It was a busy day as usual when I got a call from one of my dear and respected friends. It was regarding a profitable offer that I felt tempted to pursue. Though I knew my plate was full, I could not refuse. I felt the FOMO deep within me. I did not want to commit immediately, so I gently asked for more time to think. The more I thought about the shiny object, the more it pulled me towards it. I was confused. So I decided to go for a long walk and not think about it. I let the thought slip my mind and decided to come back to it later.
After a couple of days, I looked at it with a fresh mind and a helicopter lens. I told myself I would take on the project if it passed the screening test. So I scanned it through these 3 questions
The answer was NO, so I picked up the phone and politely refused the offer. Though I was relieved, I felt I upset somebody who trusted and considered me worthy of the offer. That is when I stumbled upon Peter Drucker’s response to Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi’s invitation to participate in his research on Creativity –
What a timely advice that was from the management guru!
This cleared off all heaviness from my heart. I not only felt proud of myself for staying in integrity with my calling but also earned the respect of my trusted friend when I explained that taking on the offer would be a disservice to both – the new project and my current one. He said very few have the courage and honesty to decline profitable offers. Yay!
The invitation landed in a VERY BIG WASTE PAPER BASKET in PETER DRUCKER STYLE. Three cheers to the ‘NO’!