Do you want to improve a specific area of your life? What are the four universal powers that everybody can tap into?
In their book The Tools, Phil Stutz and Barry Michels argue that universal powers help you fulfill your potential and improve the lives of everyone around you. Each universal power supports your growth in a different area of your life.
Keep reading to learn more about how these universal powers can help start your spiritual journey.
What Does It Mean to Reach Your Full Potential?
The powers the authors identify are positive momentum, personal truth, radiant love, and gratitude. Here, we’ll discuss what fulfilling your potential means to the authors and explore how to get in touch with the universal powers to start your spiritual journey.
According to the authors, reaching your full potential means becoming a changemaker (or what the authors call a creator). When you become a changemaker, your actions will be aligned with the universal powers: You see it as your purpose to make positive changes in the world. As a changemaker, you’ll view life’s challenges as opportunities to improve yourself and help those around you.
The authors say that when you’ve successfully implemented their strategies in your daily life, you’ll begin to live in accordance with these three changemaker principles:
- You’ll leave the world a better place than you found it.
- You’ll have the courage to do what you think is right, regardless of the opinions of others.
- You’ll be disciplined enough to overcome immediate gratification and stay focused on your goals.
In contrast to changemakers are stagnators. The authors explain that stagnators aren’t interested in improving themselves or contributing to the world around them. Instead, they expect the world to serve them. When life presents stagnators with difficulties, they feel unfairly treated and unmotivated to overcome those challenges.
How Do You Get In Touch With the Universal Powers?
According to the authors, life challenges can be catalysts for connection with universal powers. This is because challenges present opportunities to apply the authors’ strategies, which they say will help you take actions that embody the universal powers’ qualities. In other words, obstacles push you to the doorstep of the universal powers, and the authors’ strategies open the door.
For example, you might be faced with a sudden responsibility in your personal life that demands a lot of discipline from you. So you turn to the authors’ strategy of embracing pain (which we’ll explore later) to persist through the difficulty.
The authors explain that we all form unique, personal relationships with the universal powers. We all have our own obstacles in life and we all conceptualize universal powers a little differently. Stutz and Michels say it’s crucial to embrace the individuality of your spiritual journey. However you conceptualize the universal powers, faith means fundamentally trusting in these powers to support you when you need help. The authors admit that they can’t prove the existence and influence of the universal powers through scientific evidence or logic—but they say you can experience these powers through their five strategies.
How The Tools Relates to Stoicism
Stutz and Michels’s advice to view challenges as opportunities for good aligns with the principles of Stoicism, a school of philosophy that was founded in Greece during the third century BCE. The most fundamental idea of Stoicism is that striving to live in accordance with the four cardinal virtues (temperance, courage, justice, and wisdom) will help you live a good life. In The Obstacle Is the Way, Ryan Holiday explains that Stoics also believe situations aren’t inherently good or bad—rather, your mindset determines their quality. Viewed in this framework, Stutz and Michels’s concept of a stagnator—someone who interprets a situation negatively and responds unproductively—would be seen as lacking Stoic virtue.
On the other hand, changemakers and Stoics alike believe it’s possible to find an upside to negative situations. For example, if your partner breaks up with you, you can choose to view the situation as a learning experience that can inform your next relationship. You could also devote the time you used to spend with your partner to personal development. Holiday explains that maintaining a positive mindset helps you cope with difficult circumstances and more readily discover solutions to your problems.
The other qualities that Stutz and Michels say make a good changemaker also make a virtuous Stoic. Let’s return to the three changemaker principles above and explore how they connect with the Stoic virtues:
1) Leaving the world a better place than you found it. This relates to the Stoic virtues of justice and wisdom. Stoics define justice as acting to prevent harm and benefit the common good. If justice means leaving the world better for others, wisdom is the ability to know which circumstances you can positively influence and which are out of your control. In other words, wisdom helps you determine how to leave the world a better place.
2) Having the courage to do what’s right. Knowing what’s just and having the wisdom to discern how a situation could be improved is useless if you don’t have the will to act. The Stoics would likely agree with Stutz and Michels that having the courage to act on behalf of the common good is a vital virtue.
3) Being disciplined. This corresponds with the Stoic virtue of temperance. For Michels, Stutz, and the Stoics, temperance means avoiding excessive behaviors. However, Stoics also practice temperance in their beliefs. For example, they say that a great achievement shouldn’t lead to excessive self-confidence. Instead, you should try to sustain a balanced, realistic belief in your abilities.
This overlap of Stutz’s and Michel’s principles with Stoic virtues suggests that there are universal patterns of behavior that have helped people improve their lives—and the lives of those around them—for centuries.
The authors’ conception of spirituality also dovetails with Stoicism. Stutz and Michels believe that you become a changemaker when you’re aligned with the universal powers. Stoics similarly believe living virtuously means you’re aligned with your natural purpose and potential as a human. Because Stoics believe nature is organized by a divine wisdom, fulfilling your human nature by living virtuously means living in accordance with god. For Stoics, god refers to a force in the universe that’s active in all things and orders the world to serve the good of living things as a whole.
Stutz and Michels’s ideas about spirituality overlap with this Stoic belief that a divine wisdom arranges the world. However, the Stoics believe this wisdom serves the good of living things as a whole—not the well-being of particular individuals—whereas Stutz and Michels believe the universal powers care for each person individually.