As you may have heard,
on Friday morning April 5,
a 4.8 magnitude earthquake
rocked the New Jersey/New York area
right on the heels of the Taiwan quake.
I was on a business call when
my studio started rattling and shaking
as if a freight train were running through it.
I’m up on the 16th floor so
the building was shuddering hard;
and given that NYC is not geographically
positioned on a fault line,
it took a few seconds for me to even process
what actually was happening.
But every cell of my being sensed danger.
I got off my call, dialed my husband
while scanning the news,
then grabbed warm clothing
and a few essentials
and got out of the building
as fast as I could.
I went across the street to the park
and sat on a bench to get my bearings.
By then, news was flooding the net.
As I tried to process it all,
I had one of those high-definition
flashes on my life.
People often encourage taking
a “long-term view”
…in your career choices,
…in your financial planning,
…in your relationships.
But what about the short-term view?
Who would YOU call first?
What would YOU do differently?
And what really matters?
Throughout my keynotes,
I address this topic of
“what really matters in life.”
And at the end of my show,
as part of the finale
along with a cinematic music score,
I project a series of images…
one being a dandelion.
The words I say in this moment:
“How you show up on any given day
makes a difference.
Because life is not only short;
it’s also fragile…and unpredictable.
We don’t know how much time we have.”
I encourage the audience
to reconnect with their Throughline now;
to Risk Forward now;
to take action now.
While a long-term view
certainly has its place,
the value of a short-term view
and your choices for the here and now
cannot be underestimated.
Because the truth is,
none of us really knows
how much time we have.
Risk Forward & Live On,