The Two Types of Toughness Required for Success

You can either experience baby steps as insulting frustrations or as small, precious achievements.

Ross Ellenhorn, PhD
Forge

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A Black woman learning to play the guitar from an online video.
Photo: Westend61/Getty Images

Change “means setting small, reasonable goals for yourself, one step at a time, one day at a time,” writes Dr. Leo M. Marvin in his book Baby Steps: A Guide to Living Life One Step at a Time.

Spoiler: Dr. Leo M. Marvin isn’t real. Bill Murray fans might recognize the name of the villainous psychiatrist, played by Richard Dreyfuss, from the 1991 film What About Bob? Though the fictional doctor’s advice is, in reality, spot-on, it’s telling that the movie delivered it through such a condescending and uncaring character.

In concept and in practice, small steps can feel inherently insulting, like serial jabs about our ineptitude. They’re also tedious. It’s easy to lose motivation when you’re faced with the slog of incremental change instead of a single, triumphant leap to success.

My friend Ann’s most recent attempt to learn Spanish is a great example of the trouble with baby steps. “I feel like I can read a bit and say words,” she told me over coffee. “But when I hear the language spoken, I have no idea what is being said. I feel like that’s my own stupidity.”

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Ross Ellenhorn, PhD
Forge
Writer for

Sociologist, psychotherapist, and social worker. Author of HOW WE CHANGE (And Ten Reasons Why We Don’t) via Harper Wave.