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The Great Problem-Solving Tool by
Earl Nightingale And
because of that, most creatures don't need much of a brain. In the
Pulitzer Prize–winning playwright Archibald MacLeish's play The Secret
of Freedom, a character says, "The only thing about a man that is man
is his mind. Everything else you can find in a pig or a horse." That's
uncomfortably true. More
astonishing still is the eagle's eyesight. And because of its need to
see small rodents moving in the grass from high altitudes or a fish
just inches under the surface of the water, its incredible eyes take up
just about all the space in its head. For
the eagle, its eyes are the most important thing, and everything else
works in unison with them. Its brain is tiny and rudimentary. It
doesn't think or plan or remember; it simply acts in accordance with
stimuli. Only
one takes 20 years to mature and has dominion over all the rest on the
earth itself, and has today the power to destroy all life on earth in a
couple of hours. Only
one is given the godlike power to fashion its own life according to the
images it holds in its remarkable mind. Everything
is reflected through our minds. Anything that comes to us in the future
will almost certainly come to us as a result of the extent to which we
use our minds. It's
because they never learned how to think. Most
people will go to any length to avoid thinking when they're faced with
a problem. They will ask advice from the most illogical people, usually
people who don't know any more than they do: next-door neighbors,
members of their families, and friends stuck in the same mental traps
that they are. Very
few of them use the muscles of their mind to solve their problems. No one
is without problems. They're part of living. But let me show you how
much time we waste in worrying about the wrong problems. Here's
a reliable estimate of the things people worry about: Things that never
happen: 40%. Things over and past that can never be changed by all the
worry in the world: 30%. Needless worries about our health: 12%. Petty
miscellaneous worries: 10%. Real legitimate worries: 8%. And of
the real legitimate worries, there are two kinds. There are the
problems we can solve, and there are the problems beyond our ability to
personally solve. But most of our real problems usually fall into the
first group, the ones we can solve, if we'll learn how. Now
this leaves 4,000 hours a year when a person is neither working nor
sleeping. These can be called discretionary hours with which that
person can do pretty much as he or she pleases. Pick
one hour a day on which you can fairly regularly count. The best time
for me is an hour before the others are up in the morning. The mind's
clear, the house is quiet, and, if you like, with a fresh cup of
coffee, this is the time to start the mind going. Try to
think of 20 possible ways in which the activity that fills your day can
be improved. You won't always get 20, but even one idea is good. When I
say it's not easy, I mean it's like starting any new habit. At first
you'll find your mind a little reluctant to be hauled up out of that
old familiar bed. But as you think about your work and ways in which it
might be improved, write down every idea that pops into your head, no
matter how absurd it might seem. Now
this means you'll be thinking about your goal and ways of improving
your performance, increasing your service six full extra working weeks
a year, 61/2 40-hour weeks devoted to thinking and planning. Can
you see how easy it is to rise above that so called competition? And
it'll still leave you with seven hours a day to spend as you please. When
they do, write them down as soon as you can. Just one great idea can
completely revolutionize your work and, as a result, your life. Face
it with faith and bend all the great powers of your mind toward solving
it. And believe me, solve it you will. This puts each of us in the
driver's seat. We've
set goals to eradicate every disease that plagues us and eradicate them
we will, one by one. We have never set a goal that we have not reached
or are now in the process of reaching. ~ ~ ~ |
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