Monday, August 12, 2013

Prologue and Part I: Vision

Part1: Vision
The Manic Society
The Busy Generation
The Hyperactive Workplace
The Joyless Economy
Part2: Potential
Authentic Success
The Self Principle
The Success Contract
Inner Dialogue
Part3: Wisdom
Wisdom Is Not an MBA
Success Is Not Always Up
Happiness Is Not an It
Money Is Not Your Purpose
Love Is Not Just an Emotion
Part4: Relationships
The Broken Community
The Independence Myth
The Competition Block
Thin Conversations
A Better Balance
Part5: Courage
Shift Happens
A Failure Policy
Further Education
Higher Learning
Part 6: Grace
Destination Addiction
Insane Busyness
The Failure of More
The Energy Crisis
Part 7: Renaissance
Be the Goal
The Big Fear
A Ph. D. in Happiness
Saying Yes


Prologue

Life is full of moments. One moment is after another. Some moments pass by with you barely noticing. Other moments stay with you forever. They change the way you think, you see, you live.

I had a life-changing moment when I was 16 years old. It was a Saturday afternoon, and I was half-walking and half-running down a very busy street. As I hurried along, I notice a man lying facedown on the pavement. He could have been dead or dying. Everyone saw him. He was in plain view. We all pretended not to see him.

I was going to pass him by. I was late. I was only 16. But something made me stop. I moved cautiously toward him. He was wearing an old, disheveled coat. His glasses lay next to his head. The lenses were smashed. His hair was long and wild. He stank of alcohol. I guessed he was homeless. I pulled at his arm and turned him over. His face was a mass of cuts and bruises. He was barely conscious. He smiled at

“Hello, Dad,” I said.

My dad suffered from alcoholism. Which he denied, of course. He had hidden his drinking for years.  We didn’t see it. One psychiatrist showed us some brain scans. “You father has been an alcoholic for most of his adult life,” he said. With hindsight, I remember Dad liked to drink. I also remember he was often very tired. Sometimes he would suddenly look very old. But we were happy, or so I thought. Mom; Dad, David; and I-“the Holdens”- all loved each other. Everyone knew that. But none of us knew that Dad was in so much pain. Silent pain.

My dad’s alcoholism becomes obvious. His drinking accelerated and his denial increased. Mom tried to get through to Dad. We all did, but we were on the outside and couldn’t get in. Confrontations, ultimatums, and more denials followed. Eventually Dad moved out. For the last nice years of his life he lived homeless.

The pain I felt was beyond words. I woke up every day for ten years with a sharp, stabbing ache in my belly. I was having a midlife crisis in a teenager’s body.  Amazingly, even as Dads alcoholism worsened, he still held senior management positions for investment banks and stock market.

My dad’s fast demise shocked everyone. He was a successful man in most people’s eye. He had enjoyed a rich and varied career with multinational companies such as Hertz and TWA. He has a family who loved him. Certainly there had been difficult times, too. He made money and he lost money. He got promoted and he got fired, several times. Some ventures grew and some folded. But he was always well respected and held in high esteem.

So what had happened to my dad? The doctors said it was due to alcoholism. I think it was something worse than that. The more time I spent with Dad, the more I understood that he was not ill; he was lost. Somewhere along the road to success he had gotten lost. He had lost sight of what is real. He had also lost sigh of himself…My dad had a career, and look what had happened to him. Surely there is more to life than just have a career.

For the next nine years, I prayed each night that my dad was safe and sleeping under a roof. My dad’s pain taught me that in a world full of front-page news, fast-tracked careers, designer clothing and tragic sports results; you have to remember what is real. Success is about seeing the truth in all things. It is about living wisely and knows what you love.

Part One: Vision

I was born at the Princess Elizabeth Hospital in Kenya. The midwife told my mother it was the fastest birth she’d ever seen. There was virtually no labor, and I arrived in record time. Apparently I couldn’t wait to get the umbilical cord cut. My mother says she immediately recognized in me a sense of purpose and urgency.

I was born with fat genes. One day when I was four years old. My mother asked me why I looked so worried. I told her, “I’m thinking about how to get a mortgage.” From the beginning, I was eager to make my mark on the world and do something important with my life.

Like most teenagers, I was ambitious for success, but I didn’t really know what success was. After my father’s downfall, my ambition for success intensified. During my 20s I pioneered two health-care clinics, authored five books, lectured internationally, gave over 1,000 media interviews, and was financially set. Looking back now, I think I hope my success would help to heal the pain I felt about my dad.

My list of achievements looked impressive, but there was also something frantic about it. I had sprinted through my life without much pause or sopping. I was so impatient for my life to happen. Of course, after 21 you hit 30 too soon, and then 40 even faster. “We imagine that we can turn the pages slowly, one by one, pausing at each paragraph, “ wrote Harold. “But it is not like that, believe me. The pages are caught by a gust of wind, a hurricane, and they flutter and rush through our fingers.”

Over time, I learned that success is not a race; it is a journey. I also learned that success is not an achievement; it is a discovery. The primary task, then, is to create a vision for success.

信仰和生活相关
你信仰什么就会照着怎的方式生活

要真

The Manic Society


In the Fast Society, we find ways to do everything faster than ever before.  It is an ASAP way of life. Fast is exciting. Fast offers us the possibility of success sooner, happiness sooner, love sooner, everything sooner. Every morning we wake early to the sound of our alarm clocks. We rise immediately. The “Snooze” button is for losers. We hit the shower. Speed-dry our hair. Switch on our fast-boil coffeemaker. Drink caffeine to lift our spirits. Scan the headlines. Take our breakfast with us to the car. And aim to beat the rush hour.

In the Manic Society, we speed ahead, on fast-forward, and the danger is that we leave behind the truth.

Men stumble over the truth from time to time, but most pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing happened.


Of particular concern is how our relationships suffer in the Manic Society. Our frantic schedules cause us to skim across the surface of each other’s lives without ever really connecting. The mad rush demands so much of our time and energy that we have to resort to quality time,” date nights, text messages, and speed dating to connect with anyone. We excel at shorthand relationships in which we get each other’s abridged headline news, but miss out on any intimate heart-to heart exchanges. The pressure to work harder is relentless, and we often end up emotionally unavailable an d socially isolated.

Personally, as someone who often lives life fast, I find I have to be constantly mindful about giving my relationships my best attention. In my heart of hearts, I know that my relationships are more important to me than more money, more business book deals, and television studios. And yet, periodically, I let my relationships lapses into a shorthand form of communication in which I barely manage to “catch up” with those I love.


Like so many people in the Manic Society, Graham had allowed his addiction to speed to blur his vision and perspective. He no longer had any idea what success is, other than to do more of the same and faster.

Pit Stops

Shortly before my 36th birthday, I woke one morning with acute pain in my lower back. At first the pain felt like an angry bee sting, but it soon worsen into a sharp, stabbing sensation. I should have stopped everything and visited my doctor. Instead I elected to press on with my busy schedule of seminars, master classes, and coaching sessions, which I wanted to honor. Over the next a few days, the pain became so intense that my body was in a constant sweat. Still I didn’t stop. I gave several presentations wearing an ice pack and standing on one leg. Then one day the pain became so horrible I passed out. I finally got the hint that it was time to stop.

No longer able to override the pain, my life came to a grinding halt for about eight weeks. The pain was so intense that no painkiller had any positive effect. Not even morphine injections worked. It was a frightening time, and I was eventually diagnosed with a prolapsed disc. It was also- at least initially- a hugely frustrating time as I fell further and further behind with my work schedule.

I returned to work and I had to take each day slowly…instead of six appointments a day, I did two. And instead of doing 20 things on my to-do list, I did what was necessary. My change of pace forced me to become more discerning, more strategic, and ultimately, I believe, more effective. I ran around less, but I got through more of what was really important. This was a real eye-opener, to say the least.

Several specialists recommended I have immediate surgery, but instead I chose a holistic program of treatment that included chiropractic, massage, acupuncture, and healing. I made a full and quick recovery, mostly because I really slowed down. I was surprised and delighted by how slowing down-and stopping-had radically helped improve the quality of my life and work. With more intelligent pacing, I became more present and more effective. Also, I found more time to have important conversations I would previously have missed. Mentally, I felt centered and more peacefully all through the day.

In the Manic Society, we increasingly display what psychologists call “Type H” behavior. The “H” stands for hurried, hostile, and humorless. We are so hurried that we have no time to be present. We are so hostile for fear of losing speed that we end u feeling isolated. And we are so humorless that we forget to enjoy this moment or, indeed any moment. We have run out of shortcuts and are completely lost.

It is an old ironic habit of human beings to run faster when we have lost our way.

In the Manic Society, we live our lives fast, but we do not always live them well. Perpetual motion. Internal combustion. Permanently busy. There is no stillness. There is no stopping. We are afraid to stop because we are afraid of losing time and falling behind. We suffer from an appalling sense of inner poverty and lack. When we don’t stop, we forget- we forgot what is important, we forget who we are, we forget that there are other options, and we forget what life is really for.

Cultivating the regular habit of stopping is an essential skill for being successful and staying sane in the Manic Society. If we never stop, we end up skimming the surface of life; our time disappears and we miss the richness, depth, and texture of each occasion. Stopping, if only for a few minutes a day, is a way to connect again to your vision, your wisdom, and your purpose.

I illustrate the crucial importance of stopping to my clients by using an example fro Formula One motor racing the fastest sport in the world. Central to the strategy of winning a Formula One race is the pit stop. No driver, no matter how fast he or she dries, can win a race without taking a pit stop. In the pit stop the drivers get refreshment, receive instructions, have engine repairs, fill the gas tank, and set off on fresh tires. A Formula One race is all about speed and strategy- and it is in the timing and management of the pit stop that the race is often won.

In life, a pit stop can take many forms. Meditation can be a pit stop. Prayer can be a pit stop. So too can a lunch break, an inspiring book, a game of golf, a regular yoga class, and time with friends. Stopping can help us remember our vision, connect more deeply to our wisdom, and make us more open and available to inspiration. Stopping can save us so much time, so many mistakes, and much heartache.

The Busy Generation

Richard told me “Every week I enter the lottery, but I am always too busy to check if I have won or not.” He looked up to the heavens and said wistfully, “I’m probably sitting on a fortune, and I don’t know it.”

As the Bible says: There is a time for everything and a season for every activity under heaven”.  There will always be projects, goals, birthday parties, and deadlines that require extra time and energy.

For the Busy Generation, busyness has become a way of life. We are either busy or looking busy. Every time we proclaim, “ I am busy, “ we are saying to the rest of the Busy Generation that we are worth something, that we have value, and that our lives are important.

From a distance, being busy looks damned impressive and very necessary. It looks like purpose, focus, drive, and huge productivity. Up close, however, our busyness often betrays us. It often hides levels of confusion, fear, anxiety, and pain. It is often just noise. It has no real substance to it.

Permanent busyness

You have to learn that it is not enough to be busy; so are the ants. The question is: What are we busy about?

Permanent busyness might start with the best of intentions, but along the way we disconnect from what is truly important, sacred, and real.

We may achieve “optical success” but we do not necessarily feel successful. We may achieve a lot, but we are often too busy to enjoy it. We are too busy paying off the mortgage to enjoy any quality time at home. We have lovers to whom we are too tired to make love. We have children who seem to grow up too fast. We have “really great friends” whom we hardly ever see. We don’t take vacations. We are too busy to be happy.

Permanent busyness is usually counterfeit success. The “buzz” and the “rush” feel great for a time, but the adrenaline soon runs out. We are busy about nothing in particular.

Permanent busyness blacks vision. It is my fervent belief that leaders are not meant to be permanently busy. Leaders are the custodians of vision. My goal is to help them discipline themselves to make time for the big picture and inspiration. I help them to lead with vision.

The ability to focus attention on important thing is a defining characteristic of intelligence.

Reward success, not busyness!

Busyness Audit

Now that it’s all over, what did you really do yesterday that was worth mentioning?

Stop to review success? Specialize in failure analysis?

Business is not true success.

It is my experience that permanent busyness is mainly compensation for a lack of clarity about true success. I notice that whenever an individual, a team, or a family becomes clearer about success, they naturally become less busy. Personally I find that whenever I meditate on the nature of true success, any unnecessary busyness quickly falls away. Busyness audit helps me to be better at saying “Yes” to what is truly important and “No, thank you” to what is not.

Business is not your purpose.

For 23 years I went to work without a purpose. I had a reason, which was money. But a reason is not the same thing as a purpose. Busyness is what you give your time to; a purpose is what you give your heart to. Purpose is about love and wholeheartedness.

Business has no implicit value.
The busy Generation lives as if each moment must be filled with an action or a task. We know how to busy ourselves. We operate in a constant “doing” mode and only reset when everything is done. But there is no end to the doing and often no real purpose either.

Another variety of busyness that blacks success is “ addictive busyness.” People who suffer from addictive busyness become insanely neurotic if they are not doing something. They feel guilty and valueless without a to-do list. Angela says “Either I leave work on time and feel guilty, or I get home late and feel guilty.”

Permanent business can often be counterproductive in that it invariably leads to exhaustion and feeling overwhelmed. The sigmoid curve for busyness shows that PB takes people up, up and up until inevitably they suffer a drop in energy and result.

Business is not people-friendly

Business bypasses the heart:
The Chinese word for “busy” is composed of two characters: “Heart” and “killing”

The Hyperactive Workplace
Michael says, “Work became an enormous black hole that chew up my energy, my dreams, my relationships, my health, everything…I made great money but at the expense of everything I valued.”

More Heart
The modern formula for work appears to be: More Success +Greater Speed+Fewer Resources ask yourself, “Do I really want to play this game.”

More Balance
I asked Clive to assess how much of his working day he spent on
a.     Tasks
b.     Relationships
c.      Vision

More Joy


The Joyless Economy

Is it asking too much to be successful and happy?
I have worked closely with very successful people from all walks of life. It has been a great education…Why isn’t their success enough?
The BBC began by running “Who wants to be happy?” Their happiness training had four major areas of focus:
a.     Inner happiness
b.     Everyday abundance
c.      Positive relationships
d.     True success
Keith, in his early 40s, was successful, rich, attractive, healthy, and discontented. He had all the symptoms f what scientists call the “new depression”

“I thought I had everything I’d ever really wanted: a well-paid job, a girlfriend I was happy with and a Mark II Jaguar. But there still seemed to be something missing. I wasn’t happy about something, but what that something is I don’t know.

I told him that his definition of success sounded like a shopping list. He nodded thoughtful.

According to the Lexus ad, “Whoever said money cant buy happiness isn’t spending it right.” In our consumer-driven society, we have developed what philosopher Erich called a “having mode” of existence. In this mode we define success, happiness, and love as “things” apart from us that we must pursue catch, and own. We speak in terms of “achieving” success.
Fromm, in his book To Have or To Be? He  said that “to be” successful requires an inquiry and education about our identity (Who am I?), about our personal values (What do I want?), and about our vision (What is my life for) Fromm warned us that if we skip this learning and try only “to have” success, we risk accumulating more and more “things” that we don’t need or want anyway. We become “thing junkies” who try to work and spend our way to success, but finish up feeling empty of any true purpose or value.
The reason why so many people are successful and unhappy is not because there is not enough to accumulate, it is because we have not figured out what we really want.

“Truth”-What do I really want?

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