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Articles by Dr. Denis Waitley
Denis Waitley is one of America's most respected authors, keynote lecturers and
productivity consultants on high performance human achievement. He
has inspired, informed, challenged and entertained audiences for
over 25 years from the boardrooms of multi-national corporations to
the control rooms of NASA's space program. Denis has been voted
business speaker of the year by the Sales and Marketing Executives'
Association and by Toastmasters' International and inducted into the
International Speakers' Hall of Fame.
With over 10 million audio programs sold in 14 languages, Denis
Waitley's CD album, "The Psychology of Winning," is still the
all-time best selling program on self-mastery. To order this
Best-Seller or his newest release, The Platinum Collection and save
30%, go to Denis Waitley Featured Products or call 800-929-0434.
To subscribe to the Free Denis Waitley Weekly E-zine send a blank email to subscribe@deniswaitley.com
From Motivation To Motive-Action by Denis Waitley
Three Rules For Turning Stress Into Success by Denis Waitley
Take a Proactive Approach to Your Health By Denis Waitley
Conducting a Personal Inventory of Your "Knowledge Resources" by Denis Waitley
Constantly Upgrade Your Computer Literacy by Denis Waitley
Become a Global Networker by Denis Waitley
Make Certain You Have a Personal Presence on the World Wide Web Now by Denis Waitley
Be Responsible For Your Own Financial Security by Denis Waitley
Start Living in Prime Time by Denis Waitley
Balance Your Workload With a Generous Number of Mini-Vacations for Maximum Productivity by Denis Waitley
Model Yourself After the Best Individuals, Who Have Proven Their Success Over Time by Denis Waitley
Set Up a Learning Resource at Home and at Your Place of Business With Both Personal and Professional Development Materials by Denis
Waitley
Be a Person Who Practices Non-Situational Integrity by Denis Waitley
The Most Important Meetings You’ll Ever Attend Are the Meetings You Have with Yourself by Denis Waitley
Balance High-Tech, With a High-Touch Environment by Denis Waitley
Institute a More Dynamic, Proactive System for Getting Back to People by Denis Waitley
Live By the Motto That Repeat Business and Profitability are Directly Related to Relationships Based on
Trust by Denis Waitley
Be Committed to Keeping Your Personal and Professional Life in Balance by Denis Waitley
Create Your Own Mission Statement for Your Personal and Professional Life by Denis Waitley
Self-Knowledge, The Key to Preparing for Competition by Denis Waitley
Overflowing Buckets of Wealth by Denis Waitley
Six Behaviors that Increase Self-Esteem by Denis Waitley
The Virtue of Patience by Denis Waitley (Excerpted from The Psychology of Motivation)
Making the Most of Today by Denis Waitley (Excerpted from The Psychology of Winning)
Allowing Setbacks to Spur You On by Denis Waitley
Aged To Perfection by Denis Waitley
Chase Your Passion (Not Your Pension)! by Denis Waitley
Becoming a Proactive Leader by Denis Waitley
Seven Techniques for Overcoming the Tendency to Procrastinate by Denis Waitley
Life Balance: The Urgent vs The Important by Denis Waitley
Power From Empowerment by Denis Waitley
Look Up To Those Beneath You by Denis Waitley
Beware The Dream Stealers by Denis Waitley
Overcoming the Fear of Rejection by Denis Waitley
As Tall As You Want To Be by Denis Waitley
Confidence - "You Only Sell You" by Denis Waitley
Carpe Diem! Sieze This Day! by Denis Waitley
Become a Student of Change by Denis Waitley
How to Stay Motivated by Denis Waitley
The Winner's Circle by Denis Waitley
Going Full Circle by Denis Waitley
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From Motivation to Motive-Action by Denis Waitley
With the passing of every new year, each of
us needs to understand the magnitude of social and economic change
in the world. In the past, change in business and social life was
incremental and a set of personal strategies for achieving
excellence was not required. Today, in the knowledge-based world,
where change is the rule, a set of personal strategies is essential
for success, even survival. Never again will you be able to go to
your place of business on autopilot, comfortable and secure that the
organization, state or government will provide for and look after
you. You must look in the mirror when you ask who is responsible for
your success or failure. You must become a lifelong learner and
leader, for to be a follower is to fall hopelessly behind the pace
of progress. The power brokers in the new global arena will be the
knowledge facilitators. Ignorance will be even more the tyrant and
enslaver than in the past. As you look in the mirror to see the 21st
Century you, there will also be another image standing beside you.
It is your competition. Your competition, from now on, will be a
hungry immigrant with a wireless, hand-held, digital assistant.
Hungry for food, hungry for a home, for a new car, for security, for
a college education. Hungry for knowledge. Smart, quick thinking,
skilled and willing to do anything necessary to be competitive in
the world marketplace. Working long hours and Saturdays, staying
open later, serving customers better and more cheerfully. To be a
player in the 21st Century you have to be willing to give more in
service than you receive in payment.
These are the new rules in the game of life.
These are the actions you must take to be a leader and a winner in
your personal and professional life. By mastering these profoundly
simple action steps, you will be positioned to be a change master in
the new century.
Action Step Number One - Consider Yourself
Self-Employed, But Be a Team Player. What this means is that you are
your own Chief Executive Officer of your future. Start thinking of
yourself as a service company with a single employee. You’re a small
company that puts your services to work for a larger company.
Tomorrow you may sell those services to a different organization,
but that doesn’t mean you’re any less loyal to your current
employer. Taking responsibility for yourself in this way does mean
that you never equate your personal long-term interests with your
employer’s.
The first idea is resolving not to suffer
the fate of those who lost their jobs and found their skills were
obsolete. The second is to begin immediately the process of
protecting yourself against that possibility – by becoming proactive
instead of reactive.
Ask yourself these questions:
How vulnerable am I? What trends must I
watch? What information must I gain? What knowledge do I lack?
Again, think of yourself as a company. Set
up a training department in your mind and make certain your top
employee is updating his or her skills. Make sure you have your own
private pension plan, knowing that you are responsible for your own
financial security.
Entrusting the government or an employer,
other than yourself, with your retirement income is like hiring a
compulsive gambler as your accountant.
You’re the CEO of your daily life who must
have the vision to set your goals and allocate your resources. The
mindset of being responsible for your own future used to be crucial
only to the self-employed, but it has become essential for us all.
Today’s typical employees are no longer one-career people. Most will
have five separate careers in their lifetimes. Remember, your
competition is a hungry immigrant with a laptop. Action Step Number
One is to consider yourself to be self-employed, but be a team
player.
Action Step Number Two - Be Flexible in the
Face of Daily Surprises. We live in a time-starved, overstressed,
violent society. Much of our over-reaction to what happens to us
every day is a result of our self-indulgent value system, where we
blame others for our problems, look to organizations or the
government for our solutions, thirst for immediate sensual
gratification and believe we should have privileges without
responsibilities. This condition is manifested in the high crime
rate and in the increase in violence in the work place where
employees blame their managers for threatening their security.
I have learned how to be flexible in the
face of daily surprises, which is one of the most important action
traits for a leader. I really haven’t been angry for about 17 years.
During that time, no one has tried to physically harm me or someone
close to me. I’ve learned to adapt to stress in life and reserve my
fear or anger for imminently physically dangerous situations. I
rarely, if ever, get upset with what people say, do or don’t do,
even if it inconveniences me. I do react emotionally when I see
someone physically or emotionally abusing or victimizing another.
But I’ve learned not to sweat the small stuff.
The Serenity Prayer, "Grant me the Serenity
to accept the things I cannot change, the Courage to change the
things I can, and the Wisdom to know the difference.", is a valuable
measuring tool we can apply to our lives. Simple yet profound words
to live by.
Credit Statement to be Included in Reprints
Reproduced with permission from Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine. To subscribe to
Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine, go to www.deniswaitley.com
or send an email with Join in the subject to
subscribe@deniswaitley.com Copyright © 2005 Denis Waitley International. All rights
reserved worldwide. back
Three Rules for Turning Stress Into Success by Denis Waitley
1. Accept the Unchangeable - Everything that
has happened in your life to this minute is unchangeable. It’s
history. The greatest waste of energy is in looking back at missed
opportunities, lamenting past events, grudge collecting, getting
even, harboring ill will, and any vengeful thinking. Success is the
only acceptable form of revenge. By forgiving your trespassers, you
become free to concentrate on going forward with your life and
succeeding in spite of your detractors. You will live a rewarding
and fulfilling life.
Your enemies, on the other hand, will
forever wonder how you went on to become so successful without them
and in the shadow of their doubts.
Action Idea: Write down on a sheet of paper
things that happened in the past that bother you. Now crumple the
paper into a ball and throw it at the person teaching this program
at the front of the room. This symbolizes letting go of past
misfortunes.
2. Change the Changeable - What you can
change is your reaction to what others say and do. And you can
control your own thoughts and actions by dwelling on desired results
instead of the penalties of failure. The only real control you have
in life is that of your immediate thought and action. Since most of
what we do is a reflex, subconscious habit, it is wise not to act on
emotional impulse. In personal relations, it is better to wait a
moment until reason has the opportunity to compete with your
emotions.
Action Idea: Write down in your diary one
thing you will do tomorrow to help you relax more during and after a
stressful day.
3. Avoid the Unacceptable - Go out of your
way to get out of the way of potentially dangerous behaviors and
environments. When people tailgate you on the freeway, change lanes.
If they follow you at night, drive to a well-lighted public place.
When there are loud, obnoxious people next
to you at a restaurant or club, change tables, or locations. Also,
be cautious of personal relationships developed via the Internet.
With the massive number of individuals surfing the net, the number
of predators increases in like proportion. Always be on the alert
for potentially dangerous situations involving your health, personal
safety, financial speculation and emotional relationships.
Action Idea: What is one unacceptable
behavior you have or allow others to do to you that you will avoid
starting tomorrow? Example: The way you drive, being around negative
people, walking down dark streets alone late at night, etc.
Credit Statement to be Included in Reprints
Reproduced with permission from Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine. To subscribe to
Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine, go to
www.deniswaitley.com
or send an email with Join in the subject to
subscribe@deniswaitley.com Copyright © 2005 Denis Waitley International. All rights
reserved worldwide.
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Take a Proactive Approach to Your Health by Denis Waitley
Think of your body as a high-powered, finely
engineered transportation vehicle, like a space shuttle. Instead of
liquid hydrogen, your body is powered by your own intake. The food
you eat is the fuel that energizes the vehicle. What you put in your
fuel tank is burned by your high performance activity or - in the
case of low-octane, junk food - is deposited in your engine. Think
of your mind as the driver who takes control of and steers your body
to victory or hits the wall. Your body is very much like a car.
Drive it without proper fuel or maintenance and it will fall apart.
You take it for granted to get you where you want to go, until it
breaks down. Then it disrupts your way of life.
Like your car, your body only speaks to you
by exception. You only notice it when it is damaged or inoperative.
But, unlike your car, the spare parts business for your body is not
a viable option at present.
To combat disease and aging, you need to
keep your bones, joints and muscles flexible and strong. The right
exercise means weight-bearing exercise, not simply aerobics. The
International College of Sports Medicine has now added exercise with
weights to its long-time recommendation of aerobic exercise. First,
check with your physician who can assess your general condition and
advise you about healthy levels of activity. Second, be aware that
the effectiveness of exercise depends as much on enjoyment as on the
nature of activity itself.
Just as important, if not more important
than daily exercise, is proper nutrition. What you eat has a major
impact on degenerative diseases. Do eat a low fat diet. Keep your
fat intake to 15 percent of all daily calories. This will keep you
lean and boost your immunity. Do eat a low salt diet. Use a
potassium-based salt substitute on the table and in cooking. Do eat
a high-fiber diet. Fiber protects the colon from cancer, lowers
cholesterol and stabilizes blood sugar. Eat 40 to 50 grams of mixed
fibers daily, as in whole grain breads and cereals, especially those
containing oat bran, vegetables and fruits. Do eat a low-sugar diet.
Use a little fructose in place of table sugar. Eat complex
carbohydrates in place of sugar and look for carbohydrate drinks
sweetened with zylitol. Do drink clean water. Drink bottled or
home-distilled water, as much as eight glasses per day.
Do eat an alkaline diet. Our high-fat,
high-sugar diet creates acidity. So many people are now acidic that
we spend hundreds of millions of dollars on antacids every year.
Do take daily nutritional supplements
including essential multi-vitamins, antioxidants and minerals.
Current research confirms that we can no longer get the essential
nutrients from our food alone. We must supplement even the best diet
with nutrition to promote resistance to disease. Do eat the right
kinds of foods and stay away from the fast-food, fat-food drive-throughs.
You are doing yourself and your children a dangerous, long-term
disservice by developing the habit of eating high-fat,
nutrition-poor meals. Make your health your top priority. You can’t
buy your health or life back after years of neglecting it while you
earn your living.
Action Idea: List one activity you will
begin to do tomorrow to improve your health and increase the quality
and quantity of your life.
Credit Statement to be Included in Reprints
Reproduced with permission from Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine. To subscribe to
Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine, go to www.deniswaitley.com
or send an email with Join in the subject to
subscribe@deniswaitley.com Copyright © 2005 Denis Waitley International. All rights
reserved worldwide. back
Conducting a Personal Inventory of Your "Knowledge Resources"
by Denis Waitley
Self-knowledge has always been the key to
preparing for competition. Knowledge of your attributes, abilities,
interests, strengths, weaknesses, and traits is essential to riding
the front end of the wave of change into the new century. To fully
assess your own talents, realize that studies confirm that what we
love and do well as children continues as our latent or manifest
talent as adults.
Examination of your weekend or evening
interests might reveal a gem of potential you can apply to your
vocation. I strongly suggest you don’t unthinkingly relegate what
you love to do for yourself solely to hobbies. You might make it, or
at least integrate it into your life’s work.
The acquisition of knowledge, which is the
new global power, is a life-long experience, not a collection of
facts or skills. Not long ago, what you learned in school was
largely all you needed to learn to secure a career. With knowledge
expanding exponentially, this is no longer true. Hundreds of
scientific papers are published daily.
Every thirty seconds, some new technological
company produces yet another innovation. Your formal education has a
very short shelf life. Life-long learning, once a luxury for the
few, has become absolutely vital to continued success. Continue
gaining expertise and avoid thinking like an expert.
Action Idea: An excellent benchmarking
exercise is to spend a weekend with key associates or family members
and dust off your childhood memories. Remember what you really
enjoyed and wanted to do most as a child. The next activity in
assessing your interests is considering your current ones. What do
you most enjoy after work? What do you most want to do on weekends
and vacations? What are your hobbies? Can you bring more of what
you enjoy into your business life?
Action Step - Increase Your Reading, Writing
and Vocabulary Proficiency. One of the most important qualities of
successful leaders is an ability to express thoughts and knowledge.
Research by management and human resource experts confirms that no
matter what the field of employment, people with large vocabularies
- those able to speak clearly and concisely, using simple as well as
descriptive words - are best at accomplishing their goals. Well
chosen, carefully considered words can close the sale, negotiate the
raise, enhance relationships, and change destinies.
In a world of e-mail, fax dispersal, voice
mail, sound bites, concise reports, business plans, and meeting
briefs, the individuals who can articulate their goals, substantiate
their claims, and support their visions, will own the future. In the
21st Century, literacy will be the major difference between the
haves and have-nots.
Why do fewer than 10 percent of the public
buy and read nonfiction books? One reason is that many would rather
get home than get ahead. They are motivated to get by and get pulled
along by the company, the economy, or the government.
Another reason is that many individuals
believe that information found in books, computer programs, and
training sessions has no value in the business world. How
self-deluding!
As the new tools of productivity become the
Internet, the Digital Versatile Disc, direct digital download of
text, audio and video, and the combination of the interactive
computer with telecommunications, the people who know how to control
the new technologies will acquire power, while those who thought
that education ends with the diploma are destined for low-paying,
low-satisfaction jobs. In almost the blink of an eye, our society
has passed from the industrial age to the knowledge era.
Increase your reading by 100 percent.
Decrease your television watching, and that of any children in your
family by 50 percent. Surf the Internet and subscribe to book
summaries, or download free chapters from different sources. By
reading book summaries, you can gain the essence of all the top
business books in a very brief period of time.
Action Idea: Read at least one book each
month, and listen to at least one additional audio book during
commute or down time. One of the best sources for business audio
books online is MP3audiobooks.com.
All kinds of reading and listening to
fiction and non-fiction will increase your vocabulary, writing and
presentation skills. Incredibly, a mere 3,500 words separate the
average person from those with superior vocabularies.
Keep a dictionary beside you when you read
and look up every word you don’t fully understand. Doing that on the
spot helps make the word part of your vocabulary forever. And don’t
depend on your computer’s spellchecker for your spelling. Not all
e-mail service includes spell check. Also, you may be called upon to
write longhand notes, memos, or information on white boards or
blackboards at meetings. You not only want to use the right words.
You also will want to spell them correctly.
A great way to increase your literacy is to
engage in Internet conferences and to read summaries on the web from
services like Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble and other booksellers.
The more interactive you become in communications and the less you
indulge in prime-time television, the more successful you’ll become
in all areas of your life. Knowledge is the new power. And literacy
is the door to knowledge. Hopefully, attending this "Winning for
Life" program will be one of the keys that will open the door to
your future for you.
Credit Statement to be Included in Reprints
Reproduced with permission from Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine. To subscribe to
Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine, go to www.deniswaitley.com
or send an email with Join in the subject to
subscribe@deniswaitley.com Copyright © 2005 Denis Waitley International. All rights
reserved worldwide. back
Constantly Upgrade Your Computer Literacy by Denis Waitley
Many friends of mine who were convinced they
would never become computer literate are now conducting all their
long-distance communication by e-mail and Internet phone calls.
Why must you begin using computers, if you
are in a high-touch business, retired, or are not actively doing
business at all? Because all the devices we plug in – computers,
telephones, fax machines, radios, television sets, VCRs and even
kitchen appliances - are emerging into a unified information
machine. Very soon, a single device will perform all their functions
and more.
Together with our appliances our credit
cards, medical records, automobile registrations, driver’s licenses,
etc. will be hooked together. Scientists envision a small card on
which our entire medical history will be electronically encoded.
We’re on the threshold of the greatest
exchange of knowledge and ideas in history. Who will own and control
that intellectual property? How will it be paid for? How will the
information transactions be monitored and secured? What impact will
this have on future generations? The answers to these questions are
anything but certain. But what is certain is that unless you are
computer literate you will be illiterate. Unless you are online you
will be in the unemployment line, or you’ll be earning minimum
wages. Unless you’re networking, you probably will be not working.
Unless you’re comfortable with the information superhighway, you’ll
be road kill on it. Unless you join the generation of the future,
you will be relegated to living in the past.
The biggest reason most people are hesitant
to jump into the world of computers and the Internet, is that it is
not in their comfort zones. Whenever we consider acquiring a new
skill, whether it is flying a plane, snow or water-skiing, or going
back to school, we procrastinate and make excuses, because we feel
awkward and clumsy in trying something we know little about and
something in which others, observing us, are more proficient in. In
other words, we feel foolish in front of family, friends and
associates, because we are adult rookies. It’s o.k. for kids to try
new things. Because they’re not afraid of criticism or looking
silly. They learn that in junior high, high school and college.
One of the most important ideas you can gain
in this program is that winners risk being a fool in the eyes of
others in order to gain expertise. There never was a winner, who
wasn’t, first, a beginner. Be willing to begin becoming computer
literate.
The computer, once a formidable challenge
for us, has become an invaluable tool, and has saved us time that we
now spend together living a more balanced life. Plan to spend about
50 to 100 dollars a month, staying current, upgrading your equipment
and software, and subscribing to computer publications. The best way
to keep from falling behind is to keep abreast of the trends.
Because the industry is changing weekly, you must assume that all
you have learned will need to be updated every week. That's why
there’s no reason to wait. No matter when you buy a computing system
it will be obsolete within a year, or need a complete upgrade. Voice
recognition systems will be commonplace in a couple of years.
Action Idea: Subscribe to a computing
magazine or newsletter service that gives you weekly or monthly
updates on the latest trends and tools of technology.
Credit Statement to be Included in Reprints
Reproduced with permission from Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine. To subscribe to
Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine, go to www.deniswaitley.com
or send an email with Join in the subject to
subscribe@deniswaitley.com Copyright © 2005 Denis Waitley International. All rights
reserved worldwide. back
Become a Global Networker by Denis Waitley
Bill Gates, Microsoft’s founder, and the
richest person in the world by several billion dollars, is convinced
that the huge access to information will trickle down to the
consumer. In another two years, he predicts, most decisions such as
hiring a part-time worker for your home, buying a consumer product,
choosing a lawyer – will be made on a much more informed basis
because of electronic communication.
It changes the nature of competition,
because in a networked world, we can ignore geographic limits to our
shopping. People, information and services are merging together, all
in the name of time-based competitive advantage.
Here is a check-off list of important
considerations. How many on the list are part of your daily life?
· E-Mail is now the most popular method of
communication next to the telephone in the industrialized nations.
And, you can now transmit your e-mail by voice mail. It is possible
and reasonable to expect that you can answer 30 e-mail messages in
one hour, or one every two minutes. This is equivalent to answering
personal correspondence at the rate of 30 letters per hour, without
a secretary.
· If you communicate long distance,
nationally or globally by phone – through the use of Internet phone
or software - you can talk indefinitely without long distance phone
charges over the Internet. By paying only the monthly, on-line
service charge, you can reduce your long distance phone bills
immeasurably by communicating verbally, computer to computer, with
individuals having compatible software.
· Since it will be desirable to be
multi-national in your business and personal relationships, by
installing foreign language software you’ll be able to have all of
your word processing appear on the screen in two languages.
Select at least one new language you feel
will be desirable to learn during the next few years and install the
software for that language. By having your correspondence appear in
both your native language and one new language, both in text and
audio, it is a great way to learn.
· As you look toward the future, be prepared
to have at least one of the following: An ISDN phone line for your
modem. A cable service for your modem. Or a satellite dish for your
modem. Cable and satellite modem services will be mandatory as
requirements for speed and quality of downloading large quantities
of information and graphics increase.
· Ensure that your computer is upgraded for
real-time audio, MP3, and video streaming, so you’ll be able to
receive information from the Internet in real time. Consider
investing in video conferencing equipment that allows you to hold
live video conferences at multiple locations nationally and
internationally, with multiple clients. Although video conferencing
will not replace live seminars and meetings, it will reduce the
costs and greatly increase the number of clients that can be served
at the same time, in the knowledge century.
Action Idea: Pick at least two friends or
business associates living in other countries, or in other parts of
this country, that you will e-mail at least once every two weeks.
Credit Statement to be Included in Reprints
Reproduced with permission from Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine. To subscribe to
Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine, go to www.deniswaitley.com
or send an email with Join in the subject to
subscribe@deniswaitley.com Copyright © 2005 Denis Waitley International. All rights
reserved worldwide. back
Make Certain You Have a Personal Presence on the World Wide Web Now by Denis Waitley by Denis Waitley
The reason it’s important for you to have
your own web presence now is that thousands of new web sites are
being developed and registered every day nationally and
internationally. Unless you make arrangements now to protect your
own name and/or company name, globally, as an Internet site, your
name may already be trademarked and registered by someone else.
Here are some guidelines, regardless of
whether or not you already have your own domain site on the web:
· Your web presence is not static, nor
should it be treated as a structure. It should be a constantly
changing infomercial and résumé of your services.
· Do not spend a great deal of money and
time creating an incredibly artistic website. The object of a
website is to develop a database of qualified prospects. In order to
have an effective website, you must provide a great deal of
important, relevant, value-packed, free information to your
visitors, with enough variety and substance to make them return to
your website often, and certainly to provide them an instant
incentive to leave their names and addresses, so that you can follow
up.
· For example, the National Board of
Realtors in the U. S. offers geography specific information
regarding schools, shopping, medical facilities and other important
data of interest to prospective buyers or renters of real property.
No matter where in the United States someone may be considering
relocating, this home page will give answers at no charge.
And by providing your name and other
particulars, the site will download other specific information to
you. The services are constantly upgraded and added to, to invite
more than one visit to the site.
Think of your home page as an advertisement
that needs to be changed and freshened weekly to be competitive in
today’s consumer-driven marketplace. Contrary to what you may have
heard, I know hundreds of individuals who already are making
$20,000 to $100,000 per month via electronic sales on the Internet.
Michael Dell, founder of Dell Computer Company, and currently the
richest person in the world under the age of 40, sells over 30
million US dollars per day worth of computer equipment directly on
the Internet, with no sales staff and no retail outlets.
Action Idea: If you do not have your own
name registered as your domain, do it this week. If you do not have
your own web site, do something this week to initiate this process.
If you have your own website, do something to make it more valuable
to visitors this week. What kind of free content can you add to your
website that will increase new visitors who leave their e-mail
addresses.
Credit Statement to be Included in Reprints
Reproduced with permission from Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine. To subscribe to
Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine, go to www.deniswaitley.com
or send an email with Join in the subject to
subscribe@deniswaitley.com Copyright © 2005 Denis Waitley International. All rights
reserved worldwide. back
Be Responsible For Your Own Financial Secutiry by Denis Waitley
There is no job security. You can’t rely on
staying with the same company through retirement. Pension plans,
when available, are woefully inadequate. Social security benefits
won’t come close to covering your living expenses in retirement.
The only way to reach financial security is
to plan for it now, regardless of your age. You have to define
financial security in your own terms. Have you defined the amount of
assets that you need for financial independence?
Financial security is that amount of assets
that will give you a specific income, after taxes, to live like you
want to, without having to depend on day-to-day employment.
What is that amount for you? I believe it is
more than you think. And, I feel that if you define it, you can
reach it in ten years or less. Do you have a financial plan and the
assistance of a financial planner? You need both. Always retain a
financial planner on a fee-for-service basis. Don’t mix financial
planning with an investment broker or insurance agent. What are your
financial goals and what is your time line? Because I started late
in my quest for financial independence, I have a maximum five-year
period remaining for capital accumulation.
Action Idea: Wealth is not only based on
income, but also on expenditures. Are you spending or investing?
Are your purchases goal-achieving or tension-relieving? How do you
use credit cards? Use your credit cards for services or purchases
that retain their value or that build your business. Don’t use
credit cards for vacations and personal entertainment, unless you
plan to pay the entire balance in one or two months. Try to pay all
your balances in full monthly. In this way, you avoid the
ridiculously high interest payments. Realize that paying minimum
balances, at high interest rates, means that you are paying two or
three times what the original purchase was worth.
Most importantly, save at least 6 to 10
percent of your take-home pay each month, by writing a check into a
savings account or mutual fund for that amount, as if it were a
utility bill or house payment. The secret of most self-made
multi-millionaires is compound interest. If parents saved one dollar
each day for their newborn infant, by going without a cup of
Starbuck’s coffee, or a Big Mac, or a soft drink for that day, by
the time the child reached age forty, he or she would have a million
dollars cash. No lottery windfall. No brilliant investment strategy.
Just compound interest, which Baron von Rothchild labeled "The
Eighth Wonder of the World."
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Start Living in Prime Time by Denis Waitley
Prime time is that period between 6 and 10
p.m. during which most of the general public watches television.
Commercials in prime time are the most expensive, approaching a
million dollars per minute. Your real success in life will take a
quantum leap when you stop watching other people making money in
their professions performing in prime time, and start living your
own dreams and goals in prime time. Time is the ultimate equal
opportunity employer. Time never stops to rest, never hesitates,
never looks forward or backward. Life’s raw material spends itself
in the now, this moment, which is why how you spend your time is far
more important than all the material possessions you may own or
positions you may obtain. Positions change, possessions come and go,
you can earn more money. You can renew your supply of many things,
but like good health, that other most precious resource, time spent
is gone forever.
Each yesterday, and all of them together,
are beyond your control. Literally all the money in the world can’t
undo or redo a single act you performed. You cannot erase a single
word you said. You can’t add an "I love you," "I’m sorry", or
"I
forgive you", not even a "thank you" you forgot to say. Each human
being in every hemisphere and time zone has precisely 168 hours a
week to spend. And some of the most precious hours occur in prime
time.
Consider this: most of your daytime hours
are spent helping other people solve their problems. The little time
you have in the evenings and on weekends is all you have to spend on
yourself, on your own dreams and goals, and personal development.
Some thoughts to ponder:
· Have supper with your loved ones at least
two to three times per week. It’s the best time for casual
conversation to listen to what those close to you feel is important
in their lives. Mealtime is a time to dialogue.
· A television set is an appliance. It
should be used, at most, for two hours at a time. It should be off,
unless specific programs of interest are selected. It should not be
used as a one-eyed baby sitter. For the most part, TV exposes us to
negative role models.
· Instead of watching television why not
read a good fiction or non-fiction book, write a letter, engage in a
hobby or craft, call a friend or someone in need of encouragement on
the phone, network on your computer, go out to an ethnic restaurant,
a home show, an entrepreneurial show, a musical recital, a play, a
fitness class, or cultural event. Take an art or photography class.
Use prime time to live the kind of life others put on layaway.
Action Idea: If you and your family/friends
watch TV, try not turning it on for one week. When you do watch TV,
reduce by 50% the amount of time you spend watching it. Concentrate
your evenings and free time engaged in hands on, real life
experiences, you can touch, feel, smell and engage all your senses
in. Instead of virtual reality, insist on the real thing.
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Balance Your Workload With a
Generous Number of Mini-Vacations for Maximum Productivity by Denis Waitley
By re-energizing and renewing yourself
frequently, you will avoid burnout and become much more motivated
and productive. Don’t keep your nose to the grindstone for years
and wait for retirement to travel. Balance and consistency are the
keys. Enjoy the process, not just the result. Don’t fight the
passing of time. Don’t fear it, squander it, or try to hide from it
under a superficial cosmetic veil of fads and indulgences. Life and
time go together. Do enjoy each phase of life. Do make the most of
each day, and draw maximum joy from each moment.
Many people today are concerned with quality
time – time generally defined in part as that spent on recreation,
personal pursuits, time with children, spouses and friends. While I
certainly believe quality time is important, I believe two other
aspects of time are equally important.
First, one must also spend quantity time.
The average father spends less than 30 minutes each week in direct
one-on-one communication with each of his children. How can we
possibly expect good family relationships with so little
communication?
Second, one must spend regular time. Many
supervisors and company presidents go for weeks, even months,
without seeing many of their employees. There’s no substitute for
regular meetings and open forums in which managers and team members
can share ideas.
Time has a dual structure. On one hand, we
live our daily routines meeting present contingencies as they arise.
On the other hand, our most ambitious goals and desires need time so
that they can be assembled and cemented. A long-term goal connects
pieces of time into one block. These blocks can be imagined and
projected into the future as we do when we set goals for ourselves.
Or, these blocks of time can be created in retrospect as we do when
we look back at what we’ve accomplished.
It’s not in the image of our big dreams that
we run the risk of losing our focus and motivation. It’s the
drudgery and routine of our daily lives that present the greatest
danger to our hopes for achievement. Good time management means that
you maximize the daily return on the energy and mental effort you
expend.
Ways to maximize your time productivity:
· Write down in one place all the important
contacts you have and all of your goals and priorities. Make a back
up copy, preferably on CD, DVD or Zip disc. Write down every
commitment you make at the time you make it.
· Stop wasting the first hour of your
workday. Having the chat and first cup of coffee, reading the paper,
and socializing are the three costliest opening exercises that lower
productivity.
· Do one thing well at a time. It takes
time to start and stop work on each activity. Stay with a task until
it is completed.
· Don’t open unimportant mail. More than a
fourth of the mail you receive can be tossed before you open or read
it, and that includes e-mail.
· Handle each piece of paper only once and
never more than twice. Don’t set aside anything without taking
action. Carry work, reading material, audiotapes and your laptop
computer with you everywhere you go. Convert down time into uplink
time.
· Spend twenty minutes at the beginning of
each week and ten minutes at the beginning of each day planning your
to do list.
· Set aside personal relaxation time during
the day. Don’t work during lunch. It’s neither noble nor nutritional
to skip important energy input and stress-relieving time. Throughout
the day, ask yourself, "What’s the best use of my time right now?"
As the day grows short, focus on projects you can least afford to
leave undone.
· And as we said at the beginning of this
message, take vacations often, mini-vacations of two or three days,
and leave your work at home. The harder you work, the more you need
to balance your exercise and leisure time.
Action Idea: Plan a relaxing 3-day vacation
within the next three months without taking any business work with
you. Reserve it on your calendar this week.
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Model Yourself After the Best Individuals, Who
Have Proven Their Success Over Time by Denis Waitley
Do this by benchmarking the world’s most
admired organizations and people in and out of your industry.
Hewlett-Packard sends teams of two to four managers to meet with
peers in other companies. After exchanging ideas about leadership
and organizational practices, the benchmarking teams exchange
comments. If you want to become or stay the best, you must know more
than what your competitors are up to.
You must know the best business practices,
wherever they exist. It’s a good idea to read business magazines to
keep current on what the real movers and shakers are doing globally.
Action Idea: This month, read a biography of
someone you admire who has overcome great hurdles to become
successful. When you learn what many of them had to endure, you are
less overwhelmed by the obstacles you face. Every hardship you face
has been endured and conquered by someone before you.
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Set
Up a Learning Resource at Home and at Your Place of Business With
Both Personal and Professional Development Materials by Denis Waitley
Every office conference, lunch, exercise,
and recreation room should be filled with personal enrichment
materials including videos, audios, books, magazines, newsletters,
and software.
Convert a special area of your home into a
learning center, especially if you have children. The trend globally
is to combine coffee house like Starbucks, with bookstores like
Barnes and Noble, to create a relaxing learning environment. In the
twenty-first century, gaining knowledge will blend into our lives as
part of our leisure time. There are several ways to create more of
an ongoing learning environment at your place of business. Many
companies are asking employees to volunteer to read a specific trade
or business magazine and clip or scan articles relevant to the
organization. Regular e-mail dispersal and fax dispersal are also
popular. I also have been participating in a variety of live
Internet conferences, including questions and answers from all over
the world.
In today’s fast-forward, knowledge-based
world, if you’re not moving ahead you are falling behind.
Action Idea: Make two files in your
computer: one for personal development and one for professional
development. Download articles and e-mails that educate and inspire
you in these files. You also can scan articles from magazines into
these files. Look at these files at least once per week.
Credit Statement to be Included in Reprints
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Be a
Person Who Practices Non-Situational Integrity by Denis Waitley
Be a Person Who Practices Non-Situational
Integrity. Integrity, a standard of personal morality and ethics, is
not relative to the situation you happen to find yourself in and
doesn’t sell out to expediency. Its short supply is getting even
shorter, but without it, leadership is a façade. Learning to see
through exteriors is a critical development in the transition from
adolescence to adulthood. Sadly, most people continue to be taken in
by big talk and media popularity, flashy or bizarre looks, and
expensive possessions. They move through most of their years
convinced that the externals are what count, and are thus doomed to
live shallow lives. Men and women who rely on their looks or status
to feel good about themselves inevitably do everything they can to
enhance the impression they make – and do correspondingly little to
develop their inner value and personal growth. The paradox is that
the people who try hardest to impress are often the least
impressive. Puffing to appear powerful is an attempt to hide
insecurity.
In the Roman Empires’ final corrupt years,
status was conveyed by the number of carved statues of the gods
displayed in people’s courtyards. As in every business, the Roman
statue industry had good and bad sculptors and merchants. As the
empire became ever more greedy and narcissistic, the bad got away
with as much as they could. Sculptors became adept at using wax to
hide cracks and chips in marble and most people couldn’t discern the
difference in quality.
Statues began to weep or melt under the
scrutiny of sunlight or heat in foyers. For statues of authentic
fine quality, carved by reputable artists, people had to go to the
artisan marketplace in the Roman Quad and look for booths with signs
declaring sine cera, which translates in English to mean, without
wax. We, too, look for the real thing in friends, products, and
services. In people, we value sincerity, from the words, sine cera,
more than almost any other virtue. We expect it from our leaders,
which we are not getting in our political, media, business and
sports’ heroes for the most part. We must demand it of ourselves.
Integrity that strengthens an inner value
system is the real human bottom line. Commitment to a life of
integrity in every situation demonstrates that your word is more
valuable than a surety bond. It means you don’t base your decisions
on being politically correct. You do what’s right, not fashionable.
You know that truth is absolute, not a device for manipulating
others. And you win in the long run, when the stakes are highest. If
I were writing a single commandment for leadership it would be, "You
shall conduct yourself in such a manner as to set an example worthy
of imitation by your children and subordinates." In simpler terms,
if they shouldn’t be doing it, neither should you. I told my kids,
"clean up your room," and they inspected the condition of my garage.
I told them that honesty was our family’s greatest virtue, and they
commented on the radar detector I had installed in my car. When I
told them about the vices of drinking and wild parties, they watched
from the upstairs balcony, the way our guests behaved at our adult
functions.
It’s too bad some of our political and
business leaders don’t understand that "What you are speaks so
loudly that no one really pays attention to what you say." But it is
even more true that if what you are matches what you say, your life
will speak forcefully indeed.
It’s hardly a secret that learning ethical
standards begins at home. A child’s first inklings of a sense of
right and wrong come from almost imperceptible signals received long
before he or she reaches the age of rational thought about morality.
Maybe you’re asking yourself what kind of model you are for future
generations, remembering that people are either honest or dishonest,
that integrity is all or nothing, and that children can’t be fooled
in such basic matters. They learn by example.
To remind myself of my responsibility to
live without wax, with sincerity and integrity, I took the liberty
of re-writing Edgar A. Guest’s poem, "Sermons We See" to apply to
setting an example as a real winner for my children and
grandchildren.
I'd rather watch a winner, than hear one
any day.
I'd rather have one walk with me, than merely show the way.
The eye's a better pupil and more willing than the ear.
Fine counsel is confusing, but example's always clear.
And the best of all the coaches are the ones who live their
deeds.
For to see the truth in action is what everybody needs.
I can soon learn how to do it, if you'll let me see it done.
I can watch your hands in action, but your tongue too fast
may run.
And the lectures you deliver may be very wise and true.
But, I'd rather get my lessons by observing what you do.
For I may misunderstand you and the high advice you give.
But there's no misunderstanding how you act and how you
live.
I'd rather watch a winner, than hear one any day.
Hey, politician, business leader, motion
picture producer, television actor, rock star, sports star. Hey
mom, hey dad. Don’t tell me how to live. Show me by your actions.
You’re my role models.
Action Idea: When you talk to others,
beginning right now, don’t try to impress them by talking about your
accomplishments. Let your actions speak for you. Ask more questions.
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The
Most Important Meetings You’ll Ever Attend Are the Meetings You Have
With Yourself by Denis Waitley
You are your most important critic. There is
no opinion so vitally important to your well being as the opinion
you have of yourself. As you read this you’re talking to yourself
right now. "Let’s see if I understand what he means by that… How
does that compare with my experiences? – I’ll make note of that –
try that tomorrow – I already knew that…I already do that." I
believe this self-talk, this psycholinguistics or language of the
mind can be controlled to work for us, especially in the building of
self-confidence and creativity. We’re all talking to ourselves every
moment of our lives, except during certain portions of our sleeping
cycle. We’re seldom even aware that we’re doing it. We all have a
running commentary in our heads on events and our reactions to them.
· Be aware of the silent conversation you
have with yourself. Are you a nurturing coach or a critic? Do you
reinforce your own success or negate it? Are you comfortable saying
to yourself, "That’s more like it". "Now we’re in the
groove." "Things are working out well." "I am reaching my financial
goals." "I’ll do it better next time."
· When winners fail, they view it as a
temporary inconvenience, a learning experience, an isolated event,
and a stepping-stone instead of a stumbling block.
· When winners succeed, they reinforce that
success, by feeling rewarded rather than guilty about the
achievement and the applause.
· When winners are paid a compliment, they
simply respond: "Thank you." They accept value graciously when it is
paid. They pay value in their conversations with themselves and with
other people.
A mark of an individual with healthy
self-esteem is the ability to spend time alone, without constantly
needing other people around. Being comfortable and enjoying solitary
time reveals inner peace and centering. People who constantly need
stimulation or conversation with others are often a bit insecure and
thus need to be propped up by the company of others.
Always greet the people you meet with a
smile. When introducing yourself in any new association, take the
initiative to volunteer your own name first, clearly; and always
extend your hand first, looking the person in the eyes when you
speak.
In your telephone communications at work or
at home, answer the telephone pleasantly, immediately giving your
own name to the caller, before you ask who’s calling. Whenever you
initiate a call, always give your own name up front, before you ask
for the party you want and before you state your business. Leading
with your own name underscores that a person of value is making the
call.
Don’t brag. People who trumpet their
exploits and shout for service are actually calling for help. The
showoffs, braggarts and blowhards are desperate for attention.
Don’t tell your problems to people, unless
they’re directly involved with the solutions. And don’t make
excuses. Successful people seek those who look and sound like
success. Always talk affirmatively about the progress you are trying
to make.
As we said earlier, find successful role
models after whom you can pattern yourself. When you meet a
mastermind, become a master mime, and learn all you can about how he
or she succeeded. This is especially true with things you fear. Find
someone who has conquered what you fear and learn from him or her.
When you make a mistake in life, or get
ridiculed or rejected, look at mistakes as detours on the road to
success, and view ridicule as ignorance. After a rejection, take a
look at your BAG. B is for Blessings. Things you are endowed with
that you often take for granted like life itself, health, living in
an abundant country, family, friends, career. A is for
accomplishments. Think of the many things you are proud of that you
have done so far. And G is for Goals. Think of your big dreams and
plans for the future that motivate you. If you took your BAG –
blessings, accomplishments and goals – to a party, and spread them
on the floor, in comparison to all your friends and the people you
admire, you’d take your own bag home, realizing that you have as
much going for yourself as anyone else. Always view rejection as
part of one performance, not as a turndown of the performer.
And, enjoy those special meetings with
yourself. Spend this Saturday doing something you really want to do.
I don’t mean next month or someday. This Saturday enjoy being alive
and being able to do it. You deserve it. There will never be another
you. This Saturday will be spent. Why not spend at least one day a
week on You!
Action Idea: Go for one entire day and night
without saying anything negative to yourself or to others. Make a
game of it. If a friend or colleague catches you saying something
negative, you must put ˝ dollar in a drawer or container toward a
dinner or evening out with that person. Do this for one month and
see who has had to pay the most money toward the evening.
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reserved worldwide. back
Balance High-Tech, With a High-Touch Environment by Denis Waitley
You must think like a high-tech research
firm, and act like a high-touch service firm to succeed in the
borderless, global economy. The investment in human capital, the
primacy of people, may be the most important consideration in
networking for the future. Some managements that are reengineering
their organizations and workforces are swerving off course with a
belief that their first priority must be to install high-tech
information systems. As they see it, this is doing first things
first in the difficult adaptation to the new global competition. In
fact, the most important reengineering may have more to do with
people than systems – or, to put it another way, the transformation
may have to be more cultural than technological. Millions of dollars
have been wasted on costly MIS (management information systems) and
hardware before discovering that human capital needs must precede
high-tech needs.
I’m not suggesting that new systems, in
particular information systems, are anything less than utterly
essential.
It would be fatal to believe that by being a
warm, high-touch, customer-focused firm or individual, you can avoid
the investment in technology that offers access to the global
information network. It may amuse you or please you that your
grade-school children tend to be far more comfortable and skillful
than you, their parents, with the computer and with the Internet.
More to the point, nearly all school
children in the developing Asian nations – at least, so far, in the
major cities – are becoming truly computer literate. This is so
central a determinant of who will succeed in the future that to fall
behind is like being sentenced to travel via freight train in the
age of orbital space travel. Successful firms and individuals must
be on the cutting edge of technological and human skills. You must
have both. Heaven help you if you’re a techie who believes that
being high-tech is enough to put you in touch with the world; that
electronic wizardry alone will somehow provide the necessary
customer satisfaction. That will get you run right over on the
information superhighway. The Asian countries clearly recognize the
need to blend touch with technology.
As one of America’s most frequent flyers and
travelers, I see a great contrast between customer service in the
United States and other Western societies, and in Asia. I can no
longer count the number of times I have missed my flight connections
in the United States due solely to the lack of sensitivity and
conscientiousness on the part of airline staff to cater more to the
needs of connecting passengers.
If performance bonuses were tied to on-time
departures and excellent service, I feel there would be a marked
improvement.
I also can’t count the number of times when
I’ve traveled for most of a day or night, arrived at a crowded
lobby, and waited in line for over twenty-five minutes only to be
told that a convention had caused some unfortunate overbooking. But
if I’d waited another half-hour or so, a shuttle bus would take me
and the others to an overflow hotel which was no more than another
half-hour away.
For comparison, I could pick virtually any
Asian hotel of any standing, but one that comes to mind is my
experience with Stanley Yen and Taiwan’s Ritz Hotel some years ago.
To ensure that my stay would be comfortable, he sent me a
customer-focused questionnaire several weeks in advance. Did I
prefer king, queen or two beds? Down or regular pillows? Soft or
medium firm? Would I require a computer, fax or VCR? What beverages
would I like in my minibar? Nothing was left to chance. When we
arrived at the Taipei airport, three Mercedes limousines pulled up
in front of the baggage claim area. The driver of the first was in a
tuxedo, complete with a top hat. He jumped out, ran to the baggage
carousel, spotted the gold plated bag tags the hotel had sent us in
advance to identify our luggage, and retrieved our bags. With a beam
and a bow, he said, "Welcome to the Ritz Hotel, Denis Waitley and
family."
The driver radioed the hotel indicating each
of our names and where we were seated in the cars, one car for the
luggage and two for the passengers. The general manager was at the
door of the hotel when we arrived. He greeted us by name as we left
the limos, then escorted us through the lobby directly to the
elevators. I asked about checking in. He smiled and said, "We have
been expecting you, and we knew you would be tired from your
travels," and therefore all registration would be handled by a
simple credit card imprint after we were in our rooms. Our shoes
were shined, luggage repaired, buttons sewed on…the response to
everything was, "Can do, no problem."
This is the economic battlefield of the 21st
Century in miniature. There is more high-rise construction in
Shanghai, China, than in any other city in the world.
Government-owned Singapore Airlines, rated continually at the top in
customer service, is also a training institute for top executives,
who learn how flight stewards and stewardesses, the most skillful in
the business, cater to passenger customers. After our every sip of
water in a Hong Kong restaurant, our glasses were refilled to the
rim. My family and I noticed that every waiter and waitress seemed
like little radar stations, searching for where service would next
be needed. Our young waiter, who was computer literate and totally
bilingual, was working his way through college and planning to
finish his study of finance at Stanford University. When he refilled
our glasses yet again, we asked him why the service was so good. He
replied, "Because there are hundreds of thousands waiting to take
our jobs. If we don’t refill your glasses every time, someone else
is ready and willing to do it." This is why we must all be high-tech
and high-touch.
From Taiwan to Malaysia, from Brazil to
Mexico, from India to Eastern Europe, the new competitors are hungry
immigrants with cell phones and laptops, willing to stay late, and
doing anything necessary to get a seat at our banquet table.
Action Idea: In your business, what is one
thing you can suggest that will improve the customer service of your
organization?
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reserved worldwide. back
Institute a More Dynamic, Proactive System for Getting Back to
People by Denis Waitley
Consider the following:
· When you receive a letter, write a short
response in the margin of the letter and either fax or mail it back,
within minutes after reading it.
· If it requires further action, set up a
time-based suspense file. If the person has an e-mail address on the
letterhead, e-mail an answer.
· Pick specific times to read and answer
mail and e-mail. Answer all e-mails within 48 hours. If you can’t
respond that soon, send a brief e-mail "will respond as soon as
current commitments allow." Read mail when phone calls are not
appropriate to make or receive. Mail is best read late at night or
early in the morning. Make important outgoing calls first thing in
the morning. Take non-critical incoming calls, after screening, in
the afternoon or early evening.
· Use more handwritten notes. In the age of
fax and e-mail, a note in your own handwriting signifies your
special interest in that person.
· Make generous use of the free electronic
greeting cards on bluemountain.com. There is a salutation for nearly
every occasion on that website. I send at least two musical cards
per week.
· Use a specific color on your e-mail that
is distinctive and easy to read. Also, consider adding your photo to
your e-mail and also using the new voice e-mail now available
online.
· As we mentioned earlier, consider sending
compatible Internet telephone software to someone important to you
in a distant city or another country, so you can communicate often
by phone, without paying long distance charges.
And, perhaps most important in the
communication process, when you have procrastinated getting back to
someone, or you feel someone has slighted you, or that you have
offended someone…please take the initiative and make the call.
I have learned through the years that the
greatest communication problems occur when no communication takes
place. One of Parkinson’s most important laws is that; "The lack of
communication creates a void that is quickly filled with doubt,
fear, anxiety, poison and innuendo." Always be first to forgive.
Always be willing to listen. Always be willing to make the call that
everyone else is afraid to make. You’ll regret what you didn’t say
or do much more than the things you did.
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Live
By the Motto That Repeat Business and Profitability are Directly
Related to Relationships Based on Trust by Denis Waitley
You never close a sale. You only begin a
long-term relationship where both parties win.
Can you think of a successful relationship
without mutual trust? Break that trust and you break the
relationship. Subvert it and it’s almost impossible to put together
again. Creating a long-term relationship takes two or more people –
whether they’re executives, representatives of labor and management,
or husband and wife – who are grounded in and operating on the same
non-situational honesty.
The central secret of good communication is
bringing the other person over to your side by satisfying one of
every person’s most fundamental emotional needs: Make him or her
feel valued. With rare exceptions, people who feel valued – who are
allowed to feel important in the sense that they are recognized –
answer with openness, cooperation and reciprocated respect. If you
want respect, be respectable. If you want to be loved, be loveable.
If you want to be trusted, be trustworthy. If you want a life-long
relationship, listen openly to the other person’s needs. Much more
than trying to accumulate money and power, leaders in the new era
will acquire good will by helping their associates, customers,
neighbors, and loved ones to win. Instead of what can you do for me,
we need to embrace the new stewardship role of what can I do for
you.
Action Idea – At the beginning of each
workday, do something special for someone you work with or provide a
service for. At the end of each day, say or do something positive
for a family member or friend.
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Be
Committed to Keeping Your Personal and Professional Life in Balance by Denis Waitley
It is so important to be living in prime
time, rather than watching TV in prime time. On your way to success
make certain you grow friendships, not just bank and mutual fund
accounts. Life is a collection of memories, not of material things.
The Egyptian pharaohs were buried with all their treasures, and were
mummified in hopes that they could enjoy their bounty in the next
life. But we are only caretakers of possessions. There is a big
difference between standard of living and quality of life. Standard
of living is based on income earned. Quality of life is the
enjoyment of the millions of minutes in between accomplishments.
Having money is only one aspect of wealth.
To the sick person, wealth is health. To the lonely person, wealth
is someone to talk to and share with. To the estranged person,
wealth is hearing words of love and forgiveness.
Borrowing the free verse style from Brother
Jeremiah’s classic poem, I’d Pick More Daisies, here are a few
things I’d do, the second time around.
I’d laugh at my misfortunes more. Spend more
time counting my blessings than my blemishes. Spend more time
playing with my children and grandchildren and less time watching
performers in the arena. More time enjoying what I have, less time
thinking about the things I don’t have. If I could live my life
again, I’d walk in the rain more without an umbrella and listen less
to weather reports. I’d spend more time looking at trees and
climbing them, less time flipping through magazines made from dead
trees. I’d spend more time fully involved in the present moment,
less time remembering and anticipating. I’d smile more, frown less.
And most of all I’d be more spontaneous and
active, less hesitant and subdued. When some spur of the moment idea
came up to go hiking, playing Frisbee, coloring Easter eggs, singing
in a chorus, going kayaking, or watching an eclipse, I’d be less
likely to sit in my chair objecting, "It’s not in our plan."
I’d be inclined to jump up and run out the
door next time and say, "Yes, we can!" Although I can’t live my life
again, I’m still going to live the new way every day any way. I’ll
never have all the moments I’ve missed, but I do have all the time
remaining.
Action Idea – Choose one activity this month
that you really want to engage in, but that you have been putting
off because it isn’t a priority. Schedule that activity in your
planner, as if it were a "must do" business or financial commitment.
When you have done it, while you are still feeling good, schedule
one for next month, and do it as long as you live.
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Create Your Own Mission Statement for Your Personal and Professional
Life by Denis Waitley
Two of life’s greatest tragedies are: Never
to have had a great mission in life, and to have fully reached it so
there is no challenge remaining.
Are you going where you want to go, doing
what you want to do, and becoming who you want to become? These are
the questions we must ask ourselves. Set some quiet time aside after
you have finished this program and see the two you’s in the mirror
of your mind:
1. There is the reflection of the person you
are today.
2. There is the image of who you will be in
the future.
Looking at my own life, I am incredibly
different in many respects from the person I was ten years ago.
As you reflect on your past and anticipate
the future, understand that virtually nothing you have experienced
has been wasted. It all blends together into wisdom and knowledge,
and creates your own unique brand of cultural diversity.
Action Idea: In your professional life, what
is most important for you to achieve in the remainder of career? In
your personal life, what is most important for you to achieve in the
remainder of your life? Find a close friend or associate you trust
and network with often, and challenge each other to continuously
strive to reach these objectives.
As you consider your mission in life, you
may want to use this final action step, Number Twenty-one, as your
guidepost for the 21st Century: Chase Your Passion, Not Your
Pension. Passion in your purpose will help you take control of your
life, and also give you one other advantage that is not widely
recognized: About ten more years of life, on average. Pursuit of a
goal wears out very few people. But they rust out by the hundreds of
thousands when their pursuit of happiness turns into a geriatric
park. A job is something you do for money. A career is something you
do because you have an inner calling to do it. You want to do it.
You love doing it. You’re excited when you do it. And you’d do it
even if you were paid nothing beyond food and the basics. You’d do
it because it’s your life.
Be inspired to learn as much as you can,
gain skills as much as you can, to find a cause that benefits
humankind and you’ll be sought after for your quality of service and
dedication to excellence. My nephew and niece, David and Heidi, at
the ages of 30, had three little girls 7, 5 and 2. On an anniversary
some years ago, they went out dancing and the margarita she had must
have been one powerful fertility drug. She became pregnant that
night, and with no incidence of multiple births in our family, eight
months later, she delivered quadruplet girls, prematurely. I hurried
down to the Children’s Hospital in San Diego to get a photo
opportunity and possible media coverage as "Uncle Denis of the
Waitley Quads." They told me to stand in the corner, saying I hadn’t
contributed anything. The TV anchorwoman asked my niece Heidi how
she felt. She said, "I feel a little tired. We’re going to need a
new car." They turned to my nephew David, whose eyes looked like
burnt corks. "David, as the father, how does it feel to have seven
little girls under the age of seven?" David replied, "We’re not
going to need a new car, we’re never going anywhere again." But
that’s not the point of the story. In addition to seeing them as
wonderful parents devoted to their seven little girls, my attention
was focused on the neo-natal nurses caring for the newborn
quadruplets, weighing between a pound and a half to two and a half
pounds. Caring passionately for them like little birds in nests.
Oblivious of quitting time. Not hearing the lunch bell at noon.
Doing what they loved. Involved in helping improve the quality of
life. We all can’t be Tiger Woods, or Barbra Streisand, or Jonas
Salk. But we can chase our passion, not our pension. You’ll always
do well, what you love most. That’s the essence of all that you’ve
experienced in this program.
Action Idea: If you had the time and
circumstances allowed, what is one of your most passionate desires
in life you would like to pursue? It could be a new business idea,
music, action, sports, or community service. Starting tomorrow,
chase that passion a little bit at a time.
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Self-Knowledge,
The Key to Preparing for Competition by Denis Waitley
Self-knowledge has always been the key to
preparing for competition. Knowledge of your attributes, abilities,
interests, strengths, weaknesses, and traits is essential to riding
the front end of the wave of change into the new century. To fully
assess your own talents, realize that studies confirm that what we
love and do well as children continues as our latent or manifest
talent as adults.
Examination of your weekend or evening
interests might reveal a gem of potential you can apply to your
vocation. I strongly suggest you don’t unthinkingly relegate what
you love to do for yourself solely to hobbies. You might make it, or
at least integrate it into your life’s work.
The acquisition of knowledge, which is the
new global power, is a life-long experience, not a collection of
facts or skills. Not long ago, what you learned in school was
largely all you needed to learn to secure a career. With knowledge
expanding exponentially, this is no longer true. Hundreds of
scientific papers are published daily.
Every thirty seconds, some new technological
company produces yet another innovation. Your formal education has a
very short shelf life. Life-long learning, once a luxury for the
few, has become absolutely vital to continued success. Continue
gaining expertise and avoid thinking like an expert.
Action Idea: An excellent benchmarking
exercise is to spend a weekend with key associates or family members
and dust off your childhood memories. Remember what you really
enjoyed and wanted to do most as a child. The next activity in
assessing your interests is considering your current ones. What do
you most enjoy after work? What do you most want to do on weekends
and vacations? What are your hobbies? Can you bring more of what you
enjoy into your business life?
Action Step - Increase Your Reading, Writing
and Vocabulary Proficiency. One of the most important qualities of
successful leaders is an ability to express thoughts and knowledge.
Research by management and human resource experts confirms that no
matter what the field of employment, people with large vocabularies
- those able to speak clearly and concisely, using simple as well as
descriptive words - are best at accomplishing their goals. Well
chosen, carefully considered words can close the sale, negotiate the
raise, enhance relationships, and change destinies.
In a world of e-mail, fax dispersal, voice
mail, sound bites, concise reports, business plans, and meeting
briefs, the individuals who can articulate their goals, substantiate
their claims, and support their visions, will own the future. In the
21st Century, literacy will be the major difference between the
haves and have-nots.
Why do fewer than 10 percent of the public
buy and read nonfiction books? One reason is that many would rather
get home than get ahead. They are motivated to get by and get pulled
along by the company, the economy, or the government.
Another reason is that many individuals
believe that information found in books, computer programs, and
training sessions has no value in the business world. How
self-deluding!
As the new tools of productivity become the
Internet, the Digital Versatile Disc, direct digital download of
text, audio and video, and the combination of the interactive
computer with telecommunications, the people who know how to control
the new technologies will acquire power, while those who thought
that education ends with the diploma are destined for low-paying,
low-satisfaction jobs. In almost the blink of an eye, our society
has passed from the industrial age to the knowledge era.
Increase your reading by 100 percent.
Decrease your television watching, and that of any children in your
family by 50 percent. Surf the Internet and subscribe to book
summaries, or download free chapters from different sources. By
reading book summaries, you can gain the essence of all the top
business books in a very brief period of time.
Action Idea: Read at least one book each
month, and listen to at least one additional audio book or education
series during commute or down time.
Knowledge is the new power. And literacy is
the door to knowledge. Hopefully, listening to the "Psychology of
Winning" program will be one of the keys that will open the door to
your future for you.
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Overflowing Buckets of Wealth by Denis Waitley
With a little discipline and patience, you can make your journey to
abundance and personal fulfillment a downhill flow instead of an
uphill struggle. The key is to use the "overflowing buckets" concept
of creating financial independence.
Picture your life as a five-step stairway, with you standing at the
top and Fulfillment waiting for you at the bottom. Complete this
picture by placing a large, empty bucket on each of the five steps
and labeling the buckets from top to bottom:
Survival, Financial Stability, Quality of Life, Financial Security,
Financial Independence.
Your objective is to fill each bucket with dollars as you progress
down the stairway, so that when one bucket overflows, it begins to
fill the next bucket.
The Survival bucket is how you can pay for your basic needs of food
and shelter. Once you’ve taken care of these, any extra money flows
into the second bucket, which is Financial Stability. Financial
stability is the ability to keep solvent in the event of sudden,
unforeseen changes and emergencies in your life – insurance against
catastrophic loss.
To be financially stable, you must have an emergency fund in a
savings account equal to a minimum of three month’s income, and
preferably six months’ income. You also must have adequate permanent
and transferable medical insurance that remains in force, regardless
of your employment status, as well as life insurance, including some
whole life, in addition to term, that accumulates cash value and has
a level premium
Another critical component of financial stability is non-cancelable,
individual permanent disability income insurance, equal to at least
70 percent of your monthly pay, but preferably 100 percent. One of
the greatest financial blunders most people make is to forget that
the possibility of loss of income resulting from an injury or
illness is much greater than that of loss of life. Not only are you
without income when you are sick or injured, you also do need to be
cared for during that period, and the expenses continue even though
you’re not able to work.
When bucket two is filled with contingency dollars for your
financial stability, you can sit down with your inner circle and
determine what standard of living will give you the quality of life
you want: your home, family, education, recreation, possessions,
etc. These considerations should be budgeted with a monthly amount
of savings, however small.
If you can fill your Quality of Life bucket, a little extra
discretionary income will trickle over the lip and fall into bucket
four. This is the Financial Security bucket. Financial security is
defined as the amount of assets that will give you the amount of
after-tax income you need to maintain the standard of living
necessary to have the quality of life you want, at some
predetermined point into the future, without having to depend upon
day-to-day employment. Less than 10 percent of Americans ever fill this bucket. Your goal
is to be in this 10 percent. It is not based on salary. Many
individuals in the top income brackets never reach financial
security. Many middle-income Americans do. To get in the top 10
percent, you need to put 10 percent of your spendable into an
appreciating investment fund every month, just like a mortgage
payment.
The fifth and final bucket is Financial Independence. This is
achieved when you beat the target date you set for retirement. The
object of creating personal assets is to be financially independent
of having to work, while you still have your health and are still
young enough to enjoy those assets. Many individuals set their
financial security target date at age 65. Using compound interest
over time, you can beat your target date and set yourself free.
See your life as a stairway to fulfillment. Put your dollars in the
right buckets, in the right order. You’ll be amazed at the way cash
flows from bucket to bucket, like a river down a mountain.
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Six Behaviors that
Increase Self-Esteem by Denis Waitley (excerpted from The Psychology of Motivation)
Following are
six behaviors that increase self-esteem, enhance your
self-confidence, and spur your motivation. You may recognize some of
them as things you naturally do in your interactions with other
people. But if you don’t, I suggest you motivate yourself to take
some of these important steps immediately.
First, greet
others with a smile and look them directly in the eye. A smile and
direct eye contact convey confidence born of self-respect. In the
same way, answer the phone pleasantly whether at work or at home,
and when placing a call, give your name before asking to speak to
the party you want to reach. Leading with your name underscores that
a person with self-respect is making the call.
Second, always
show real appreciation for a gift or complement. Don’t downplay or
sidestep expressions of affection or honor from others. The ability
to accept or receive is a universal mark of an individual with solid
self-esteem.
Third, don’t
brag. It’s almost a paradox that genuine modesty is actually part of
the capacity to gracefully receive compliments. People who brag
about their own exploits or demand special attention are simply
trying to build themselves up in the eyes of others — and that’s
because they don’t perceive themselves as already worthy of respect.
Fourth, don’t
make your problems the centerpiece of your conversation. Talk
positively about your life and the progress you’re trying to make.
Be aware of any negative thinking, and take notice of how often you
complain. When you hear yourself criticize someone — and this
includes self-criticism — find a way to be helpful instead of
critical.
Fifth, respond
to difficult times or depressing moments by increasing your level of
productive activity. When your self-esteem is being challenged,
don’t sit around and fall victim to "paralysis by analysis." The
late Malcolm Forbes said, "Vehicles in motion use their generators
to charge their own batteries. Unless you happen to be a golf cart,
you can’t recharge your battery when you’re parked in the garage!"
Sixth, choose
to see mistakes and rejections as opportunities to learn. View a
failure as the conclusion of one performance, not the end of your
entire career. Own up to your shortcomings, but refuse to see
yourself as a failure. A failure may be something you have done —
and it may even be something you’ll have to do again on the way to
success — but a failure is definitely not something you are.
Even if you’re
at a point where you’re feeling very negatively about yourself, be
aware that you’re now ideally positioned to make rapid and dramatic
improvement. A negative self-evaluation, if it’s honest and
insightful, takes much more courage and character than the
self-delusions that underlie arrogance and conceit. I’ve seen the
truth of this proven many times in my work with athletes. After an
extremely poor performance, a team or an individual athlete often
does much better the next time out, especially when the poor
performance was so bad that there was simply no way to shirk
responsibility for it. Disappointment, defeat, and even apparent
failure are in no way permanent conditions unless we choose to make
them so. On the contrary, these undeniably painful experiences can
be the solid foundation on which to build future success.
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The Virtue
of Patience by Denis Waitley (excerpted from The Psychology of Motivation)
While persistence is the determination to strive to achieve your
ultimate goal, there is another virtue of equally great value.
Persistence keeps us moving inside ourselves to see the purpose
behind the purpose, but patience is the wisdom behind persistence.
Patience cautions us to focus our efforts on what we can change
while accepting what we cannot When external circumstance rains on
our parade, patience is our umbrella. Rather than blaming what we
cannot control, patience is the wisdom behind persistence.
It is when a goal is distant and difficult to reach that patience is
an ally. Time changes everything, but with patience you can keep
your desires relatively constant. If you can just hang on long
enough, time will finally create the conditions in which you can
succeed.
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Making
the Most of Today by Denis Waitley (excerpted from The Psychology of Motivation)
What each
of us is doing this minute is the most important event in history
for us. We have decided to invest our resources in THIS opportunity
rather than in any other.
It is
helpful to remember this when we consider the passage of time. As I
write this, my mother is in her eighties and I will never see fifty
again. As the years pass, I am acutely aware that the bird of time
is on the wing. At my fortieth high school reunion, I saw people who
claimed to be my former classmates. We all had big name tags printed
in capital letters so we wouldn't have to squint with our reading
glasses on trying to associate the name with each well-traveled
face. It was only yesterday that I was really enjoying high school.
What had happened to the four decades in between? Where had they
flown?
To the
side of the bandstand, where the big-band sound of the late 1940s
and 50s blared our favorite top-ten hits, there was a poster with a
printed verse for all of us to see. I read the words aloud: "There
are two days in every week about which we should not worry, two days
which should be kept free from fear and apprehension."
"One of
these days is YESTERDAY, with its mistakes and cares, its faults and
blunders, its aches and pains. Yesterday has passed forever beyond
our control All the money in the world cannot bring back yesterday.
We cannot undo a single act we performed or erase a single word we
said. Yesterday is gone."
"The other
day we should not worry about is TOMORROW, with its possible
adversities, its burdens, its large promise, and its poor
performance. Tomorrow is also beyond our immediate control."
"This
leaves only one day, TODAY. Anyone can fight the battles of just one
day. It is only when you and I add the burdens of those two awful
eternities - Yesterday and Tomorrow - that we break down."
"It is not the experience of Today that drives us mad, it is remorse
and bitterness for something which happened yesterday and the dread
of what tomorrow may bring. Let us therefore… Live this one full
TODAY."
Malcolm
Forbes believed the important thing is "never say die until you're
dead," and he lived that example to the hilt. It is, as we realize
when we suddenly attend our fortieth high school reunion, a short
journey.
But it is
difficult to be depressed and active at the same time. So get
active! Live TODAY.
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Allowing
Setbacks to Spur You On by Denis Waitley (Excerpted
from The Psychology of Motivation)
Many times, we look at high achievers and
assume they had a string of lucky breaks or made it without much
effort. Usually, the opposite is true, and the so-called superstar
had an incredibly rough time before he or she attained any lasting
success.
It may
motivate you more toward your own goals to know that some of the
most famous and well-known people in modern times had to overcome as
difficult obstacles as anyone before they finally reached the top It
takes persistence and total commitment to your goals, but it's
possible!
You may
not know the background of a certain laundry worker who earned sixty
dollars a week at his job but had the burning desire to be a writer.
His wife worked nights, and he spent nights and weekends typing
manuscripts to send to publishers and agents. Each one was rejected
with a form letter that gave him no assurance that his manuscripts
had even been read. I've received a few of those special valentines
myself through the years, and I can tell you first hand that they're
not the greatest self-esteem builders.
But
finally, a warm, more personal rejection letter came in the mail to
the laundry worker, stating that although his work was not good
enough at this point to warrant publishing, he had promise as a
writer and he should keep trying.
He
forwarded two more manuscripts to the same friendly-yet-rejecting
publisher over the next eighteen months, and as before, he struck
out with both of them too. Finances got so tight for the young
couple that they had to disconnect their telephone to pay for
medicine for their baby.
Feeling
totally discouraged, he threw his latest manuscript into the
garbage. His wife, totally committed to his life goals and believing
in his talent, took the manuscript out of the trash and sent it back
to Doubleday, the publisher who had sent the friendly rejections.
The book, titled Carrie, sold over five million copies, and
as a movie, became one of the top-grossing films in 1976. The
laundry worker, of course, was Stephen King.
The main
message - believe in your ability to turn obstacles into
opportunities. Too often people try to storm their obstacles as if
they're forts that need to be taken. It's better to step back and
ask yourself: "Did I cause this obstacle by my own actions or lack
of them? Did someone else cause this obstacle? Is this obstacle one
that grew out of the natural progression of circumstances?"
This last
question may seem complex, but it holds a secret to the way you can
set and reach your goals and achieve your destiny!
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Aged to Perfection by Denis Waitley
LIVING IN THIS MOMENT, IN THE BEAT OF A
HEART
In the beat of a heart, a child is born. In the
beat of a heart a celebrity or unknown person faces mortality. In
the beat of a heart, an Olympic speed skater wins the gold medal. In
the beat of a heart, history is made by something someone did or did
not say or do. In the beat of a heart our children will have grown
and flown, with families of their own.
I looked in the mirror this morning and saw Rip
Van Waitley, the little boy I used to be, now able to get my
senior’s discount at the movie theater. As I write these words, I
have just returned from a family reunion to celebrate my mother’s 92nd
birthday, and soon I will be the eldest in our clan, the keeper of
the family tree and curator of our memories.
I already suffer from
"Dessert Altsheimer’s".
When I go to the buffet, I ask the restaurant staff? Was I just
here? Did I already have the carrot cake and chocolate decadence?
Or is this my first trip, as I think it is?
Many of my favorite anecdotes now center around
older people. You may recall the true story concerning famous
newscaster Lowell Thomas, when at the age of 87 married a
58-year-old woman and took her to Europe aboard a luxury cruise ship
for their honeymoon. My friend Art Linkletter, who went to high
school with my mother, sent Lowell Thomas a cryptic telegram:
"Be
careful and conservative, Lowell. This trip could be fatal!"
Whereupon, Lowell Thomas telegraphed back, "If she’s gotta go, she’s
gotta go!
A favorite fictional story I like to tell is
about a forlorn older man sitting, crying, on a bench in New York’s
Central Park. A passerby tried to help and comfort the old man:
"How can I help you, are you homeless?
"No," sniffled the old man,
"I have a large,
comfortable townhouse on E. 67th Street! "
"Well then," said the good Samaritan,
"are you lonely and by yourself?"
"No," the old man shook his head.
"I have a beautiful, romantic young wife waiting for me."
"Why you ungrateful, wretched mal-content, why
are you sniveling there feeling sorry for yourself?" the passerby
scolded.
The old man wiped a tear from his eye and
replied miserably, "I can’t remember where I live?"
Soon I will no longer buy green bananas, rather
than worry about living long enough for them to ripen. And a
meaningful discussion for me will concern what we had for lunch at
the senior center.
Let’s make a pledge together, You and I, to
seize this moment and live it to the fullest, rather than yearn for
the past or simply dream of a bright future. Let’s keep the playful
spirit full of curiosity and energy like a child, and live in the
now, in this beat of a heart.
Of all the wisdom I have gained, the most
important is the knowledge that time and health are two precious
assets that we rarely recognize or appreciate until they have been
depleted. As with health, time is the raw material of life. You can
use it wisely, waste it or even kill it.
Each human being now living has exactly 168
hours per week. Scientists can’t invent new minutes, and even the
super rich can’t buy more hours. Queen Elizabeth the First of
England, the richest, most powerful woman on earth of her era,
whispered these final words on her deathbed: "All my possessions for
a moment of time!"
We worry about things we want to do –
but can’t – instead of doing the things we can do – but
don’t. How often have you said to yourself, "Where did the day go? I
accomplished nothing," or "I can’t even remember what I did
yesterday." That time is gone, and you never get it back.
Staring at the compelling distractions on a
television screen is one of the major consumers of time. You can
enjoy and benefit from the very best it has to offer in about seven
total hours of viewing per week. But the average person spends more
than thirty hours per week in a semi-stupor, escaping from the
priorities and goals he or she never gets around to setting. The
irony is that the people we are watching are having fun achieving
their own goals, making money, having us look at them enjoying their
careers.
Even so, time is amazingly fair and forgiving.
No matter how much time you’ve wasted in the past, you still have an
entire today. If you’ve just frittered away an hour procrastinating,
you will still be given the next hour to start on priorities. Time
management contains one great paradox: No one has enough time, and
yet everyone has all there is. Time is not the problem; the problem
is separating the urgent from the important.
Every decision we make has an
"opportunity
cost." Every decision forfeits all other opportunities we had before
we made it. We can’t be two places at the same time.
In their excellent management book
Tradeoffs, Drs. Greiff and Munter discuss the difficult options
that face us in all areas of our lives. One case in point
illustrates a common opportunity cost. It’s a true anecdote they
call, "Bicycle vs. Mother:"
"Johnny is a precocious eight-year-old boy.
Both his parents work. His mother is a management consultant and
travels frequently. After being away for several days, she arrived
home late one night and hugged her son.
"He said, ‘Mom, I missed you. Why were you away
so long?’
"She smiled and replied, ‘One of the reasons I
was away was to make enough money to buy you the bicycle you
wanted.’
"Young Johnny
looked at her reflectively and stated, ‘Mom, I really did want the
bicycle. But mothers are more important than bicycles. So please
stay home more.’"
Even though we all are aware of the tradeoffs
of "quality time vs. quantity time" in our relationships, we are not
used to thinking specifically about how our decisions cost us other
opportunities. Without this understanding, our decisions will often
be unfocused and unrelated to helping us achieve our most important
goals.
Each day we will continue to encounter
deadlines we must meet and "fires," not necessarily of our own
making, we must put out. Endless urgent details will always beg for
attention, time and energy. What we seldom realize is that the
really important things in our life don’t make such strict demands
on us, and therefore we usually assign them a lower priority.
To live a rich, balanced life we need to be
more in conscious control of our habits and lifestyles. We need a
regular exercise routine. We need to practice what we preach
regarding our own eating and health habits. We need to relax more
through musical, cultural, artistic, outdoor and family activities.
We need sufficient sleep and rest to meet the next day renewed and
invigorated. In addition to blocking periods of time for recreation
and vacations, we also need to schedule large, uninterrupted periods
of work on our most important projects.
Contrary to popular notions, most books, works
of art, inventions, and musical compositions are created during
uninterrupted time frames, not by a few lines, strokes, or notes
every so often. Every book or audio program I have written has been
done with the discipline of twelve to fifteen hours per day during a
specific block of time.
You see, it’s the easiest thing in the world to
neglect the important and give in to the urgent. One of the greatest
skills you can ever develop in your life is not only to tell the two
apart, but to be able to assign the correct amount of time to each.
There is no company or government agency to
remind you to stay focused on doing first things first. And, our
loved ones don’t schedule conference calls with us that we must
make. They understand when we are preoccupied with our urgent
business, but it’s hard for us to understand, many years later, why
they appear preoccupied when we finally find some time for them.
I have never received a call from a university
begging me to improve my knowledge, nor received an e-mail from my
health spa insisting that I show up and work out for thirty minutes
each day. The grocery clerks have never made me put back on the
shelves the junk food I put in the cart, nor have I ever been
subpoenaed by the ocean or the mountains to appear for relaxation
and solitude. Yet I receive hundreds of urgent phone messages and
e-mails each week from people with deadlines.
Beginning tomorrow, throughout the day, and
every day thereafter, stop and ask yourself this question: "Is what
I’m doing right now important to my health, well-being and mission
in life, and for my loved ones?" Your affirmative answer will free
you forever, from the tyranny of the urgent.
And more than any other quality except
integrity, compassion, and respect, maintain a well-developed sense
of humor. I love to make light of myself and how ridiculous it is to
take yourself so seriously, you actually believe you’re at the
center of the universe. Laughter is the greatest stress buster and
smiling is the best way to have a face lift.
I did go to my fiftieth high school reunion
recently. It was a big mistake. We all had oversized name tags, with
capital letters, but it didn’t matter, because none of us could make
out the names without our reading glasses. We all had our graduation
yearbook photos on our name tags. It was a big mistake.
We all saw old people who claimed to be our
classmates. The cheerleaders looked like the Refrigerettes. The
football players chests had all fallen to their drawers, and they
were driving Frito Lay trucks
My high school sweetheart didn’t even recognize
me with my name tag. She broke out laughing and said, innocently, "
how many wars were you in?" Although it’s not nice to seek revenge,
which is a loser’s defensive reaction, I couldn’t help but answer
her back with a wink: "I recognized you right away. I
spent a lot of time with your mother when we were young!"
She said, "That’s not like you to say things
like that." I said, I know: "I grew up to be the kind of boy my
mother didn’t want me to play with." We both laughed and hugged, and
wondered where the years had flown.
It seems like only yesterday that I was
jitterbugging and slow dancing at the prom listening to the big band
sounds with Sinatra, Doris Day, Peggy Lee, Jo Stafford, and Louis
Armstrong in the background. What had happened to the five decades
in between?
Fifty years had passed, in the beat of a heart.
At my high school golden anniversary, I stood
up before the aging, dwindling student body who had gathered at the
La Jolla Beach and Tennis Club, as I had so many years ago and
recited these words:
"There are two days in every week about
which we should not worry, two days which should be kept free from
fear and apprehension. One of these days is Yesterday, with its
mistakes and cares, its faults and blunders, its aches and pains.
Yesterday has
passed forever beyond our control. All the money in the world cannot
bring back Yesterday. We cannot undo a single act we performed; we
cannot erase a single word we said. Yesterday is gone.
The other day we should not worry about is
Tomorrow, with its possible adversities, its burdens, its large
promise, and poor performance. Tomorrow is also beyond our immediate
control. Tomorrow’s sun will rise, either in splendor or behind a
mask of clouds; but it will rise. Until it does, we have no stake in
tomorrow, for it is as yet unborn. This leaves only one day: Today.
Anyone can fight the battles of just one
day. It’s only when you and I add the burdens of those two awful
eternities, Yesterday and Tomorrow, that we break down. It is not
the experience of today that drives us mad, it is remorse and
bitterness for something which happened Yesterday and the dread of
what Tomorrow may bring. Let us therefore, live this one full
Today." Make your decision to grab this precious moment
in joy, faith and thankfulness and count your many blessings instead
of your blemishes.
In the beat of a heart, this moment will be
history.
Credit Statement to be Included in Reprints
Reproduced with permission from Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine. To subscribe to
Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine, go to www.deniswaitley.com
or send an email with Join in the subject to
subscribe@deniswaitley.com Copyright © 2005 Denis Waitley International. All rights
reserved worldwide. back
Chase Your Passion (Not Your Pension)!
by Denis Waitley
Lisa, our youngest
daughter, recently earned her master’s degree to start a career as a
high school English teacher. I doubt she was more excited about her
graduation than her parents were. As we entered the stadium for the
commencement services, it dawned on me that after putting seven
children through college and graduate studies, I’d finally be able
to fund my retirement plan.
It was very hot in the concrete arena. A midday
sun beat squarely in our faces. I suspected that the exercises would
be long and merciless. As the graduates filed in, I was amused to
see slogans taped to their tasseled caps. "Will work for food!"
"Get my room ready, Mom!" Our daughter’s read, "Thanks Mom and Pop."
Some wore bathing suits beneath their gowns. Some blew bubbles with
a pipe and soap. Most were ecstatic about finally leaving school,
visibly impatient for that night’s parties and for freedom and the
opportunity to earn.
Olmos
"Stood and Delivered"
As the warm-up
speakers droned on about politically correct issues, I wondered
whether any time would remain for the main speaker. In fact, his
address lasted barely ten minutes, which may have set a national
record for brevity.
(Winston Churchill holds the international
record: thirty seconds to repeat "Never give up!" nine times.) That
main speaker was Edward James Olmos, the actor-activist who played
Jaime Escalante in an inspiring movie about inner-city students
called Stand and Deliver. Olmos stood up, removed his cap,
and regarded the graduates. "So we’re ready to party?" he asked.
"Yeah, let’s party!" they answered in unison. "I know, thank God
it’s Friday," he resumed. "But commencement means to begin, not
finish. You’ve had a four-year sabbatical from life, and now you’re
ready to go out there and earn. You’re only beginning Real World 101
in your education.
"One more thing before we leave," he continued.
"Please never, ever work for money. Please don’t just get a job. A
job is something that many of you had while you worked your way
through college. A job is something you do for money. But a career
is something you do because you’re inspired to do it. You want to do
it, you love doing it, you’re excited when you do it. And you’d do
it even if you were paid nothing beyond food and the basics. You’d
do it because it’s your life."
What he was saying, which I have tried to
recall and interpret in my own words is that many of you will go out
and try to get the highest-paying job possible, regardless of the
industry, regardless of the opportunity, regardless of the service
or product the company may provide. If you chase money, it may catch
you – and if it catches you, you’ll forever be its slave.
By letting money pursue you but never catch
you, you’ll always be its master. By always doing what you love,
loving what you do, delivering more than you promise, you’ll always
be underpaid – which is how it always should be.
For if you’re paid more than you’re worth, you
may be restructured, reengineered, replaced, fired, declared
obsolete, disposed of. Overpaid people are overdrawn in their
knowledge bank account. People who are underpaid for the
level and quality of the service they provide are always in demand
and always ahead of the money in their knowledge and contribution.
So money and opportunity are always chasing them. This is what I got
out of the commencement speech that day. Olmos concluded with a charged voice and moist
eyes. "Chase your passion, not your pension! Be inspired to learn as
much as you can, to find a cause that benefits humankind – and
you’ll be sought after for your quality of service and dedication to
excellence. This passion will make you oblivious of quitting time
and to the length of your workday. You’ll awake every morning with
the passion of pursuit, but not the pursuit of money ….
Those who do
more than they’re paid for are always sought for their services.
Their name and work outlive them and always command the highest
price. Chase your passion, not your pension!"
The graduates were stunned. Many cried with
joy. I was speechless, which is rare indeed. Olmos was no actor
speaking for an honorarium. He was all passion, pure and simple.
"Maybe we should have taught that in a class," I heard a faculty
member say.
Motive in Action
Motivation is a contraction of motive
and action. An inner force that compels behavior, it comes
from within, not from any external circumstance. You know where
you’re going because you have a compelling image inside, not a
travel poster on the wall, a financial statement with a big bonus,
or a slogan in the hall. The performance of may externally motivated
individuals begins declining as soon as they win contests of one
sort or another. I’ve personally witnessed this among Super Bowl
champions and World Cup teams that lost the incentive to maintain
their excellence after winning the cup, the honors, and the cash.
If you’re really committed to peak performance
and leadership, you must motivate yourself from within. Studies of
achievers show that inner drives for excellence and independence are
far more powerful that desire for wealth, status or recognition.
The Inner Drive
Behavioral
scientists have found that independent desire for excellence is the
most telling predictor of significant achievement. In other words, the success of our efforts
depends less on the efforts themselves than on our motives. The most
successful companies, like the most successful men and women in
almost all fields, have achieved their greatness out of a desire to
express what they felt had to be expressed. Often it was a
desire to use their skills to their utmost in order to solve a
problem. This is not to say that many of them did not also earn a
great deal of money and prestige. William Shakespeare, Thomas
Edison, Estee Lauder, Walt Disney, Oprah Winfrey, Sam Walton and
Bill Gates all became wealthy. But far more than thoughts of profit,
the key to their success was inspiration and inner drive by creating
or providing excellence in a product or a service. All were
motivated by the desire to produce the very best that was in them.
Go for the Inner Applause
The late Ray Kroc, a former
neighbor of mine who founded McDonald’s Corporation when he was in
his fifties, stressed the importance of people working for the inner
satisfaction, not just for the money. Ray said most people find it
difficult to associate applause with their work when they can’t hear
literal applause – but the important applause should come from
within. It is the faster heartbeat, the pride and satisfaction of
accomplishment. Kroc told the University of Southern
California’s Business School that the first thing a business
executive needs is love of an idea.
If you don’t love your concept, drop it. If you
prostitute yourself at an early age by taking a job where the money
is, you’ll be working for money all your life. Loving their work is
particularly important for younger people. If they lose that love
early, they may never grow to anywhere near their potential for
self-actualization.
Hire People Who Have Empowered
Themselves
An inner drive for excellence
motivates you always to be the best you possible can in whatever you
do. Leaders and managers should take special note hear. They must be
careful in their use of external motivators – money, perks,
prestigious offices and titles – in trying to inspire their team
members and employees. Enduring motivation must always come
ultimately from within the individual. That’s why empowerment and vision are so
crucial to team performance and quality. Their power and
their vision, not those of the leader must compel team members.
Interviewing potential members, you should look for internally
motivated individuals who hold their work important for its own
sake, who love their field or their industry, who seek the
exhilaration of testing their limits and contributing to the world.
Be wary if they show more interest in your compensation package than
in their contribution package.
Put Your Signature On Your Career
No one exemplifies the concepts in
this article better than Antonio Stradivari, an Italian violin maker
who lived from 1644 to 1737. Stradivari died at the age of
ninety-three, at a time when the average life expectancy was a
little over thirty-five years. He taught himself his trade. His
tools were primitive, and he usually worked alone until later in
life, when his sons joined him. Stradivari had a passion. He put the
best of himself into every violin and viola. When he was finished
and was certain that his craftsmanship measured up to his personal
standards, he signed his name on the instrument.
Nearly three hundred years later, his violins
sell for hundreds of thousands and even millions of dollars, and
Stradivarius is a synonym for quality throughout the world. But far
from every man or woman with uncommon standards of excellence become
celebrities. At this very moment, thousands or tens of thousands are
working unknown and unsung in industry, the arts and the sciences.
The public has never heard of them and probably never will; yet they
refuse to turn out shoddy work. They are in the minority, but that’s
where they’ve always been – playing for a gallery of one, for their
own inner applause. Remember, people who consistently do things well
set their own standards and make themselves measure up. In so doing,
they:
·
Give the best of themselves to benefit others, making
their work a source of joy and satisfaction while they experience
deep self-respect from being uncommon contributors.
·
Build a kind of security that lasts a lifetime or
beyond, because respect for quality always abides and will always
command the highest price. If you accept nothing but excellence from
yourself and feel entitled to put your name on your work, both will
endure. The bitterness of poor quality lingers on long after the
sweetness of low price.
Chase your passion, not your pension!
Credit Statement to be Included in Reprints
Reproduced with permission from Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine. To subscribe to
Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine, go to www.deniswaitley.com
or send an email with Join in the subject to
subscribe@deniswaitley.com Copyright © 2005 Denis Waitley International. All rights
reserved worldwide. back
Becoming a Proactive Leader
by Denis Waitley
The knowledge era’s new leaders,
many of whom are immigrants and women, are managing change by
conceiving innovative organizations and novel ways to attract and
motivate employees. They are learning to be proactive instead of
reactive, and to appreciate the full importance of relationships and
alliances. They also have a healthy aptitude for risk and
perseverance, and know how to gain strength from setbacks and
failure.
Life’s Batting Average
Baseball’s greatest hitter grew up
near my neighborhood in San Diego. When Ted Williams slugged for the
Boston Red Sox, my father and I kept a record of his daily batting
average. And when I played Little League ball, my dad told me not to
worry about striking out. In Williams’s finest year, dad reminded
me, the champion failed at the plate about 60 percent of the time.
Football’s greatest quarterbacks
complete only six out of ten passes. The best basketball players
make only half their shots. Even with satellite mapping and expert
geologists, leading oil companies make strikes in only one out of
ten wells. Actors and actresses auditioning for roles are turned
down twenty-nine in thirty times. And stock market winners make
money on only two out of five of their investments.
Since failure is a given in life,
success takes more than leadership beliefs and solid behavioral
patterns. It also takes an appropriate response to the inevitable,
including an effective combination of risk-taking and perseverance.
I meet many individuals who are seeking security at all costs, and
avoiding risk whenever and wherever possible. Knowing that certain
changes would make success much more likely for them, they
nevertheless take the path of least resistance: no change. For the
temporary, often illusory comfort of staying as they are, they pay
the terrible price of a life not truly lived.
Parable of the Cautious Man
There was a very cautious man,
who never laughed or cried.
He never risked, he never lost,
he never won nor tried.
And when he one day passed away,
his insurance was denied,
For since he never really lived,
they claimed he never died.
In other words, missed
opportunities are the curse of potential. Just after the Great
Depression, Americans, perhaps understandably at the time, took many
steps intended to minimize risk. The government guaranteed much of
our savings. Citizens bought billions of dollars worth of insurance.
We sought lifetime employment and our unions fought for guaranteed
annual cost-of-living increases to protect us from inflation. This
security-blanket mentality has continued in recent decades as
executives awarded themselves giant golden parachutes in case a
merger or takeover took their plum jobs.
These measures had many benefits,
but the drawbacks have also been heavy, even if less obvious. In our
eagerness to avoid risk, we forgot its positive aspects. Many of us
continue to overlook the fact that progress comes only when chances
are taken. And the security we sought and continue to seek often
produces boredom, mediocrity, apathy and reduced opportunity.
We still hear much about security,
especially from federal and state politicians. But total security is
a myth except, perhaps, for those six feet underground in the
cemetery. We may indeed ask our government for guaranteed benefits.
But we must be aware that when a structure starts with a floor,
walls and ceilings will follow. And herein lies a paradoxical
proverb:
You must risk in order to gain
security, but you must never seek security.
When security becomes a major goal
in life – when fulfillment and joy are reduced to merely holding on,
sustaining the status quo – the risk remains heavy. It is then a
risk of losing the prospects of real advancement, of not being able
to ride the wave of change today and tomorrow. Had the founders of
Yahoo, Amazon.com and America Online been concerned with immediate
profits and return on investment, we would not be enjoying those
Internet services today, each of which has a greater market
capitalization than IBM or General Motors.
Procrastination Doesn’t Make
Perfect
Perfectionists are often great
procrastinators. Having stalled until the last minutes, they tear
into a project with dust flying and complaints about insufficient
time. Perfectionist-procrastinators are masters of the excuse that
short notice kept them from doing the quality job they could
have done.
But that’s hardly the only variety
of procrastination – which is one of my own favorite hiding places
when I try to blame external conditions instead of myself for some
difficulty. Mine comes with a gnawing feeling of being fatigued,
always behind. I try to tell myself that I’m taking it easy and
gathering my energies for a big new push, but procrastination
differs markedly from genuine relaxation – which is truly needed.
And it saves me no time or energy. On the contrary, it drains both,
leaving me with self-doubt on top of self-delusion.
We’re all very busy. Every day we
seem to have a giant to-do list of people to see, projects to
complete, e-mails to read, e-mails to write. We have calls to answer
and calls to make, then more calls to people with whom we keep
playing voice-mail tag.
Henri Nouwen’s classic book
Making All Things New likens our lives to "overstuffed suitcases
that are bursting at the seams."
Feeling there is forever far too
much to do, we say we’re really under the gun this week. But working
hard or even heroically to solve a problem is little to our credit
if we created the problem in the first place. When most people refer
to themselves as being under the gun, they want to believe, or do
believe, that the pressures and problems are not of their own
making. In most cases, however, the gun appeared after failure to
attend to business in good time. Instead of being proactive early,
they procrastinated until the due date became a crisis deadline.
By the Inch Life’s a Cinch, by the
Yard it’s Hard
One of the best escapes from the
prison of procrastination is to take even the smallest steps toward
your goals. People usually procrastinate because of fear and lack of
self-confidence – and, ironically, become even more afraid when
under the gun. There are many ways to experiment and test new ground
without risking the whole ball game on one play.
Experience has shown that when
people go after one big goal at once, they invariably fail. If you
had to swallow a twelve-ounce steak all at once, you’d choke. You
have to cut the steak into small pieces, eating one bite at a time.
So it is with prioritizing. Proactive goal achievement means taking
every project and cutting it up into bite-sized pieces. Each small
task or requirement on the way to the ultimate goal becomes a
mini-goal in itself. Using this method, the goal becomes manageable.
When mini-mistakes are made, they are easy to correct. And with the
achievement of each mini-goal, you receive reinforcement and
motivation in the form of positive feedback. As basic as this
sounds, much frustration and failure is caused when people try to
"bite off more than they can chew" by taking on assignments with
limited resources and impossible timeline expectations.
Two major fears that sire
procrastination are fear of the unknown and fear of rejection or
looking foolish. A third fear – of success – is often overlooked.
Many people, even many executives, fear success because it carries
added responsibility that can seem too heavy to bear, such as
setting an example of excellence that calls for additional effort
and willingness to take risks. Success, without adequate self-esteem
or the belief that it is deserved, also can create feelings of guilt
and the result is only temporary or fleeting high achievement.
Playing it safe can seem more tempting than a need to step forward
with determination to do it now and do it right.
Moving from Procrastination to
Proactivation:
Here are some ideas to help make
you a victor over change rather than a victim of change:
1.
Set your wake-up time a half hour earlier tomorrow and keep
the clock at that setting. Use the extra time to think about the
best way to spend your day.
2.
Memorize and repeat this motto: "Action TNT: Today, not
Tomorrow." Handle each piece of incoming mail only once. Answer your
e-mail either early in the morning or after working hours. Block out
specific times to initiate phone calls, personally take incoming
calls, and to meet people in person.
3.
When people tell you their problems, give solution-oriented
feedback. Rather than taking on the problem as your own assignment,
first, ask what’s the next step they plan to take, or what they
would like to see happen.
4.
Finish what you start. Concentrate all your energy and
intensity without distraction on successfully completing your
current major project.
5.
Be constructively helpful instead of unhelpfully critical.
Single out someone or something to praise instead of participating
in group griping, grudge collecting or pity parties.
6.
Limit your television viewing or Internet surfing to mostly
educational or otherwise enlightening programs. Watch no more than
one hour of television per day or night, unless there is a special
program you have been anticipating. The Internet has also become a
great procrastinator’s hideout for tension-relieving instead of
goal-achieving activities.
7.
Make a list of five necessary but unpleasant projects you’ve
been putting off, with a completion date for each project. Immediate
action on unpleasant projects reduces stress and tension. It is very
difficult to be active and depressed at the same time.
8.
Seek out and converse with a successful role model and
mentor. Learning from others’ successes and setbacks will inevitably
improve production of any kind. Truly listen; really find out how
your role models do it right.
9.
Understand that fear, as an acronym, is False Evidence
Appearing Real, and that luck could mean Laboring Under Correct
Knowledge. The more information you have on any subject – especially
case histories – the less likely you’ll be to put off your
decisions.
10.
Accept problems as inevitable offshoots of change and
progress. With the ever more rapid pace of change in society and
business, you’ll be overwhelmed unless you view change as normal and
learn to look for its positive aspects – such as new opportunities
and improvements – rather than bemoan the negative.
There is actually no such thing as
a "future" decision; there are only present decisions that will
affect the future. Procrastinators wait for just the right moment to
decide.
If you wait for the prefect
moment, you become a security-seeker who is running in place,
unwittingly digging yourself deeper into your rut. If you wait for
every objection to be overcome, you’ll attempt nothing. Get out of
your comfort zone and go from procrastinating to proactivating.
Make your personal motto: "Stop stewing and start doing!"
Credit Statement to be Included in Reprints
Reproduced with permission from Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine. To subscribe to
Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine, go to www.deniswaitley.com
or send an email with Join in the subject to
subscribe@deniswaitley.com Copyright © 2005 Denis Waitley International. All rights
reserved worldwide. back
Seven Techniques for Overcoming the
Tendency to Procrastinate
by Denis Waitley
The science of physics recognizes two kinds of
inertia - both of which can be related to procrastination. The first
law states, "Standing objects tend to remain stationary." The second
law is the inverse: "Moving objects tend to stay in motion."
Procrastination is stationary inertia. We
aren’t moving, and we therefore don't move! Procrastination overcome, however, moves us
into the arena where the law of motion takes over. We frequently
find that once we've started a project or process, we stay with it
until completion. One of my favorite sayings from my friend Dr.
Robert Schuller is posted on my word processor: "Beginning is Half
Done!" (I've modified it to say, "Beginning is Half Won!")
Here are seven techniques to overcome
procrastination:
1. Take five minutes to identify what you
are putting off.
On a blank sheet of paper, note several
important activities that you realize you are delaying or have put
on hold.
2. Look at your list of tasks and do one of
them right now.
Put the energy you've been directing toward
excuses into the activity you've been avoiding. You'll discover that
action eliminates anxiety.
3. If getting started is the hard part for
you, set a designated time slot in the day to work on the list.
Set aside thirty minutes of your lunch hour for
work specifically on one job, project, or personal goal that you've
been avoiding or find difficult to start.
4. Don't worry about perfection.
What counts is quality of effort, not perfect
results. Don't let yourself get bogged down with a preoccupation for
perfectionism.
5. If what you are putting off involves
other people, consult with them.
Your reasons for delaying action may be
imaginary. Lack of communication often turns molehills into
mountains.
6. If you fear the consequences associated
with the action you've been avoiding, ask yourself, What's the worst
thing that could happen If I did this today?
The worst-case scenario most likely would be a
minor inconvenience or a temporary setback.
7. Finally, Vividly picture how you'll feel
once the task is done.
Freedom from anxiety. Freedom from nagging
pressures. Freedom from self-doubt. Accomplishing put-off tasks will
give you a great boost of confidence and energy!
Ground breaking requires TNT. To blast your way
out of apathy and overcoming procrastination. Remember what TNT
means: Today! Not Tomorrow!
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Life Balance: The Urgent vs The Important
by Denis Waitley
Of all the wisdom I have gained, the most
important is the knowledge that time and health are two precious
assets that we rarely recognize or appreciate until they have been
depleted. As with health, time is the raw material of life. You can
use it wisely, waste it or even kill it.
To accomplish all we are capable of, we would
need a hundred lifetimes. If we had forever in our mortal lives,
there would be no need to set goals, plan effectively or set
priorities. We could squander our time and perhaps still manage to
accomplish something, if only by chance. Yet in reality, we’re given
only this one life span on earth to do our earthly best.
Each human being now living has exactly 168
hours per week. Scientists can’t invent new minutes, and even the
super rich can’t buy more hours. Queen Elizabeth the First of
England, the richest, most powerful woman on earth of her era,
whispered these final words on her deathbed: "All my possessions for
a moment of time!"
We worry about things we want to do –
but can’t – instead of doing the things we can do – but
don’t. How often have you said to yourself, "Where did the day go? I
accomplished nothing," or "I can’t even remember what I did
yesterday." That time is gone, and you never get it back.
Staring at the compelling distractions on a
television screen is one of the major consumers of time. You can
enjoy and benefit from the very best it has to offer in about seven
total hours of viewing per week. But the average person spends more
than thirty hours per week in a semi-stupor, escaping from the
priorities and goals he or she never gets around to setting. The
irony is that the people we are watching are having fun achieving
their own goals, making money, having us look at them enjoying their
careers.
Even so, time is amazingly fair and forgiving.
No matter how much time you’ve wasted in the past, you still have an
entire today. If you’ve just frittered away an hour procrastinating,
you will still be given the next hour to start on priorities. Time
management contains one great paradox: No one has enough time, and
yet everyone has all there is. Time is not the problem; the problem
is separating the urgent from the important.
Every decision we make has an
"opportunity
cost." Every decision forfeits all other opportunities we had before
we made it. We can’t be two places at the same time.
In their excellent management book
Tradeoffs, Drs. Greiff and Munter discuss the difficult options
that face us in all areas of our lives. One case in point
illustrates a common opportunity cost. It’s a true anecdote they
call, "Bicycle vs. Mother:"
"John is a precocious eight-year-old boy. Both
his parents work. His mother is a management consultant and travels
frequently. After being away for several days, she arrived home late
one night and hugged her son.
"He said, ‘Mom, I missed you. Why were you away
so long?’
"She smiled and replied, ‘One of the reasons I
was away was to make enough money to buy you the bicycle you
wanted.’
"Young John
looked at her reflectively and stated, ‘Mom, I really did want the
bicycle. But mothers are more important than bicycles. So please
stay home more.’"
Even though we all are aware of the tradeoffs
of "quality time vs. quantity time" in our relationships, we are not
used to thinking specifically about how our decisions cost us other
opportunities. Without this understanding, our decisions will often
be unfocused and unrelated to helping us achieve our most important
goals.
You may have heard the story about the analogy
of the "circus juggler" to each of us as we try to balance our
personal and professional priorities. I have heard the story
repeated by many keynote speakers and have used it in previous
books, but have never been able to trace the identity of the
original author.
When the circus juggler drops a ball, he lets it bounce and picks it up
on the next bounce without losing his rhythm or concentration. He
keeps right on juggling. Many times we do the same thing. We lose
our jobs, but get another one on the first or second bounce. We may
drop the ball on a sale, an opportunity to move ahead, or in a
relationship, and we either pick it up on the rebound or get a new
one thrown in to replace what we just dropped.
However, some of the balls or priorities we
juggle don’t bounce. The more urgent priorities associated with
self-imposed deadlines and workloads have more elasticity than the
precious, delicate relationships which are as fragile as fine
crystal. Balance involves distinguishing between the priorities we
juggle that bounce from the ones labeled "loved ones," "health," and
"moral character" that may shatter if we drop them.
The reason I always ask my seminar attendees to
list the benefits of reaching their goals is so they can arrange
them in the true order of importance to them and give them a
sufficient amount of attention as they juggle them within their time
constraints. Handle your priorities with care. Some of them just
don’t bounce! To live a rich, balanced life we need to be
more in conscious control of our habits and lifestyles. Actualized
individuals have a regular exercise routine. They pay attention to
nutrition, with lean source protein and fiber-based carbohydrates as
their basic food choices. They relax through musical, cultural,
artistic, and family activities. They get sufficient sleep and rest
to meet the next day renewed and invigorated.
In addition to blocking periods of time for
recreation and vacations, they also schedule large, uninterrupted
periods of work on their most important projects. Contrary to
popular notions, most books, works of art, invention, and musical
compositions are created during uninterrupted time frames, not by a
few lines, strokes, or notes every so often. Every book or audio
program I have written has been done with the discipline of twelve
to fifteen hours per day during a specific block of time.
True enough, I may have sacrificed a ski trip
or an escape vacation once or twice. But by trying to focus on prime
projects in prime time, the opportunity costs have been outweighed
by the return on invested resources.
With your material, time and energy resources
allocated well, you should be able to use your innovative powers to
focus on goal achievement. Effective priority management creates
freedom. Freedom provides opportunity to make decisions. We make our
decisions and our decisions, over time, make us.
Freedom from urgency …. that’s what will allow
us to live a rich and rewarding life. You may have thought your
problem was "time starvation," when in truth, it was in the way you
assigned priorities in your decision-making process. Have you
allowed the urgent to crowd out the important?
Each day we will continue to encounter
deadlines we must meet and "fires," not necessarily of our own
making, we must put out. Endless urgent details will always beg for
attention, time and energy. What we seldom realize is that the
really important things in our life don’t make such strict demands
on us, and therefore we usually assign them a lower priority.
Our loved ones understand when we are
preoccupied with our urgent business, but it’s hard for us to
understand, many years later, whey they appear preoccupied when we
finally find some time for them. Harry Chapin’s classic song,
"The
Cat’s in the Cradle," is still a mirror reflecting our priorities.
All the important arenas in our life are there
awaiting our decisions. But they don’t beg us to give them our time.
The local university doesn’t call us to advance our education and
improve our life skills.
I have never received a call or e-mail from the
health club I joined insisting that I show up and work out for
thirty minutes each day. My bathroom scale has never insisted that I
lose thirty pounds. The grocery clerks have never made me put back
on the shelves the junk food I put in the cart, nor has a fast-food
restaurant ever refused me a double cheeseburger and large fries
because of my high cholesterol.
Nor have I ever been subpoenaed by the ocean or
the mountains to appear for relaxation and solitude. Yet I receive
hundreds of urgent phone messages and e-mails each week from people
with deadlines.
You see, it’s the easiest thing in the world to
neglect the important and give in to the urgent. One of the greatest
skills you can ever develop in your life is not only to tell the two
apart, but to be able to assign the correct amount of time to each.
Beginning tomorrow, throughout the day, and
every day thereafter, stop and ask yourself this question: "Is what
I’m doing right now important to my health, well-being and mission
in life, and for my loved ones?" Your affirmative answer will free
you forever, from the tyranny of the urgent.
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Power From Empowerment by Denis Waitley
A good way to think of leadership is the
process of freeing your team members to do the best work they
possibly can. I have followed NBA basketball coach Phil Jackson’s
career.
Like Phil Jackson who moved from the record
setting Chicago Bulls to the Los Angeles Lakers. Jackson says his
principal task is creating an environment in which his players can
flourish. In communicating with his championship teams,
Jackson convinced them that they had the talent to win
championships, and that the main goal of the coach was going to be
freeing them to use that talent.
Today’s business team members, say they want,
more than anything else, the autonomy to do their jobs without the
boss’s interference. In the new century, it’s already clear that the
CEOs of our best-run companies believe that the more power leaders
have, the less they should use.
The job of the team leader is to set a mission,
decide upon a strategic direction, achieve the necessary
cooperation, delegate authority --- and then let people innovate. To
do that we all could take a hint from the late football coach, Paul
"Bear" Bryant. Before his retirement as one of the leading coaches
in college football history at Alabama, Bryant observed:
I’m just a plowhand from
Arkansas, but I’ve learned how to put and hold a team together. I’ve
learned how to lift some individuals up and how to calm others down,
until finally they’ve got one heartbeat together, as a team. To do
that, there’s just three things I’d ever have to say: If anything went wrong,
I did it. If it went semi-good, then we did it.If anything went real good,
then you did it! That’s really all it takes to get other people to win for you. The key to authentic leadership is to listen to
your followers, and then open the door for them to lead themselves.
The secret is empowerment. The main incentive is genuine caring and
recognition.
The five most important words a leader can
speak are: "I am proud of you."
The four most important are: "What is your
opinion??
The three most important are: "If you please."
The two most important are: "Thank
You."
And the most important single word of all is:
"You!"
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Look Up to Those Beneath You by Denis Waitley
The most successful business leaders today are like great coaches
who manage by inspiration, instead of intimidation. The command and
control, management style is obsolete. In this fast forward global
marketplace, there is no such distinction as superior and
subordinate. The key to getting and staying on top is to provide a
resilient, positive working environment. This requires that you
"check your ego at the door" and that you seek alliances with others
who may have different talents or strengths than you do. This is
what synergy is all about.
David
Ogilvy, founder of giant advertising agency, Ogilvy and Mather, used
to give each new manager a Russian doll, which contained five
progressively smaller dolls inside. A message inside the smallest
one read: "If each of us hires people we consider smaller than
ourselves, we shall become a company of dwarves. But if each of us
hires people who are bigger than we are, we will become a company of
giants."
To become
a giant in the eyes of others, and to succeed in the 21st century,
look up to those beneath you! Consider these action ideas as you
lead your team:
1.
Listen often and openly to what others say, and try to do so
without prejudgment.
2.
Don’t put anyone off or be too busy to listen to and answer
questions.
3.
Use praise frequently and sincerely.
4.
If you feel that criticism is warranted, do it in private,
and make sure you say something encouraging after the reprimand.
5.
Be firm and be fair. Don’t meet with people in person or on
the phone when you are angry. Exercise or take a walk first, then
communicate when you are relaxed.
6.
Don’t be afraid or hesitant to share your concerns with
others. Far better to discuss a molehill, then to wait until it
festers into Mt. Everest.
7.
Don’t make rash promises and be consistent.
8.
Whenever you are in a leadership role, focus your supervision
on teaching effective habits and skills, not in pointing out
mistakes.
Encourage everyone in both your personal and
professional life to speak up and express their own ideas, even if
you disagree with them.
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Beware the Dream Stealers by Denis Waitley
Although
your own internal measurements are the most important, you will
occasionally need to seek external feedback on your progress toward
your goals. When you do, be sure it is from people who are truly
interested in seeing you succeed. Don't seek feedback from
fair-weather friends, competitive peers, or any person who doesn't
have your best interests at heart. Neutral doesn't count. Get
feedback from someone who is on your side but will still be
objective and honest with you.
I've
observed time and again that misery truly does love company.
Jealousy creates some of the most miserable people I know. Surpass
the achievements of your particular social crowd or your business
colleagues, and look out for the slings and arrows of those who wish
you were back where they are. You have to dodge the snide remarks
and catty comments. Let them roll right off you. Don't internalize
them.
Only pay
attention to feedback from those who have similar goals or who are
working actively alongside you to achieve goals of their own.
Motives and fears run deep. Study them in others. The sympathetic
fair-weather friend who supports you and comforts you when you're
down, may like you best when you are in just that state: down and
dependent.
Ultimately, nobody else is responsible for your life but you. Nobody
else is accountable for your actions but you. Therefore, nobody's
expectations for you and opinions about you are as important as your
own. So make sure those take precedence in your mind over all
others, and if you do need to consult with someone else, think very
carefully before you choose exactly who.
Equally
important, be prepared to sell your ideas to an indifferent world.
As passionate as you are about your business and the fact that your
products and services will have positive, life-changing benefits to
everyone you meet, you are going to find resistance every time you
tell your story.
People are
most interested in their own dreams and goals.
They have difficulty believing that you have
found a better way than they have to reach them. They are suspicious
and guarded when anyone tries to sell them or change their minds.
Rather than have others steal your dreams by raining on them, ask
questions and find out about their dreams before you launch into
your sermon. People buy what they want first, then what they need.
Find what turns them on. It may not be what turns you on. By helping
others get what they want, you’ll get what you want too!
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Overcoming
the Fear of Rejection by Denis Waitley
To conquer your fear of rejection, you
need to handle the word "no" in a constructive way. When people turn
you down after a presentation, you have to interpret the "no" as "no
this is not right for me now." We also can interpret "no" as
meaning, "I need to know more about this opportunity or the products
before I can say yes."
I look at
the service I offer to others as a gift that almost everyone
desires. It’s like a nutritious dessert. What if waiters or
waitresses in a restaurant said to customers at their tables: "Would
you like our special strawberry parfait for dessert? It’s the best
in the world!" And they were told "no" by their patrons, three out
of five times.
Would they
go to their manager, throw up their hands and quit, lamenting, "They
don’t like me or my strawberry parfait?" Of course they wouldn’t.
They’d go on about their business, thinking the patrons had missed
out on something delicious.
That’s why
I treat products as a gift, much more nutritious and beneficial than
a fruit dessert. But what is being rejected is the presentation, not
the presentor. When I can separate my self-esteem from offering the
products or business opportunity, I can live with rejection and look
for ways to get a positive response more often.
When you are experiencing
rejection, that’s the time to network with mentors and role models.
It’s also the time to listen to upbeat music and read articles like
this, to attend meetings and conference calls, and to hang around
with optimists and winners
There are
basically four things we do in selling our products and services,
and only four. We use the products and services ourselves, we talk
to people about the products and services, we talk to people about
the financial benefits we offer, and we coach them to refer us to
others who do the same thing. First, we are coachable and willing to
learn something new every day. Then, we become coaches. All you
really need to move up to the next level is have faith in yourself.
To laugh is to risk appearing the fool. To weep is to risk appearing
sentimental. To reach out for another is to risk involvement. To
expose your feelings is to risk revealing your true self. To place
your ideas and dreams before a crow, is to risk rejection. To love
is to risk not being loved in return. To live is to risk dying. To
hope is to risk despair. To try is to risk failure. But risks must
be taken because the greatest hazard in life is to risk nothing at
all. People who will risk nothing --- do nothing, have nothing, and
become nothing. They may avoid suffering and sorrow, but they cannot
learn, feel, change, grow, love or live. Chained by their
certitudes, they are slaves.
They have
forfeited their freedom. Only a person who risks is truly free. And
one last idea you can live and believe, is the more that you give
----- the more you’ll receive.
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As Tall as You Want to Be by Denis Waitley
When he
was two years old, this adopted child of two college professors
suddenly and inexplicably stopped growing, and his health started to
fail. A team of doctors gave him six months to live after they
diagnosed him as suffering from a rare disease that inhibits
digestion and nutrients in food. Intravenous feedings of vitamins
and supplements allowed him to regain his strength, but his growth
was permanently stunted.
Confined
to hospitals for long periods of time, until the age of nine, he
quietly plotted his revenge on the kids who taunted him and called
him "peanut."
He
recalled many years later that subconsciously "the whole experience
made me want to succeed at something athletic." Sometimes his
sister, Susan, went ice skating at the local rink, and he would go
along to watch. There he stood, a frail, undergrown kid, with a
feeding tube inserted through his nose and down into his stomach.
When he wasn’t using it, one end of the tube was taped behind his
ear.
One day,
as he watched his sister whirl around the ice, he turned to his
parents and said,
"You know,
I think I’d like to try ice skating." Talk about two adults,
looking at their life-threatened child, with glances that were
beyond belief!
Well, he
tried it and he loved it, and he went at it with a passion. Here was
something fun at which he could excel, where height and weight
weren’t important.
During his
medical checkup the following year, the doctors were startled to
discover that he had actually started growing again. It was too late
for him to reach normal size, but neither he nor his family cared.
He was recovering and succeeding. He believed in his dream, although
he had little else to hang on to.
None of the
kids taunt him and tease him today. Instead, they all cheer and rush
to get his autograph. He has just completed another dazzling
performance on the world professional ice skating tour, with a long
string of triple jumps, complicated maneuvers, and athletic moves,
capped off with a racing front flip that brought him to a sudden
stop inches from the audience. Although he has retired from
professional skating, he remains a coach, mentor and commentator
revered by everyone in winter sports.
At five
feet three inches and 115 pounds of pure muscle and electrifying
energy, former Olympic gold medal figure skating champion, Scott
Hamilton stands as tall and as proud as any winner. Scott’s size
didn’t limit his faith and reach. Don’t let doubts and critics limit
yours. This doesn’t mean that you’ll close almost every sale or get
promoted in record time. Scott Hamilton certainly didn’t hit every
triple-axle jump he ever attempted, especially during the initial
learning phase. Success in developing any skill requires a basic
trust in your ability that should never be allowed to waver.
You can
stand tall, no matter how small!
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Confidence - You Only Sell You by Denis Waitley
In my opinion, there is nothing more important
than your belief in your own potential for success and happiness,
regardless of your age, gender, ethnicity, looks, education or
background. The truth is, every day "You only sell you. You don’t
sell products or a business concept. You sell the value of the
person offering the products and services. The decision of the buyer
is based on the value of the seller. Just as products are branded as
"the best", "cheap", "ineffective", "trustworthy" or "unreliable",
so, too, are individuals branded by others as "winners" or "also-rans." Who you are shots so loudly, that people either can’t
hear, don’t want to hear, or listen carefully to what you are
saying. Everybody loves a winner, and we all want to buy from
winners who pass their own value on to us.
Self-confidence isn’t something you were born
with. It’s something you develop. Many of us were cultivated like
weeds as children. We played inferior roles to the adults around us,
who frequently reminded us of our faults and shortcomings more than
our successes and abilities.
If you had that type of childhood, as I did,
you face a special challenge in building up your self-confidence as
an adult. Here are some basic points to remember about yourself:
1. Realize that the most important opinion about you is the one that
you hold. Ultimately, nobody else is responsible for your life but
you. Nobody else is accountable for your actions but you. Therefore,
nobody’s opinion about you is more important than yours.
2. Recognize that the most important
conversations are the ones you have with yourself. Whether or
not you are aware of it, you have a running conversation with
yourself from the time you get up to the time you go to sleep.
Your thoughts and ideas are "you talking to you." Have daily
conversations with yourself that are supportive and reinforcing.
We know the value of talking to people who praise us, reward us,
recognize us, are happy to see us, and let us know they
genuinely enjoy talking with us. Talk to yourself with those
same qualities – silently as well as audibly.
3.
Develop a strong system of internal
values. Weigh what you hold to be true, good and lasting. Write
down some of your values for periodic review. Read material that
reinforces what you hold to be significant in life. Know what
you believe and why you believe it. At times, have discussions –
even debates – with yourself Draw conclusions about life.
Think about deeper issues. Your values will greatly affect how
you relate to others. The stronger your values are, the greater
the impact. If you are lacking in internal values, you will tend
to draw from and even use other people to try to mimic their
behaviors, if only superficially. Instead, seek to become a
model, one who can help and give strength to others.
4. Don’t reinforce your failures. Failure is
a detour, not a dead-end street. Failure is a temporary setback,
not a residence. Failure is a learning experience, not a
person. Like success, failure is a growth process, not a
status. Don’t wallow in your mistakes. Correct them and move
forward.
5. Don’t demand perfection of yourself. An A
is usually awarded to the person who scores 90 percent or
better, and sometimes the score doesn’t need to be that high.
Professional basketball players only make half their shots.
Professional quarterback complete only half their passes, and
professional baseball players reach first base less than 40
percent of the time, and that includes walks. And we all know
what our averages are in picking stocks to invest in that are
always going up. That would be never! Give your best effort
every day and keep ratcheting forward. Perfection is not only
totally unrealistic to expect and virtually impossible to
achieve, but it greatly deters your ability to move forward. The
person who is constantly looking over his or her shoulder at
what might have been done better, can’t possibly be focused on
the future. Drive with your eyes ahead; don’t drive by
concentrating on the rearview mirror.
6. Give each job or task your best effort.
Countless individuals say, when confronted with a chore, "I’m too
good to be doing this." They have contempt for their current
situation and position, and get discouraged easily. Success is an
accumulation of what you do in the minutes of each day. No task is
too unworthy to do well. There are no small parts – only small
actors.
7. View the big picture of life. Step back
from the landscape of your life today and take a long walk, ride
a bike, or just sit silently, observing the wonder and abundance
of God’s creation in nature. You are a part of a much bigger
whole. Listen to the subtle rhythms of your environment.
Recognize that you have rhythms and cycles of change in your
life. Relax and open up to the vast creative and interrelated
world around you.
To develop
confidence, you must see yourself ultimately as a unique part of
creation. You must recognize, with pleasure, that nobody else is
just like you. No one else has exactly your temperament, history or
experiences. No one else has your footprints, your finger prints,
your voice print or your genetic code. No one else has precisely
your set of talents, capabilities and skills. You are one of a kind.
The value is there. It just needs to be dusted off and polished.
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Carpe
Diem! Seize this Day! by Denis Waitley
What each
of us is doing this minute is the most important event in history
for us. We have decided to invest our resources in this opportunity
rather than in any other. It is helpful to remember this when we
consider the passage of time.
As I write
this, my mother is in her nineties and I will never see sixty again.
As the years pass, I am acutely aware that the bird of time is on
the wing. At my fiftieth high school reunion, I saw old people who
claimed to be my former classmates. We all had big name tags printed
in capital letters so we wouldn't have to squint with our reading
glasses on trying to associate the name with each well-traveled
face. It was only yesterday that I was really enjoying high school.
What had happened to the five decades in between? Where had they
flown?
To the
side of the bandstand, where the big-band sound of the late 1940s
and 50s blared our favorite top-ten hits, there was a poster with a
printed verse for all of us to see. I read the words out loud:
"There are two days in every week about which we should not worry,
two days which should be kept free from fear and apprehension.
"One of
these days is Yesterday, with its mistakes and cares, its faults and
blunders, its aches and pains. Yesterday has passed forever beyond
our control. All the money in the world cannot bring back Yesterday.
We cannot undo a single act we performed; we cannot erase a single
word we said. Yesterday is gone.
"The other day we should not worry about is Tomorrow, with its
possible adversities, its burdens, its large promise, and poor
performance. Tomorrow is also beyond our immediate control.
Tomorrow's sun will rise, either in splendor or behind a mask of
clouds; but it will rise. Until it does, we have no stake in
tomorrow, for it is as yet unborn. This leaves only one day: Today.
Anyone can fight the battles of just one day. It is only when you
and I add the burdens of those two awful eternities -Yesterday and
Tomorrow - that we break down. It is not the experience of Today
that drives us mad, it is remorse and bitterness for something which
happened Yesterday and the dread of what Tomorrow may bring. Let us
therefore, live this one full Today."
Malcolm Forbes believed the important thing
is never to say die until you're dead, and he lived that example to
the hilt. It is, as we realize when we suddenly attend our fiftieth
high school reunion, a short journey. But it also is difficult to be
depressed and active at the same time. So get active! And make today
your best day ever!
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Reproduced with permission from Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine. To subscribe to
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Become a Student of Change by Denis Waitley
As the world becomes more interconnected,
events outside your industry and career have an impact on your
business, your family and your pocketbook. Whatever your daily
routine, it takes place in a larger context of social,
technological, political, economic and cultural change. To be
successful today, you must understand that world. Without that you
won’t be prepared to innovate; you’ll only be able to react and to
avoid.
Many people will tell you it doesn’t matter how
well-informed you are. "You can’t do anything about it anyway," goes
the refrain, "so why bother to find out about things?" Here’s a
newspaper editorial that sumps up this attitude:
"The world is
too big for us. Too much going on, too much crime, violence and
change. Try as you will, you get behind in the race. It’s an
incessant strain to keep pace and still you lose ground. Science
empties its discoveries on you so fast that you stagger beneath them
in hopeless bewilderment. Everything in business and life is high
pressure. Human nature can’t endure much more!"
This newspaper editorial reads as if it were
written last week. But it actually appeared more than 168 years ago
on June 16, 1833 in The Atlantic Journal back in the "good
old days!"
How can you avoid becoming a casualty of the
"bad new days?" Take the offensive. Instead of "stewing," start "doing." Pay attention to the early warning signs of change. Look
for changes in your industry, your family life and your region. You
cannot innovate is your understanding of change is misinformed,
incomplete or outdated.
Success in the new era is heavily dependent
upon innovation, creativity and solving problems for which there are
no precedents. While new technology is often the driver of economic
and social change, the real opportunities are created by individuals
who apply technology in new ways. Fred Smith, operating outside of
the airline industry, created Federal Express because he saw the
trend of speed in delivery of goods and services.
Your success depends on how well you think. You
are not paid to collect, sort, store or retrieve information,
although you do these things every day. You are paid to interpret
that information and create and implement new ideas.
Ask yourself:
- What can I offer that "they" aren’t
offering? Where’s the niche that hasn’t been developed? How
can I add value to the service or products I promote?
- Where is the market inefficiency? What
would make this process more convenient? How can I do this less
expensively?
- What would people pay for that isn’t
available now? Which consumer groups and Internet communities
are the most likely prospects who want what I provide? What
trends will change my and their assumptions about the quality of
life?
Breakthrough ideas often occur when you are
calmly searching for opportunities. They rarely occur when you are
anxious and frustrated. Close your eyes and dream!
Credit Statement to be Included in Reprints
Reproduced with permission from Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine. To subscribe to
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reserved worldwide. back
How to Stay Motivated by Denis Waitley
Be willing
to say to yourself, "I’m on the right road. I’m doing OK. I’m
succeeding." We too frequently become adept at pointing out our
flaws and identifying failures. Become equally adept at citing your
achievements. Identify things you are doing now that you weren’t
doing one month ago … six months ago … a year ago. What habits have
changed? Chart your progress.
Doing well
once or twice is relatively easy. Continuously moving ahead is
tough, in part, because we so easily revert to old habits and former
lifestyles. Over the long run, you need to give yourself regular
feedback to monitor your performance and reinforce yourself
positively. Don’t wait for an award ceremony, promotion, friend or
mentor to show appreciation for your work. Take pride in your own
efforts on a daily basis.
Keep the
end result in sight.
Always see
the big picture of the ultimate goal you’re working for and the
benefits that come with it. During World War II, parachutes were
being constructed by the thousands. From the workers point of view,
the job was tedious and repetitive. (Like making "cold calls" on the
phone or in person.) It involved crouching over a sewing machine
eight to ten hours a day, stitching endless lengths of colorless
fabric. The result was a seamless heap of cloth. But every morning
the workers were reminded that each stitch was part of a life-saving
operation.
As they
sewed, they were asked to think that this might be the parachute
worn by their husband, brother or son. Although the work was hard
and the hours long, the women and men on the assembly line
understood their contribution to the larger picture. The same should
be true with your work. Each thing you do benefits the health and
well being of adults and children throughout the world, not just
generally, but specifically. These are the visions that drive us
through tedious details to the top.
Set up a
dynamic daily routine.
Getting
into a positive routine or groove, instead of a negative rut, will
help you become more effective. Why is the subway the most energy
efficient means of transportation? Because it runs on a track.
Think of
the order in your day, instead of the routine. Order is not
sameness, neatness or everything exactly in its place. Order is not
taking on more than you can manage, without still being able to do
what you really choose. Order is the opposite of complication; it’s
simplification. Order is not wasting a lot of time trying to find
things. Order is avoiding a lot of recriminations because you didn’t
do something you promised. Order is setting an effective agenda with
others, so neither of you is disappointed. Order is doing in a day
what you set out to do.
Order frees
you up. Get into the swing of a healthy, daily routine and discover
how much more control you’ll gain in your life.
Credit Statement to be Included in Reprints
Reproduced with permission from Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine. To subscribe to
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The Winner's Circle by Denis Waitley
Soon we
will see those five, brilliant, interlocking Olympic rings on flags
and in television and billboard advertising globally. It will be the
Winter Olympic Games in Salt Lake City, where the best in the world
go for the gold and the few stand, listening to their national
anthem, in the coveted winner’s circle. If the five Olympic rings
were attitudes of champions in every profession, these five
attitudes would be prominent in the mindset of the peak performer:
-
Paying the Price -- Everyone
wants to win, but few are willing to invest the time and effort.
Paying the price means focusing on developing the skills and
training regimen of champions – observation, imitation,
repetition and the internalization of knowledge into habits;
also, learning why and how to go the extra mile and seeing
success as a marathon, not a dash. Champions view failures as
temporary inconveniences and learning experiences.
-
The Olympian Within --
Winners believe in their worth in advance of their performance.
Most people base their worth on their current status or
achievement level, which means that until they are judged
successful by society’s standards, they have little to be proud
of. Champions believe in their dreams when they have only a
dream to hang on to, even in the face of criticism and superior
achievements by others.
-
Non-situational Integrity --
Authentic, lasting winners have an uncompromising attitude about
self-honesty. They function according to an "integrity
triangle", consisting of three basic questions: (a) Are my
beliefs based upon truth? (b) Do my words and actions
correspond with truth and honesty? (c) Before I speak or act,
do I honestly consider the impact of my decision on other people
and the environment?
-
The "Coachability" Factor --
Champions are always open to alternatives to improve their
performance. Consistent winners are not the arrogant egotists
who dominate the media spotlight. The most successful
individuals in the game of life are often the most approachable,
most gracious, non-judgmental with others and most critical of
their own performances, as well as most eager to learn and
improve.
-
Being a Team Player -- a team
in harmony is synergy in motion, where the whole is greater than
the sum of the individual talents. When all assignments are
understood, when each takes 100 percent responsibility for the
outcome, a quantum leap in performance takes place. Winners
learn how to become interdependent, without sacrificing
individuality; how to stand out, while fitting in.
Credit Statement to be Included in Reprints
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Going Full Circle by Denis Waitley
Great teams, great companies and great families have great leaders.
Real leadership is the process of empowering others by abdicating
one’s power over them.
It means to set others free to become all they can be in an
atmosphere of inspiration, innovation and mutual respect.
The real challenge is to maintain balance and harmony, while
excelling in one professional endeavor. After the season is over,
the champion must change into street clothes and become a parent,
companion, spouse, citizen and neighbor. The greatest mark of the
authentic champion is the way he or she relates to society beyond
the arena or stadium, and translates superb performance in a
specialized field into a global perspective to benefit this and
future generations.
My new
mission, based upon the sobering aftermath of this past September,
is to be a role model for these words I have altered slightly from
MY CREED by Dean Alfange:
"I do not choose to be a common man or woman. It is my right to be
uncommon, if I can. I seek opportunity, not security. I do not wish
to be a kept citizen, humbled and dulled by having the state look
after me. I want to take the calculated risk, to dream and to build,
to fail and succeed. I will not trade freedom for beneficence, nor
my dignity for a handout. I will never cower before any master, nor
bend to any bully or terrorist threat. It is my heritage to stand
erect, proud and unafraid, to think and act for myself, enjoy the
benefits of my creations and to face the world boldly, and say,
"This I have done."
"And, whatever I do, I do in the spirit of
win-win. If I help others win, then I win too. I will win with
others, not win at the expense of others."
Credit Statement to be Included in Reprints
Reproduced with permission from Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine. To subscribe to
Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine, go to www.deniswaitley.com
or send an email with Join in the subject to
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reserved worldwide. back
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