Beating cancer made Yale Law grad Seun Adebiyi rethink his
fast-paced life and become an entrepreneur.
Just
one week after he graduated from Yale Law School, while
he was training for the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, Seun Adebiyi
was diagnosed with lymphoma and leukemia. This forced him to put his Olympic
dreams on the back burner as he rethought his life plans.
Adebiyi
knows all about mental toughness and resilience. After experiencing firsthand
the difficulty of finding stem cell donors (the odds of finding a genetically
compatible donor is less than 17 percent for those of African descent, compared
to 70 percent for Caucasians), Seun took it upon himself to found Nigeria's
first national bone marrow registry--the second ever in Africa.
And
Adebiyi did eventually participate in the Olympics, carrying
the torch for Nigeria in the 2018 Winter Olympic Games.
Today, Adebiyi is cancer-free, and he made the decision to become an
entrepreneur. He's currently a self-employed, freelance attorney with
InCloudCounsel, a legal technology company that automates and enhances high-volume legal
processes.
Here,
according to Seun Adebiyi, are five ways to develop unbeatable mental
toughness.
1. Never confuse who
you are with what you do.
The
most common mistake people make is to confuse their self-worth with their accomplishments. Says
Adebiyi, "I remember when I first missed the Olympics--fracturing my spine
from overtraining just months before the 2000 Games. It was my first major
setback as an athlete, and I completely crumbled mentally--all because I had
made the mistake of tying my self-worth to my sense of accomplishment." In
reality, nothing could be further from the truth.
2. Master your inner
dialogue.
What
you say to yourself matters more than what the entire world together says about
you. When he was fighting leukemia with intensive chemo and full body
radiation, Adebiyi refused to wear a hospital gown. Instead, he wore
workout sweats and did walking lunges up and down the linoleum hospital floors,
pushing his surgically attached IV pole next to him. Says Adebiyi,
"Doctors and nurses looked at me like I was crazy, but I never accepted
their perspective that I was a 'cancer patient.' In my mind, I was an Olympic
hopeful who just happened to be overcoming cancer."
3. Learn to live in
the moment.
Let's
face it--sometimes life just kicks you in the teeth. Trying to avoid suffering
is like trying to cross the Atlantic in a rowboat without getting wet. When the
storms of life start tossing you around like a toy, you need an anchor--something you can cling to when all
seems hopeless. According to Adebiyi, "That anchor was my
breath. I just focused on surviving from breath to breath, and repeated the
following words over and over like a mantra: 'This too shall pass.'"
4. Fortify your
village, then build a moat.
In many
African countries, there's a popular saying, "It takes a village to raise
a child." This is true in life as well. Learn to pick your associates
carefully. Find those handful of people who will support you no matter what,
invest your time and energy in strengthening those relationships. As Adebiyi
explains, you may also need to distance yourself from the toxic people in your life who tear down your
self-confidence. "This might involve some painful
conversations, spending less time on social media, and ending a few
relationships," says Adebiyi. "But trust me, it's virtually
impossible to master your inner dialogue and develop inner resilience with
someone whispering doubts in your ear."
5. Be prepared, be
prepared, be prepared.
As
someone once said, never let a good crisis go to waste. Often, the biggest
opportunities for personal and professional growth are found in times of
upheaval and uncertainty. The time to "hurricane-proof" your life
isn't when the shingles start to fly off the roof, but when the sky is still
blue and sunny. Suggests Adebiyi, "Work on your self-image, inner
dialogue, present moment awareness, and key relationships now. It
doesn't take much: You can practice visualization/meditation every day, affirm
your key relationships, and minimize negative influences with just a few
minutes each day."
And
when life comes knocking, you'll be ready to rock.
PUBLISHED
ON: NOV 15, 2019
The opinions expressed
here by Inc.com columnists are their own, not those of Inc.com.
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