Saturday, October 18, 2014
Time
We all have the same amount of time – 24 hours a day. No one has less or more time than anyone
else. Each of us ultimately decides on
how we use our time.
Our use of time can be productive, neutral / un-productive,
or our use of time can be negative / destructive.
To say, “I don’t have time,” is not an entirely accurate
statement. The fact is that we choose to
spend our time on what we feel is
important, our priorities. When we decide not to devote time to something,
in reality the reason is because [that], whatever issue is vying for our time,
is simply not important - not a priority.
Perhaps, if one is honest with them self, it may help to
change their priorities. For example: If
one could admit that they don’t exercise because it is not as important as
watching three hours of television each night, maybe this candour
could cause them to make a change. I don’t
think anyone would tell their kids that the reason they don’t have time for
them is because everything else - shopping, golf, work, any hobby - is more important.
There is only one person that controls your time - you. You might now be thinking to yourself, “Try
telling that to my boss.” Do you choose to work or, do you have to work? Two different mindsets. Work should be a productive use of time, but
I know many people that feel they need to put in more time than is expected to
get the job done while others are doing the same job in regular time. Work
does fill the time allotted. Are
you putting in time or, working to
accomplish an objective? Again, two
different mindsets, but our mindset - the way that we think
- ultimately controls how we do our job, our time and . . . our life.
Instead of using the excuse of “no time,” just be honest and
say: “I have more important things to do.”
This may help realign your priorities.
Labels:
priorities,
Time,
work life balance
Sunday, October 5, 2014
Maple syrup
Maple syrup is made by boiling the sap from maple trees
until it is reduced to a very concentrated sweet syrup. The reduction in liquid is as high as 50
litres of sap down to 1 litre of syrup.
At the end of the process you get the good stuff.
When communicating, please do everyone a favour and provide
only pure maple syrup vs. a bunch of sap, can you imagine eating maple tree sap
to get the enjoyment of maple syrup?
Please stop feeding it [sap] to others.
Communication, verbal and written, should be as succinct and
as tight as possible. Use the least
amount of words to get your point across.
After you have written something, review it and reduce it. Challenge yourself to shorten every sentence
and every thought down to simple, direct and concise language.
Just the good stuff please.
Hope I made my point (153 words).
Maple syrup
Labels:
communicating,
communication
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