It’s my and my wife’s weekly date night, and I think I’m doing pretty well so far so I ask my wife, “On a scale of 1 to 10, how would you rank this date night?” (a practice I picked up from Jack Canfield). She says, “An 8.” So I ask, “What would it take to make it a 10?” She says, “Watching The Notebook with me.” Inside my head, I scream, Nooooo! I rub my forehead—dead giveaway, but I was trying to recover—and say, “I’d love to.” (”Grrrrr” - inside my head only)
Now, I love movies, all movies, even most “chick flicks.” (Well, I take that back, not scary movies. I watched Carrie at the drive-in when I was 10, and haven’t seen a scary movie since. Oh, except The Shining, you know, “RedRum”, that did me in for good). ) At the same time, though, I don’t like seeing movies I have seen before—been there done that, next. For one reason or another, I had already seen The Notebook three times. Now, whenever I watch it, it’s like scratching my eyes out. But I want that “10,” so we go home and watch.
Not being sucked into the story (since this is the fourth freakin’ time!), I see how truly corny the movie is. The point to this story, though, is what happens the next day.
Now it’s Saturday, and my wife tells me she wants me to install a doggie door. This requires cutting a perfect hole… yada, yada. Who am I kidding? I have no idea what installing a doggie door requires, and I don’t have any intention of finding out. Anything other than a pen and a fork in my hands, and I become dangerous. I say, “I’d be happy to hire someone to come over and do that.” Then she says, “Noah could restore a 200-year-old home, but you can’t install a doggie door?” Uh-oh, I think, I smell something is in the air.
Later, I ask her what she would like to do for fun that day. She says, “I want you to take me out in a rowboat surrounded by hundreds of geese. Then I’d like to have you dance with me in the middle of the street.” Now I know I am in trouble. If you have no idea what I am talking about, good for you; keep The Notebook out of the house and out of the head of your spouse.
Then when we get into bed and I start reading as we normally do, which, for me, usually consists of 15 to 30 minutes of something inspirational just before I go to sleep. But she doesn’t have a book. I—regrettably—ask, “Aren’t you going to read?” She says, “No, I want you to read to me.” “But this is my book. Aren’t you reading something already?” I reply. “Noah read to Allie every single day, and you can’t read to me for one night?” Oy vey! Uncle! I tap-out.
Last week, I wrote about how commercial marketing uses the Law of Contrast to make you feel like crap so marketers can portray a need for something you didn’t know you needed. Let me explain this some more because Hollywood uses this same tactic, and it is falsifying our reality and setting us up to fail.
You see, we only understand ourselves by comparison to someone or something else. For the most part, we only know if we are doing well or poorly by contrasting ourselves with others. Thus, whether we are satisfied and happy with ourselves depends largely on who we’re comparing ourselves to. For example, the guy in Mogadishu who gets two full meals a day, versus only the one meal everyone around him receives, feels like a king. Yet, some people in America think that if they don’t have the latest Louis Vuitton handbag (or whatever), they are living like a pauper.
See, our perspective has gotten way out of whack in America, and that’s because we are constantly bombarded with exaggerated and falsified reference points (our points of contrast) showing us all the things we don’t have and all the things we are not. And one of the biggest culprits is Hollywood.
Hollywood is in the drama, entertainment and feel-good business. It’s an industry built on happy endings. And that’s all fine and good, but much of that industry perverts our perspective. We see an epic love affair between Rhett Butler and Scarlett O’Hara; Gordon Gekko’s perfect pitch at the stockholders meeting; George Bailey’s rags-to-riches “wonderful life”; James Bond snowmobiling over helicopters; or Roy Hobbs hitting it out of the park, exploding the stadium lights in the bottom of the ninth and grasping victory just in the nick of time.
The problem is this: We consciously, or subconsciously, start comparing our life to these well-scripted, CGI-enhanced images, characters, or “lives,” on the big screen. The most disparaging aspect is that we start to believe that we should be able to obtain this great love, victory, conquest, fame or wealth in the 96 minutes it takes in the movie. What we don’t see are all the boring, mundane and laborious scenes of the characters trying to make a relationship work, the two-a-day trainings in the hot sun for 10 years before the winning touchdown, the exhausting number of hours spent at the office before the big score, etc.
Life is exactly the opposite of the movies. The real story be told, the journey toward success is ordinary, tedious, unexciting and very unsexy (see “What Happened to Hard Work”).
Don’t let Hollywood’s artificial contrast reference point falsify the reality of what it really takes to be successful: simple, consistent, planned, prepared and skilled discipline applied every day, compounded over time, accumulating to great success, happiness and prosperity.
A fairytalelike life is possible, and happy endings do exist; they just take years of arduous and steadfast disciplined work, which doesn’t necessarily make for “gripping” scenes and “riveting” movies.
For dialogue’s sake: What is your favorite feel-good movie? Share in the comments below…
39 Responses
Kmack
21/Jul/2009 1Shoulda stuck with the “8″…That was a pretty good score!!
[DARREN HARDY] Ya, great point! I’m always striving for excellence though… just sometimes it can open up Pandora’s Box… or the DVD box to The Notebook… same thing I found out!
Christopher
21/Jul/2009 2Hey Darren,
A voice from the trenches in Hollywood!
Hollywood, when the story is strong and good, is about SET UPs and PAYOFFs - it’s about RESOLUTION - not necessarily “happy” endings. This is true of stories in general. . .
Did Rhett and Scarlett have a “happy” ending??
Characters act in an “ideal” way - the quitisenntial character - not in an ordinary way. Why? Because we see ordinary people doing things with weak or no intentions. But stories are ideals we strive for, not reality necessarily right now. Of course, there are lots of lousy stories - Hollywood or otherwise!
- Chris
Robert
21/Jul/2009 3Bull Durham and a League of Their Own, and I’m not even a baseball fan!
[DARREN HARDY] Great movie - “There’s NO CRYING in baseball!!” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rWoD2sQ9LiU
Kathy L
21/Jul/2009 4Darren
I think it is great that you care enough about your wife to want to make her happy. As for my favorite “feel-good movie” it has changed over the years, but it is currently “The Bucket List” - because it shows that even the most self-centered of us has a “human side” and CAN change for the better. It also shows how complete opposites can become good friends and be there for each other…..
[DARREN HARDY] Bucket List, great movie. Music video from John Mayer from the movie: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YZ0z86LmXBM
Henry Mims
21/Jul/2009 5My favorite feel good mvie is Rudy… yeah, it would have to be Rudy! Rudy! Rudy! Rudy!
Henry Mims
21/Jul/2009 6Or Mr. Hollands Opus…
Sanjay Gupta
21/Jul/2009 7My one of the favorite feel good movie is While You Were Sleeping. I am an aspiring filmmaker and currently working on a shoot with a bright ambitious director. And I am realizing how insanely hard it is to make a film and how insanley beautiful end product can be. Through films, I want to tell stories of human beings - how we struggle with all shades of gray and we constantly strive to chart out a courese of fulfillment for us.
Laura Simoes
21/Jul/2009 8I believe if you starting the date watching “Pride and Prejudice”, and added a 1/2 hour foot rub, your wife would have given your date night a “10″ from the get-go
[DARREN HARDY] Spoken like a sister… Pride & Prejudice - WORSE!! But at least it’s more true to life…. Ya, right!!
Gary Hussell
21/Jul/2009 9Darren, I’m with you brother, I’m with you! If I even hear of any hint of saddness; I will go to the ends of the earth to get out of watching a movie!!That being said; I never miss a chance to watch “Independence Day”!! Although I still tear up profusely at the “sacrifice” scene; and risk my kids seeing me with the quivering lip; I LOVE that movie!!
J. Cusimano
21/Jul/2009 10A lot of the feel good movies may be the way a fantasy life happens in a script aided by being able to cut and edit. The movies that inspire me however are movies based on real life and historical figures even though we know Hollywood spices things up. Because I am in MLM and see how easy those that refuse motivation wimp out and quit at the word no, I have to pick “BRAVEHEART” even though he was tortured and died in the end. I see the way William Wallace kept going against terrific odds, when others let him down, until he finally organized followers in the name of Freedom. History is full of many great people they have never made movies about, people that went for broke till they made it.
I wish they would make movies about the life of Napoleon Hill, Orrison Swett Marden, Og Mandino, Henry Ford, Thomas Edison, and others like Andrew Carnegie but they don’t have enough blood spilled for most of the population to buy a ticket. Those are true feel good subjects, and their biographies are fascinating.
Christine Egan
21/Jul/2009 11love Mama Mia - Merrly Streep - brilliant actress, this is a long way from the Devil Wears Prada but both movies provide you with a sense that life should and could be fun - with or without money or fancy clothes. I also love the fact that this movie included some of the worst singing I have every heard … and as someone who loves to sing but has a shocking voice it gave me heart to keep on singing no matter the critics.
RachinAustralia
22/Jul/2009 12Thank you Darren, your blog is exactly what I needed. Growing up idolising Hollywood characters has only caused grief now being a hard working girl because the expectation that I have for myself is so unrealistic it can be very disappointing at times…..also thank you to all the staff at Success.
Daniel Janse
22/Jul/2009 13I totally agree with you, nice to see that I’m not the only one to think the same thing. I actually caught myself comparing situations of real life to scenes that I had seen in movies.
In the evenings, whenever I have time with my fiancee, we usually have the choice of either watching a movie, or having a great time talking and communicating to each other.
We have now actually understood that film and entertainment kills relationships making us think that we are having a good time. Applied to a whole population, it’s like anesthesia to a body of cells.
Also, by watching a movie, we mentally incarnate the heroes and live their success, which I find, somehow releaves us from the tension that is necessary to drive real life accomplishment.
I think that our governments should institutionalize healthier mental environments for people of all ages, and that positive mental attitude should be something compulsory in schools and the public education system. That’s the future I want to see.
Thanks Darren for your great contribution to society !
Jennifer (Newfoundland, Canada!)
22/Jul/2009 14Hi Darren!
I have 2 favourite feel good movies. The first is Elf - I mean.. who doesn’t crack up at Elf? Total cheese, but Will Ferrell is superb! I love it and it makes me laugh every time!! Who can’t laugh to ‘Saaaaaaaaaaaanta, I KNOW him!’ haha.. still laughing as I type! Brilliant!
The second movie is Love Actually. You see, I am someone who believes that what you would call ‘movie laugh’ as in, how Noah and Allie are, does exist. In fact, if someone doesn’t, just go meet Tony and Sage Robbins and then you will believe!
Yet, we all know that love like that doesn’t exist because everything is always perfect.. in fact, it normally does come with many ups and downs and battles (if you have read Twilight, you know what I mean!).
So, Love Actually, in my mind, is such a great movie because it shows the reality of love (some harsh times on how it can go wrong and it doesn’t always work out) yet it shows the beautiful moments too and the magical ones. And because it really has all different angles through a few different story lines, it makes them so believable and heart warming. I also believe that sometimes, a strong and amazing love can come to you to give you something nothing else can, even if it doesn’t last forever.
Real, true, loving with all your soul love is something that takes a lot of work, compromise and time. So, if you are someone who is lucky enough to be in a relationship where you both want to put the effort in to have that kind of love.. wow, hold on, because you are one lucky person!!
I love love.
And I love success! Thanks for the great interviews and stories! You all rock!
Karl Scifres
22/Jul/2009 15Hi Darren,
I love your columns and appreciate the opportunities they give me to think about how I can be a better person and how I can improve my relationships.
My number one priority and my first interest is to see that my wife is happy. So, I related to your efforts to turn that date night into a “10″. I firmly believe that if more men (and women, too) worked daily on seeing that their spouse is happy, there would be less divorces. By the way, we don’t use that “d” word in our relationship. Date nights are also a good way to keep the romance going in your life. Too many of us quit dating when we get married.
Unlike most men, I like chick flicks. So, I also liked “The Notebook” and most of the other movies that have been mentioned in these comments. However, I’d have to agaree with Kathy L. — my favorite feel good movie right now would have to be “The Bucket List”.
After seeing it, we were telling my mother-in-law about the movie and she told us several items that were on her “bucket list”. One was to see Niagara Falls. Well, that’s a long way from Oklahoma and would involve major effort and money. The other thing she mentioned was that she’d like to see an ice hockey game. I immediately told her that we could do that — and we did. She loved it and I loved making her happy. (Of course, another way to see that my wife is happy is to see that her mother is happy!)
Thanks for letting me ramble and thanks, again, for all you do!
John
22/Jul/2009 16Hoosiers is one of my favorite all time feel good movies. Great post keep em coming.
John O.
Georgia Hardy
22/Jul/2009 17Uhhh, I seem to remember YOU begging me to watch The Notebook and while you sat and cried through it, I installed the doggie door! : )
Thank you for always striving to be my perfect husband… you are my 10!!
PS- I like Laura Simoes’ comment about the 10 minute foot rub… : )
Jerry Hardy
23/Jul/2009 18Now, children— I know you know, that I stay away from movies as they are just that–Hollywood. Mel Brooks, Steve Martin, Chevy Chase, Gene Wilder, Jim Carey are Hollywood outsiders. My favaorites, “It’s a Mad Mad Mad World” “Caddy Shack”, ” Vacation”, “Blazing Saddles”, “Pet Detective” all hysterical and genius.
Dad ( Long Live The Music Genius of John Coltrane)
Vanessa Michele Garcia
23/Jul/2009 19Hi Darren,
Great post! I dislike scary movies. My favorite feel-good movies are both The Holiday and Kung Fu Panda (it’s so cute). Hmmm…..I saw your wifey’s comment funny.
I can’t believe she had to install the doggie door.
Cheers,
Vanessa
Alyss Rose
23/Jul/2009 20Mr. Hardy,
Are you so insecure that you have to have your marital dates rated? Isn’t just having a good time with your wife enough? Nothing in life is a perfect 10 and if you are going to compete with yourself, which is actually what you are doing, you have ony yourself to blame for the answers. Chill out and leave the competitiveness for your professional life.
Andrew Parkes
23/Jul/2009 21Back to Jack Canfield’s advice, is there actually a true 10 or has our 10’s been too heavily tainted by Hollywood?
Vanessa Michele Garcia
23/Jul/2009 22Alyss,
Just because Darren asked his wife, “On a scale of 1 to 10, how would you rank this date night?” Doesn’t mean anything. Where is the competitiveness in that? To me, that shows him to be a courteous man, rather than ASSUMING all is good, he asked his wife. There is nothing wrong with a man trying to make a woman happy.
YOUR perception is YOUR own projection. You wrote, “Nothing in life is a perfect 10″ - I beg to differ with you, maybe because YOU still haven’t experienced perfect 10’s in your life - that is why you believe that. I believe YOU are the one that needs to go chill out - I challenge you to find an area of your life in which you are struggling in whether, career, romance, financial etc. and have the CHUTZPAH to achieve a perfect 10.
Ask and YOU shall Receive!
Respectfully,
Vanessa
Marie Calberry
24/Jul/2009 23Listen to the CDs and read SUCCESS. Great! Would love to hear from any Canadians who do this as well. Keep up the great writing, and keep my SUCCESS coming. Thanks Darren.
By the way, a foot rub encourages communication during the exercise.
Pam
24/Jul/2009 24My husband and my favorite is an oldie but goodie - Return to Me!
Alyss Rose
24/Jul/2009 25LOL!!!! Vanessa, the reason that we continue to strive is BECAUSE nothing in life is perfect. And, it never will be. It can’t be, given the human condition. I think that the better question might have been, “What, if anything, could have made this evening better?” Asking for someone else’s perception of “perfection” is self-defeating. A social evening should be a pleasurable experience for both, not just one.
As you can clearly see from Darren’s response to having to watch the movie and then read aloud, he was made uncomfortable. And, it made the relationship appear lopsided. I have a wonderful relationship with my husband and would never, ever expect him to ask me about a perfect 10 anything. And, neither would I ask him that question. We alternate with activities that appeal to each of us and if there is something that I enjoy and I know would absolutely cause him to tear his own eyes out I find a girlfriend with whom to do it. It is self-defeating for one or the other partner to ask that a spouse do things that clearly make him or her uncomfortable. And, I might add, selfish on the part of the person making the request.
This “chickafication” of America is creating girlie men who don’t understand why they can’t just be masculine as opposed to metrosexual. I would bet that the same women who demand that their men watch chick flicks take themselves off to another room in high dudgeon when their man gets into SciFi, action movies or, God forbid a game of golf or football. We need to learn to live with our differences and give each other the needed space to be individuals.
Alyss Rose
24/Jul/2009 26And, oh, Vanessa, Darren did ask and he did receive - bsically he received criticism. Wouldn’t it have been so much nicer if his wife had responded that it was a perfectly lovely date and what would make it a perfect 10 would be to simply curl up with him and fall asleep in his arms? That is the kind of response that a real woman gives a man who has been considerate enough to ask. She doesn’t give him what amounts to chores and a laundry list of honey-dos that make him uncomfortable.
Steven Andrew Williams
24/Jul/2009 27This message goes out to Alyss Rose and Vanessa Michele Garcia,
It’s been very interesting to “watch” the two of you cat fight over Darren Hardy and his “wifey”. Since this week’s blog was about Hollywood, I’ll stick to that topic. You’re little interaction, which has been quite pathetic yet entertaining, brings to mind several movies… “Misery”, “Fatal Attraction”, “Monster”, and “Much Ado About Nothing”. While the two of you banter about what Mr. Hardy and Mrs. Hardy do on their date night, what makes a “Man a MAN”, or how a woman should treat her husband, why don’t the two of you GET A LIFE. Better yet, why don’t the two of you choose a different forum to vent out your frustrations? Vanessa, you’re obviously in love with Darren, and it’s cute, but sad… he’s very much in love with his “wifey”, as ALL of his blogs attest. Alyss, why don’t you make your husband a nice piece of American Pie and lay in his arms and tell him how much you appreciate him. He might even surprise you with a happy ending. Instead of bitching it out on a public forum meant for those with positive minds, go make your lives worth living. The best of “SUCCESS ” to you!!!
Alyss Rose
24/Jul/2009 28LOL!!!! Steven, that is precisely what I do for my husband. Although I am not a pie baker I make a mean lamb shank, duck confit and osso buco for which he chooses the appropriate wine. Later I do fall asleep in his arms. It is precisely because I am familar with how well that sort of thing works that I recommend it.
Trust me, there’s no frustration in my home with the exception of not having enough hours in the evening to schmooz the wonderful man. I wish that more women realized that it is through giving, rather than asking, or more accurately, demanding, that one receives.
And, thanks for the wishes toward success. We are all works in progress regardless of how “successful” we may be.
You have a great weekend.
Daphne Arambula
24/Jul/2009 29Darren:
I read your blogs all the time and I’m a huge fan of SUCCESS. I couldn’t let Scott Andrew Williams comment just go. I know if I did I would regret it. Good for you on wanting to make your wife happy and score a 10 on your date. I have learned and gained more from SUCCESS than I learned in my college years at Harvard. Thank you very much for everything you do to make SUCCESS Magazine possible.
Steven Andrew Williams:
IF ANYONE IS PATHETIC IT’S YOU, BUD. YOU ARE THE SICK MAN, SICK IN THE HEAD THAT IS. You call “sticking to the topic” the comment you just posted. That seems more like banter YOU are much worse. Both Alyss and Vanessa were just trying to make a point with each other. At least they had more CLASS THAN YOU.
Just because someone is defending their point of view based on their belief system doesn’t mean they are in love with that person. Come on seriously! I found Vanessa Michele Garcia’s blog through Bob Burg - National Bestselling author (he has referred to Vanessa on numerous ocassions as next best thing in personal development on his Facebook account). I believe that to be true. I have no doubt that Vanessa will one day be featured in SUCCESS Magazine. How many National Bestselling authors are recommending your blog? My guess is NONE. I noticed her blogs, What Legacy Will You Leave Behind, Recession-Proof Your Attitude and many other reposted by many individuals on FB. You obviously don’t know anything about her or what she stands for. My advice to you bud is to google her and see what she does or better yet how she maximizes her downtime, being at events, learning, sharing and keeping it real to SUCCESS. In the past, I was able to view Vanessa’s FB profile not anymore. She shared articles, videos posted from John Maxwell, Jeffrey Gitomer, Jack Canfield, Les Brown and even Niurka and she defends all this people as well. DOES THAT MEAN SHE IS IN LOVE WITH ALL OF THEM AS WELL? Come on get real and get GET WITH the program. HOW ARE YOU HELPING OTHERS ACHIEVE SUCCESS? Is it with your silly comments like the one to Alyss and Vanessa.
Alyss:
I love your response to Scott Andrew Williams. Good for you. I wish I can be that calm with someone that is obviously PATHETIC. You can find me on FB.
Tracy
24/Jul/2009 30Good grief….Anyway….my favorite feel good movies (besides Notebook!) are: “Under the Tuscan Sun” and probably little known “Enchanted April” about British woman who are frustrated with their lives and their husbands/men who are treating them badly and go on a holiday on the coast of Italy together and end up falling back in love with their husbands and their husbands with them.
I love Success and the DVD/CD that come with the magazines now!!!
Alyss Rose
25/Jul/2009 31Daphne,
Great name, by the way.
One of my closely-held beliefs is that when someone is determined to make a fool of himself/herself it is best to just step aside and allow the process to play itself out. The first rule of holes being, “When you find yourself in one, STOP DIGGING!!!!!” is lost on many people.
Truly, I rarely even get involved in this blogging thing because too often people would rather engage in cyberfisticuffs than in understanding where the other person is coming from. Too darn much of it is phoney-baloney-plastic-banana-good-time-rock-and-roll play acting anyway. Who the heck cares if people who don’t even know you think you are a deep thinker? You can be anyone you want in cyberspace, hiding behind your laptop. Most people out there are nobodies in real life and get their ego gratification by building a personna in the ether. It’s rather sad, actually.
Alyss Rose
25/Jul/2009 32My favorite feel good movie is “Garbo Speaks”, starring Ron Silver in his early years. His death this past March at the age of only 62 was a great loss to both the thespian and academic communities. Now, there was a great and accomplished mind. And not too hard on the eyes either. For anyone who is interested, take a look at his background.
Darren Hardy
26/Jul/2009 33Thanks for all the fun and rousing dialogue this week everyone!
I know I added several of your great movie recommendations to my Netflix Queue – hope you did too!
I think you are going to like next week’s post too - stay tuned…
-Darren Hardy
Ursula
27/Jul/2009 34LOL… I really enjoy reading your blog… I love the fact that you write about so many different topics but to which we can relate to and advice we can apply to our lives… BTW everytime I mention The Notebook to my fiance, I can tell by the look on his face he is thinking… OH NOOOOOOO here we go again!!!! :o) so we compromise..he watches my chick flicks and I go with him to see transformers!
CarolynW
04/Aug/2009 35Hi Darren,
I think if anyone’s to feel the “real love” they have is anything like “movie love” it’s a decision they make. You don’t have to watch “kissy” movies or read to your wife, for her to feel like you love her like they do on the big screen. She has to decide you do. It’s a choice like anything else.
I let me husband off the “kissy” movie hook. I carry around my little DVD player from chore-to-chore watching chick flick after chick flick - trust me, they make ironing go a heck of a lot faster (for me). I get to watch my movies, I am happy and so is he.
Isn’t that real love, not making your spouse do something they don’t want to? How about your wife asking you the same question you ask her? What would it take to make our relationship (or date night) a 10? What if you said watch mud wrestling and a back rub? Would she do those things for you like you do them for her?
It think it’s a 10 for both when I do the things I like alone, he does the things he like alone and those shared interests we do together.
Does she read your blog? If not, maybe she should start and understand how you really feel.
For us, “raw” open communication is the key. It doesn’t always lead to perfect feelings, but we know where we stand, how the other truly feels, about anything, and that is a much better feeling than wondering what the other is really thinking or feeling.
May you be as happy in your marriage as Hoah is
Carolyn
Kimberley Huggins
04/Aug/2009 36Forrest Gump, hands down best feel good and ATTITUDE movie EVER!
On a side note, caught you at the BeautiControl convention this past weekend - you were AWESOME! Everything that I needed to hear! Can’t wait to get my products but I’m already making changes! Hope to see/hear you again in the future - thanks so much!
Mike Cadman
11/Aug/2009 37It has to be The Bucket List ! Cancer - something we all relate to one way or another, and things we just gotta do.
Closely followed by Forrest Gump.
Teamleadership
13/Aug/2009 38“The Miracle” because I love it when the underdog works “his” tail off and does what everyone said couldn’t be done.
Sue
19/Aug/2009 39Married 38 years and still madly in love…think she was just asking for some romance..maybe the movies are a bit unrealistic, but we gals, we do love romance about as much as you guys love…well, you know what you love.
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