Apply the Learning of the Masters to your Goals
When I entered the rotunda of the Galleria dell’Accademie in Firenze (Florence) for my first live look at this Italian icon, it literally took my breath away. 17 feet tall, sleek and powerful, Michelangelo’s David is truly a marvel — accurate down to the veins on the back of his hands and the chipped toenails on his feet, I fully expected him to start breathing any second.
“This,” I thought, “is a work of brilliance!” Ah, but there’s more to the story, as I learned.
Inspiration AND Perspiration
The European Renaissance was a time of great innovation marked by a surge of new knowledge and captured in architecture, sculpture, music, and painting. Before I visited Italy this spring, I imagined gifted Renaissance masters spending their days in sunlit studios, painting or sculpting great works of art in a flowing, effortless climate of creativity and support.
The truth, I learned, was far from my fantasy. Many of those whom we now call Masters were, in their time, mere wage slaves, often struggling to live on a fixed budget set by a wealthy patron who wanted a specific project done on a deadline. Good oil paints, gilt, quality canvas, and fine Carrera marble were not cheap, so these artists were very careful in their use of resources.
Out of necessity, then, they spent long hours preparing for their commission. A painting would be sketched in parts and done in miniature to work out spacing many times before moving to a larger field. Then there would be endless pencil and charcoal sketches before final application of oils and gilt onto the final medium (e.g. wood, canvas, or the dome of a cathedral).
Sculptors followed a similar process. First, multiple sketches; then multiple miniatures of different sizes and in different poses and in different media (e.g. clay, stone) and with varying levels of detail attended to in each piece, so that by the time they put chisel to marble they literally “knew” the work in their head, hands and heart.
Practice is the surest path to Mastery.
I now appreciate that the works of the masters really was WORK. Sure, some of them were brilliant. Yet it was their attention to the tiny details that led to “perfection.” Before he created the David in its full splendor, Michelangelo made hundreds of sketches and miniatures, gradually increasing in size and detail. The final product, then, was not a singular act – it was the manifestation of practice, practice, and more practice.
Apply the Learning of the Masters to YOUR Goals
Follow the example of the Masters to improve your probability of success:
- Picture your goal. 80% of your brain’s processing is visual, so writing or drawing what you want brings your goal alive.
- Create it in miniature. Big, life-shifting goals generally flop because your system can’t shift that much, that fast. Break your goal into tiny pieces you can implement one at a time, to see how they “fit” into your life/work.
- Get feedback. Share your progress with others, both for support as well as for ideas to make it better/easier.
- Adjust, adjust, adjust. The “marble” of your current habits may not cut exactly as you planned, so don’t be afraid to tweak your design as you go so that it fits into your current reality.
- If it’s not working for you, take it as a lesson and move on. The most moving artwork I saw in Italy was Michelangelo’s “Unfinished Slaves,” a major commission he never finished. Yet he saw them as a great accomplishment, because he learned so much from the process.
- Ground it in your bones. Work on some part of your goal every day. The journey is about progress, not perfection. Some days you’ll finish a mural – other days a single brushstroke may be all you can do – yet your constant attention will build goal intimacy.
- Risk, learn, and grow. Michelangelo was a sculptor, and he resisted taking up a brush – yet today the Sistine Chapel is considered his greatest performance.
- Finally, find the Joy. In the end, choose goals that take care of your passions and feed what YOU really want from life, career, and relationships.
Achieving Mastery of you and your life is simple, yet not easy. Good luck on your Master’s journey!
Happiness and New Beginnings
Filed under: About Happiness, Everyday Happiness, Practicing Happiness
I’m not a big believer in New Year’s Resolutions. Most people fail at them within a few weeks. So then they give up… until next year.
But hold on! Maybe there’s a better way to approach self-improvement, one goal at a time.
The start of the new year, in my opinion, just one occasion for creating change. Think about how many new beginnings occur every year:
- New Year’s Day, first of the year, start of the First Quarter (in business)
- Beginning of Winter Quarter/Winter Semester (in school)
- The first day of Spring
- Opening Day in Baseball
- Easter/Passover
- Start of the Second Quarter
- Memorial Day (the “official” start of summer)
- Graduations
- the first day of Summer
- Start of the Third Quarter
- Start of the NFL exhibition season
- Beginning of the School year
- the first day of Autumn
- Start of the Fourth Quarter
- the beginning of the year-end holiday season
- Return from Vacation (any time of year)
- Completion of any long-term project… and the start of another
- Starting a new job
- Getting a promotion
- Starting a new task on the same job
- The start of any new month
- The start of a new week (e.g. Sunday, or Monday…)
- Add your own: _______________
Little Changes, All the Time
Every time you experience a new beginning, you have an opportunity to start over in some area of your life. Will you fail, sometimes? Yes. When you carry a perspective that things are CONTINUALLY new, however, you give yourself permission to fall down, get back up, and try again in a few days or a week, rather than giving up on yourself until next Jan 1.
When you adopt a mindset of “little changes, all the time” you can make self-improvement part of Who You Are, rather than some Big Event that is all scary and hard and ‘different.’
When you fail, you can look to the next “beginning” in your life to restart your efforts in earnest.
Having multiple beginnings in your year also allows you to FOCUS your goals. Instead of having to create change in five major areas in January, pick one. Yes, just One. And let go of the rest, for now. Practice the one shift every day, every day, every day, until it starts to feel routine. Then pull up the next goal and introduce the next little change a few months later, at your next beginning point.
The path to Happiness is not direct and continuous. The path is winding and full of twists and turns and backtracking and sideroads that lead nowhere. Give yourself permission to keep coming back and starting over on the path you really want to take.
Make a list of all the times in a year you can declare a “new beginning.”
You have as many chances as you give yourself!

Happiness, the BOOK!