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How to Stay Motivated by Denis Waitley, PhD 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. 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. 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. 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. Denis Waitley, PhD has created leadership programs for the U.S. Navy, participated in conventions with Bell South and DuPont and delivered keynote speeches for multinational financial service companies, healthcare providers, and universities. He delivered his legendary mental training for Olympians during the Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City. In addition to his popularity in the United
States, Denis
Waitley is one of the most prominent high performance coaches in
Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, Latin America, Malaysia, Singapore,
Taiwan, and China. Denis Waitley titles include
Seeds of Greatness; The Seven Sacred Truths; The
Psychology of Winning and many others. More writings, programs
available from Nightingale-Conant ~ ~ ~
Related Talent Development Resources sites : The Inner Entrepreneur Personal Growth Information
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