Posted: January 30th, 2007 at 12:09am
In “The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People“, Steven Covey wrote about seven habits that could change a person’s life on an immeasurable scale. These habits are split into three distinct areas: Private Victory, Public Victory and Renewal, which cover both internal and external change.
The first habit, and possibly the most fundamental, is “Be Proactive“.
The term “Proactive” has lost a lot of its meaning in recent years, as it has been picked up and bandied around as a buzz-word (much like the term “synergy”). Once you cut through the management speak, you’ll see that this habit is one of the most vital that any person can develop.
Being proactive is about choosing how you react in any given situation. The more commonly held reactive model of living suggests that how we act in certain circumstances is out of our control. If someone shouts at us, we become upset. It’s not our fault, it’s theirs. They made us feel this way.
The proactive model says that you can decide on how you react. By living a proactive life, you take full responsibility for how you act and feel.
Steven Covey illustrates this habit with the story of Victor Frankl, a Jewish prisoner during World War 2. With the exception of his sister, Frankl’s entire family perished during the war, and Victor himself was subjected to savage and harrowing torture. During his time as a prisoner, he came to realise that although his captors could take away the freedoms of his physical body, they could not take away the most basic freedom of all – the freedom to choose his response.
Like building any habit, becoming proactive takes time and consistent effort, but it can be learnt in a similar way to most other habits.
I would certainly recommend taking a thirty day trial to see if it makes a difference. Start small and build your way up. Going in at the deep end can destroy your confidence, so start with small things. This helps to give a solid foundation as you gain experience and confidence.
A few examples of where you can try out being proactive:
There are plenty of other ways to be proactive, so have fun and experiment. One of the great things about doing a thirty-day trial is that you can try lots of different approaches in a short space of time, but without the pressure of making a permanent commitment.
Everything can build upon this habit. Becoming a better person requires that you go about it in a proactive way. Getting fitter, learning a new language, starting a business, forming a new relationship or maintaining an existing one. All of these activities benefit when you act in a proactive manner instead of a reactive one.
Posted: January 22nd, 2007 at 10:56pm
We all have bad habits that we’d like to get rid of. They can be something simple, like chewing our fingernails, or they can be something more dangerous like eating too much junk food or watching too much TV. Giving up a bad habit can be a difficult process, but it can be made easier by approaching it in the right way.
Picture the scene: It’s 3am in the morning, and you’ve just finished playing some Flash game involving towers whilst reading two-dozen blogs about funny things cats have done. You wake up the next day tired and irritable, with huge bags under your eyes.
“That’s it”, you say, “No more late night internet surfing for me!”
You make the commitment to stop hanging on the internet for so long. For the first few days you’re clear of the internet, but it isn’t long before you find yourself rubbing your eyes at 2am and wondering why you failed.
The problem isn’t always that you don’t have the discipline to succeed, or that you’re too addicted to something. The problem is that getting rid of a habit leaves a hole to be filled. It sounds simple, but dropping the habit entirely won’t fix the problem. By leaving out something like internet surfing, you’re creating a gap that wants to be filled. If you don’t fill it, you’ll go back to your old ways.
A better solution is to replace the bad habit with a more constructive one.
There are two main ways of finding a bad habit. The first and easiest method is to just grab a piece of paper (or open up notepad) and write down what you think your bad habits. We’re often our own worst critics, so it’s not hard to fill a sheet of paper, but try not to be too hard on yourself. Focus your attention on the habits that will yield the highest rewards if you replace them.
The second way is to ask other people what your bad habits are. This can be quite an eye-opener, but be prepared to hear things you might not like. It’s not essential to get feedback from other people, but it can be useful if you want to get a fuller picture.
Once you’ve decided on which habit to change, you must decide what you’ll replace it with. I recommend only changing one habit at a time to begin, and to build upon small victories. Think of all the benefits you’ll gain from taking up your new habit, and compare it to the consequences of keeping your existing habit.
It’s important to visualise the benefits and how they’ll make you feel, as this will help when the going gets tough (which it will). Don’t forget to write all of this down, so you can refer to it as often as you need. I suggest when you wake up and before you go to bed, but it’s really down to personal choice. The important thing is to constantly reinforce the belief of how this new habit will improve your life.
Our environment often reinforces our current habits, so take a conscious step and change things to reinforce the habit that you want. A small change in our surroundings can make a huge difference in our habits. If your environment isn’t supporting this new habit, then it’s time for a change. It doesn’t have to be anything dramatic, and even creating a poster with your new habit written on it can make all the difference.
For example: if you want to stop drinking lots of soda, replace all the existing drinks in your fridge with water or fruit juice, and keep bottles of water close to the areas that you work in.
To finish off with, here’s a small example of how all this can work. A friend of mine had a habit of biting their fingernails that they wanted to change. They found the easiest way to prevent themselves from biting their nails was to place nail clippers around the house. The best places to put them were in areas where they would normally start biting, such as next to the couch or on the bedside table. When the urge came to bite, they could simply pick up some clippers and use them instead.
That’s a very simple example, but it shows just how powerful a few small changes can be.