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You are here: Home / All Podcasts / 15-Comfort Zone Examples, You thought you knew?

15-Comfort Zone Examples, You thought you knew?

October 14, 2014 by Thomas O'Grady, PhD 1 Comment

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Kaanapali is the Place to Do Your Work

The Comfort Zone is something that everyone thinks they know and understand. If you can’t jump outside your comfort zone, you can not truly succeed in business or in most of personal life. Most people think they move out of it on a regular basis. After listening, you may have a very different view. Dare to enter! Comfort Zone for Social Skills, Networking, Business is so important and yet so scary that few dare to truly roam.



The Comfort Zone is hugely misunderstood as people only look at themselves. Far more important to breakthrough success is the zone of others.

The Comfort Zone is hugely misunderstood as people only look at themselves. Far more important to breakthrough success is the zone of others. This episode is meant to supply comfort zone examples.

Most people talk about the comfort zone, but few every truly go outside it. Why? Why can pushing the envelope be a bad thing?

Your comfort zone in not the only comfort zone that holds you back. Everyone around you has a comfort zone, too, and those will affect yours and stepping out of your comfort zone. How do you overcome this (go to Episode 20)?

Today I’m going to talk a little bit differently on a topic that most people feel that they know fairly well, and they probably do to some extent – the comfort zone. We have lots of opinions, ideas, and thoughts on it, but I want to try to think about it in a little bit more expansive and different way.

Of course, the comfort zone is where you go in where you’re needing to learn new stuff or you’re going to learn new stuff. That is you go outside the area you’re comfortable with to get into something that is different.

It is learning what makes you uncomfortable. It is also social situations, whether in person, online, meeting new people in uncomfortable situations, networking, etc., at first you’re going to have some level of discomfort. There is some level of uncertainty of the outcome. It’s part of learning. We’ll figure part of that out in a little bit. Also, in social situations, meeting new people, will you be accepted? Will you be embarrassed? All those situations are outside the comfort zone.

A little bit of a warning, in a sense, because thinking about this, we get back to the concept mentioned in the first episode on causality; cause and effect of being in a situation or on the edge or outside of your comfort zone, you are going to have certain other things take effect. That is: when you’re uncomfortable, why is that? Your judgment is going to be a little off, you’re going to be in a risky, stressful, uncertain situation.

Many people think of the comfort zone as pushing the envelope. Let’s think of a diagram of a circle with a dot in the middle.

When I was at one company, my boss brought me in for something and said: “Gee, I’m very concerned.” I was actually brought into this company to make changes. My boss said: “I want to make sure that people are not uncomfortable.” I said: -“May I borrow your whiteboard?” -“Yeah, sure.”

So I scratched off some of the junk that was on there, put a dot and a circle, with a dot right in the center of the circle.

I said: “Think of this as a comfort zone. You don’t want me to just push slightly on the edge of it. You really want to make change, here.” He said: “Yes, absolutely.” I said: “Change that’s going to be new and different, that is going to make people uncomfortable.”

Needless to say, we soon realized what those implications were. This guy is really bright, and even somebody like that, people that don’t understand or talk about the comfort zone don’t really have a good feeling of what it is and what it means to step outside and get outside of it and therefore expand your comfort zone.

Going outside the comfort zone, that is part of learning, is going to be subject to the stress on you going outside into something new, the uncertainty about the outcome, and the risks you’re taking by going out there. The risk can be monetary or it could be embarrassment. All this talk about getting outside the comfort zone, it’s not as easy as we all make it sound, but we can learn to deal with it, and it’s definitely worth doing.

Let me give you an example, in a sense, of how we adapt to getting outside the comfort zone. Something that I don’t really do, but is common out there in the world is people playing games; computer games online. When they played their first game initially, I would imagine they were uncomfortable. They would lose a lot, not know where they’re going, etc. But what happened?

Why did they play a new game where they were start uncomfortably? Generally they do that because of social pressure. Everybody else was playing the game. “Come on, come on, we got to go play. Hey, come on. You’re going to play that, aren’t you?” Whatever the action is, even though it was uncomfortable, they went and did it anyway.

Over time, they became more and more comfortable with the game. Now even on a new game where their expectations of losing were increased. They accept that concept of losing within that game, even if other people were around, looking at them, etc. “I’ll get better. I’ll know what I’m doing.” Every time they play a new game, they will also find it easier. Stepping into a new game is more familiar.

We can use this same adaptation for other things. It may not necessarily be thatsocial pressure will get us over it. We need to get that acceptability within ourselves, keeping in mind the stress, the uncertainty, the risk of learning new things. It would probably be best by starting out by just pushing the envelope a little bit. That is: we have to learn to find some little level of discomfort.

Slowly, as we find that discomfort more acceptable, we’ll feel like being able to push and push a little bit more over time, eventually building up confidence which will replace some of the stress. Why? Because you did it a couple of times and saw positive results.

Let’s say you learn some things in mathematics, you learn something in languages, whatever your cup of tea was and is going to be in the near future, and you start building up your confidence that: “I know I can do this,” even though you’ve never done it before because you’ve had a series of successes.

I’m going to take a side story that becomes very important, but maybe the analogy also helps. A few days ago, I saw on TV something about some new teaching method they have in some schools.

They’re teaching this new way because otherwise, students feel uncomfortable. What are we doing? Should we be teaching them to feel more comfortable, or should we be acclimating them to progress and to learning new things?

We become more successful and familiar with a situation. Our stress goes down and the confidence rises. We may find these new situations exciting challenges, rather than difficult situations. It can become, in social situations, that meeting new people becomes exciting, that networking can become exciting.

Yes, we still may be a little apprehensive and not really like it when the person turns around and says: “Oh, thanks, but I’m busy right now.” You find that that’s okay because 7 out of 10 times, 6 out of 10 times, you meet somebody new.

How important is getting out of the comfort zone? I think we’ve seen that it’s really crucial for progress. At the same time, it’s not easy. It sounds easy, we all talk about it, but what holds us back.

It’s generally uncomfortable, but it also can be scary, it can be humiliating, it can be intimidating, and there’s usually social risk attached to getting outside the comfort zone and meeting new people. What are going to be the impressions? But again, necessary for progress. Moving far beyond your comfort zone is by definition necessary fortrue breakthrough success!

So, what do you do? Start in small steps or in less risky situations. Meeting people, networking where nobody knows you at a strange place. Push the envelope slowly at first. Over time as confidence is built and we see positive outcomes we are more willing to accept minor disappointments.

The overall weight of each success allows us to take further steps outside our comfort zone. The progress stretches the comfort zone.

Over time, you’ll be able to get further and further outside your comfort zone. Keep the idea in the back of your mind, because as you’re able to get further and further outside the comfort zone, the further and faster you can go in all respects—social, academic, business, etc.—the more success and the faster success you’ll see.

I’d like to caution again that while everybody talks about the comfort zone, getting outside, and doing it, remember: very few people really do it or do it well. They feel very comfortable within their own environment, their own social situation, etc. That gives you a little hint that this episode is really a prerequisite for a few other episodes that are going to be on and released very soon.

Please play around with it, think about it. Send me your comments, write down something on the website. Let me know what you’re thinking, both positive and negative. Examples, what have you done?

Filed Under: All Podcasts, Goal Setting, Personal Growth Tagged With: business, Comfort Zone, entrepreneur, networking, stress, success

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