1950s, experts concluded that
the human body could not run a mile in less than four minutes.
Then Bannister came along in 1954 and proved
it could in fact be run in 3:59.4.
Once Bannister broke the imaginary barrier,
suddenly the floodgates opened; scores of runners started besting the
four-minute mark every year, each one faster than the last.
How fast does a human have the potential to
run the mile today? We honestly don’t know.
That is why we hold our breath during every
Olympics.
We don’t know the limits of our brain’s
enormous potential to grow and adapt to changing circumstances.
All we know is that this kind of change is
possible.
Keep this in mind the next time you feel
stuck or challenged. Just because it hasn’t been done before doesn’t mean it’s
impossible.
This
article originally appeared in the April 2017 issue of SUCCESS magazine.
Shawn
Achor
is a Harvard-trained researcher and best-selling author of The Happiness
Advantage and Before Happiness. Get a daily dose of happy at Shawn's Facebook
page.
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