Your life doesn't just "happen." Whether you know it or not, it is carefully designed by you. The choices, after all, are yours. You choose happiness. You choose sadness. You choose decisiveness. You choose ambivalence. You choose success. You choose failure. You choose courage. You choose fear. Just remember that every moment, every situation, provides a new choice. And in doing so, it gives you a perfect opportunity to do things differently to produce more positive results.
For
the next couple of days I will like to share with you all THE SEVEN HABITS OF HIGHLY EFFECTIVE PEOPLE
by Dr. Stephen Covey. We will talk about one habit daily and I hope we can all
take something from it.
HABIT 1: BE PROACTIVE
Be Proactive is about taking responsibility for your life. You can't
keep blaming everything on your parents or grandparents. Proactive people
recognize that they are "response-able." They don't blame genetics,
circumstances, conditions, or conditioning for their behavior. They know they
choose their behavior. Reactive people, on the other hand, are often affected
by their physical environment. They find external sources to blame for their
behavior. If the weather is good, they feel good. If it isn't, it affects their
attitude and performance, and they blame the weather.
All of these external
forces act as stimuli that we respond to. Between the stimulus and the response
is your greatest power--you have the freedom to choose your response. One of
the most important things you choose is what you say. Your language is a good
indicator of how you see yourself. A proactive person uses proactive
language--I can, I will, I prefer, etc. A reactive person uses reactive
language--I can't, I have to, if only. Reactive people believe they are not
responsible for what they say and do--they have no choice.
Instead of reacting to or worrying about conditions over which they have little or no control, proactive people focus their time and energy on things they can control. The problems, challenges, and opportunities we face fall into two areas--Circle of Concern and Circle of Influence.
Instead of reacting to or worrying about conditions over which they have little or no control, proactive people focus their time and energy on things they can control. The problems, challenges, and opportunities we face fall into two areas--Circle of Concern and Circle of Influence.
Proactive people focus their efforts on their
Circle of Influence. They work on the things they can do something about:
health, children, problems at work. Reactive people focus their efforts in the
Circle of Concern--things over which they have little or no control: the
national debt, terrorism, the weather. Gaining an awareness of the areas in
which we expand our energies in is a giant step in becoming proactive.
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