The Discipline of Perception Before he was an oilman, John D. Rockefeller was a bookkeeper and an aspiring investor-a small-time financier in Cleveland, Ohio. The son of a criminal who''d abandoned his family, the young Rockefeller took his first job in 1855 at the age of sixteen (a day he celebrated as "Job Day" for the rest of his life). All was well enough at fifty cents a day. Then the panic struck. Specifically, the Panic of 1857, a massive national financial crisis that originated in Ohio and hit Cleveland particularly hard. As businesses failed and the price of grain plummeted across the country, westward expansion quickly came to a halt. The result was a crippling depression that lasted for several years.
Rockefeller could have gotten scared. Here was the greatest market depression in history and it hit him just as he was finally getting the hang of things. He could have pulled out and run like his father. He could have quit finance altogether for a different career with less risk. But even as a young man, Rockefeller had sangfroid: unflappable coolness under pressure. He could keep his head while he was losing his shirt. Better yet, he kept his head while everyone else lost theirs. And so instead of bemoaning this economic upheaval, Rockefeller eagerly observed the momentous events.
Almost perversely, he chose to look at it all as an opportunity to learn, a baptism in the market. He quietly saved his money and watched what others did wrong. He saw the weaknesses in the economy that many took for granted and how this left them all unprepared for change or shocks. He internalized an important lesson that would stay with him forever: The market was inherently unpredictable and often vicious-only the rational and disciplined mind could hope to profit from it. Speculation led to disaster, he realized, and he needed to always ignore the "mad crowd" and its inclinations. Rockefeller immediately put those insights to use. At twenty-five, a group of investors offered to put approximately $500,000 at his disposal if he could find the right oil wells in which to deploy the money. Grateful for the opportunity, Rockefeller set out to tour the nearby oil fields.
A few days later, he shocked his backers by returning to Cleveland empty-handed, not having spent or invested a dollar of the funds. The opportunity didn''t feel right to him at the time, no matter how excited the rest of the market was-so he refunded the money and stayed away from drilling. It was this intense self-discipline and objectivity that allowed Rockefeller to seize advantage from obstacle after obstacle in his life, during the Civil War, and the panics of 1873, 1907, and 1929. As he once put it: He was inclined to see the opportunity in every disaster. To that we could add: He had the strength to resist temptation or excitement, no matter how seductive, no matter the situation. Within twenty years of that first crisis, Rockefeller alone would control 90 percent of the oil market. His greedy competitors had perished. His nervous colleagues had sold their shares and left the business.
His weakhearted doubters had missed out. For the rest of his life, the greater the chaos, the calmer Rockefeller would become, particularly when others around him were either panicked or mad with greed. He would make much of his fortune during these market fluctuations-because he could see while others could not. This insight lives on today in Warren Buffett''s famous adage to "be fearful when others are greedy and greedy when others are fearful." Rockefeller, like all great investors, could resist impulse in favor of cold, hard common sense. One activist described the Standard Oil trust as a "mythical protean creature" capable of metamorphosing with every attempt by competitors or the government to dismantle it. They meant it as a criticism (and they had a point), but even this critique, and his clearly illegal monopoly, tell us something of Rockefeller''s personality. He was resilient, adaptable, calm, always growing, hard to pin down.
He could not be rattled-not by economic crisis, not by a glittery mirage of false opportunities, not by aggressive, bullying enemies, not even by federal prosecutors (for whom he was a notoriously difficult witness to cross-examine, never rising to take the bait or defend himself or get upset). This is what great investors cultivate, a rational self-command that allows them to see what others can''t, to size up situations and anticipate what''s coming next . and then to take advantage of it. Was Rockefeller born this way? No. This was learned behavior. And Rockefeller got this lesson in discipline somewhere. It began in that crisis of 1857 in what he called "the school of adversity and stress." "Oh, how blessed young men are who have to struggle for a foundation and beginning in life," he once said.
"I shall never cease to be grateful for the three and a half years of apprenticeship and the difficulties to be overcome, all along the way." Of course, many people experienced the same perilous times as Rockefeller-they all attended the same school of bad times. But few reacted as he did. Not many had trained themselves to see opportunity inside this obstacle, that what befell them was not unsalvageable misfortune but the gift of education-a chance to learn from a rare moment in economic history. You will come across obstacles in life-fair and unfair. And you will discover, time and time again, that what matters most is not what these obstacles are but how we see them, how we react to them, and whether we keep our composure. You will learn that this reaction determines how successful we will be in overcoming-or possibly thriving because of-them. Where one person sees a crisis, another can see opportunity.
Where one is blinded by success, another sees reality with ruthless objectivity. Where one loses control of emotions, another can remain calm. Desperation, despair, fear, powerlessness-these reactions are functions of our perceptions. You must realize: Nothing makes us feel this way; we choose to give in to such feelings. Or, like Rockefeller, choose not to. And it is precisely at this divergence-between how Rockefeller perceived his environment and how the rest of the world typically does-that his nearly incomprehensible success was born. His careful, cautious self-confidence was an incredible form of power. To perceive what others see as negative, as something to be approached rationally, clearly, and, most important, as an opportunity-not as something to fear or bemoan.
Rockefeller is more than just an analogy. We live in our own Gilded Age. In a few short decades, we''ve experienced major economic bubbles, a devastating global pandemic, civil unrest, and technological disruption. Entire industries are crumbling, people feel unmoored. What feels like unfairness abounds. Adversity is everywhere. It''s frustrating. It''s unfair.
It''s all awful. Not necessarily. Outward appearances are deceptive. What''s contained within a circumstance, what we can turn it into, is what matters. We can learn to perceive things differently, to cut through the illusions that others believe or fear. We can stop seeing the "problems" in front of us as problems. We can learn to focus on what things really are. Too often we react emotionally, get despondent, and lose our perspective.
All that does is turn bad things into really bad things. Unhelpful perceptions can invade our minds-that sacred place of reason, action, and will-and throw off our compass. Our brains evolved for an environment very different from the one we currently inhabit. As a result, we carry all kinds of biological baggage. Humans are still primed to detect threats and dangers that no longer exist-think of the cold sweat when you''re stressed about money, or the fight-or-flight response that kicks in when your boss yells at you. Our safety is not truly at risk here-there is little danger that we will starve or that violence will break out-though it certainly feels that way sometimes. We have a choice about how we respond to this situation (or any situation, for that matter). We can be blindly led by these primal feelings or we can understand them and learn to filter them.
Discipline in perception lets you clearly see the advantage and the proper course of action in every situation-without the pestilence of panic or fear. Rockefeller understood this well and threw off the fetters of bad, destructive perceptions. He honed the ability to control and channel and understand these signals. It was like a superpower; because most people can''t access this part of themselves, they are slaves to impulses and instincts they have never questioned. Was Rockefeller perfect? No. He was a rapacious tycoon who amassed more money than any person could use in their lifetime. It''s good that he gave a lot of it away, that his fortune still has an impact long after his death. But the damage he left in his wake as he destroyed every competitor (and the environment) lingers on as well.
We don''t have to hold him up as the perfect model of the perfect life-we can simply learn from his ability to perceive and feel his way through panics and bubbles, challenges and crises. And yes, Rockefeller became obscenely wealthy but that''s not the kind of wealth the Stoics were after. "The greatest empire," Seneca-an adviser to emperors and a wealthy man himself-would say, "is command of yourself." Rockefeller ruled over an enormous business empire, but first and foremost, at least when it comes to the art of the market, he ruled over himself. Each of us has thi.