Page 65 - 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

       about it.


       Using Your Whole Brain

             Our self-awareness empowers us to examine our own thoughts.    This is particularly helpful in
       creating a personal mission statement because the two unique human endowments that enable us to
       practice Habit 2 -- imagination and conscience -- are primarily functions of the right side of the brain.
       Understanding how to tap into that right brain capacity greatly increases our first-creation ability.
             A great deal of research has been conducted  for decades on what has come to be called brain
       dominance theory.    The findings basically indicated that each hemisphere of the brain -- left and right
       -- tends to specialize in and preside over different functions, process different kinds of information, and
       deal with different kinds of problems.
             Essentially, the left hemisphere is the more logical/verbal one and the right hemisphere the more
       intuitive, creative one.    The left deals with words, the right with pictures; the left with parts and
       specifics, the right with wholes and the relationship between the parts.    The left deals with analysis,
       which means to break apart; the right with synthesis, which means to put together.    The left deals with
       sequential thinking; the right with simultaneous and holistic thinking.    The left is time bound; the right
       is time free.
          Although people use both sides of the brain, one side or the other generally tends to be dominant in
       each individual.    Of course, the ideal would be  to cultivate and develop the ability to have good
       crossover between both sides of the brain so that a person could first sense what the situation called for
       and then use the appropriate tool to deal with it.    But people tend to stay in the "comfort zone" of their
       dominant hemisphere and process every situation according to either a right- or left-brain preference.
          In the words of Abraham Maslow, "He that is good with a hammer tends to think everything is a
       nail." This is another factor that affects the "young lady/old lady" perception difference.    Right-brain
       and left-brain people tend to look at things in different ways.
             We live in a primarily left-brain-dominant  world, where words and measurement and logic are
       enthroned, and the more creative, intuitive, sensing, artistic aspect of our nature is often subordinated.
       Many of us find it more difficult to tap into our right-brain capacity.
             Admittedly this description is oversimplified and new studies will undoubtedly throw more light
       on brain functioning.    But the point here is that we are capable of performing many different kinds of
       thought processes and we barely tap our potential.    As we become aware of its different capacities, we
       can consciously use our minds to meet specific needs in more effective ways.

       Two Ways to Tap the Right Brain

             If we use the brain dominance theory as a model, it becomes evident that the quality of our first
       creation is significantly impacted by our ability to use our creative right brain.    The more we are able
       to draw upon our right-brain capacity, the more fully we will be able to visualize, to synthesize, to
       transcend time and present circumstances, to project a holistic picture of what we want to do and to be
       in life.

       Expand Perspective

             Sometimes we are knocked out of our left-brain environment and thought patterns and into the right
       brain by an unplanned experience.    The death of a loved one, a severe illness, a financial setback, or
       extreme adversity can cause us to stand back, look at our lives, and ask ourselves some hard questions:
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