7 Powerful Lessons From the Book “The 7 Habits Of Highly Effective People”
⚡️Book Thread⚡️
(Over 30 Million Copies Sold)
Habit 1: Be Proactive
Proactivity refers to simply taking responsibility for your life.
When we respond to things reactively, we tend to think we are not responsible for what happens to us.
✅Focus your time on what you can control, and overall feel better about a situation.
Habit 2: Begin With The End In Mind
Beginning with the end in mind requires you to use a little imagination. Look into the future at what you want to do in life.
👉Then, use that vision to plan what you’ll do today to help you get there.
Habit 3: Put First Things First
✅Putting first things first means organizing and executing around your most important priorities.
It is living and being driven by the principles you value most, not by the agendas and forces surrounding you.
Habit 4: Think Win-Win
This habit looks at putting your attention less on competition and more on collaboration
👉In the long run, if it isn’t a win for both of us, we both lose. That’s why win-win is the only real alternative in interdependent realities.
Habit 5: Seek First To Understand, Then To Be Understood
When we communicate, most times we listen with the intent to reply, not to understand.
✅When you change this way of thinking, you may realize your entire response changes.
Habit 6: Synergize
When people experience synergy, they are taking the time to truly accept the other person’s differences.
You’re experiencing synergy, if you:
- Have a change of heart
- Feel new energy and excitement
- Feel that the relationship has transformed
Habit 7: Sharpen The Saw
👉Sharpening the saw is what keeps the rest of the six habits together.
When our body and mind are empowered, we have no limits.
Here are a few ways you can sharpen the saw:
- Physical: Beneficial eating, exercising, and resting
- Social/Emotional: Making social and meaningful connections with others
- Mental: Learning, reading, writing
- Spiritual: Spending time in nature, meditation, music, art, prayer
Can you remember…
- the worst/best decision you’ve ever made?
- the consequences of it?
- all the possible perspective you had?
Go to an upper level of decision making and make you mind to be on auto pilot mode.
1. Fear is a bigger obstacle than the obstacle itself
Tell your heart that the fear of suffering is worse than the suffering itself. And that no heart has ever suffered when it goes in search of its dreams.
✅With any great risk comes great reward.
2. What is "true" will always endure
Truth cannot be veiled by smoke and mirrors -- it will always stand firm.
✅When you're searching for the "right" decision, it will be the one that withstands the tests of time and the weight of scrutiny.