Page 6 - stephen covey The seven habits of highly effective people
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THE SEVEN HABITS OF HIGHLY EFFECTIVE PEOPLE                                                      Brought to you by FlyHeart


       Part One


       Paradigms and Principles



       INSIDE-OUT


             There is no real excellence in all this world which can be separated from right living
          -- David Starr Jordan
                                                          *  *  *
             In more than 25 years of working with people in business, university, and marriage and family
       settings, I have come in contact with many individuals who have achieved an incredible degree of
       outward success, but have found themselves struggling with an inner hunger, a deep need for personal
       congruency and effectiveness and for healthy, growing relationships with other people.
             I suspect some of the problems they have shared with me may be familiar to you.
             I've set and met my career goals and I'm having tremendous professional success.    But it's cost me
       my personal and family life.    I don't know my wife and children anymore.    I'm not even sure I know
       myself and what's really important to me.    I've had to ask myself -- is it worth it?
             I've started a new diet -- for the fifth time this year.    I know I'm overweight, and I really want to
       change.    I read all the new information, I set goals, I get myself all psyched up with a positive mental
       attitude and tell myself I can do it.    But I don't.    After a few weeks, I fizzle.    I just can't seem to keep a
       promise I make to myself.
             I've taken course after course on effective management training.  I expect a lot out of my employees
       and I work hard to be friendly toward them and to treat them right.    But I don't feel any loyalty from
       them.    I think if I were home sick for a day, they'd spend most of their time gabbing at the water
       fountain.    Why can't I train them to be independent and responsible -- or find employees who can be?
             My teenage son is rebellious and on drugs.    No matter what I try, he won't listen to me.    What can
       I do?
             There's so much to do.    And there's never enough time.    I feel pressured and hassled all day, every
       day, seven days a week.    I've attended time management seminars and I've tried half a dozen different
       planning systems.    They've helped some, but I still don't feel I'm living the happy, productive, peaceful
       life I want to live.
             I want to teach my children the value of work.    But to get them to do anything, I have to supervise
       every move;    and put up with complaining every step of the way.    It's so much easier to do it myself.
       Why can't children do their work cheerfully and without being reminded?
             I'm busy -- really busy.    But sometimes I wonder if what I'm doing will make a difference in the
       long run.    I'd really like to think there was meaning in my life, that somehow things were different
       because I was here.
             I see my friends or relatives achieve some degree of success or receive some recognition, and I smile
       and congratulate them enthusiastically.    But inside, I'm eating my heart out.    Why do I feel this way?
             I have a forceful personality.    I know, in almost any interaction, I can control the outcome.    Most of
       the time, I can even do it by influencing others to come up with the solution I want.    I think through
       each situation and I really feel the ideas I come up with are usually the best for everyone.    But I feel
       uneasy.    I always wonder what other people really think of me and my ideas.

             My marriage has gone flat.    We don't fight or  anything; we just don't love each other anymore.
       We've gone to counseling; we've tried a number of things, but we just can't seem to rekindle the feeling
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