![]() |
Click Here to see the latest posts! Ask any questions related to business / entrepreneurship / money-making / life NO BLATANT ADS PLEASE
Stay up to date! Get email notifications or |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]() > Right there. The problem for many people is
> they do a lot of things well AND love to do > them all. > That often is the first RUT they have to > climb out of. Picking and choosing what to > do is not an easy thing. What I DO and what I get out of it - the inner satisfaction - can be unrelated. We may appear to have many varied interests on the surface - but - would closer inspection reveal that each interest satisfies the same inner need? Something to think about. Michael Ross. http://www.sowpub.com/artofleverage.html |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Michael --
> What I DO and what I get out of it - the > inner satisfaction - can be unrelated. Absolutely agree here. > We may appear to have many varied interests > on the surface - but - would closer > inspection reveal that each interest > satisfies the same inner need? I alluded to this in one of my other messages. People drop some interests to "focus" and then they have this empty spot in their life. I think the varied interests could all satisfy the same need or they could satisfy different needs. The different needs is where dropping one can lead to an overall uneasiness - dis-ease? The concept in NLP of future pacing is interesting. It takes account of how actions will affect you long term. Specifically how making large changes or following certain paths will play out. Are there other needs that will pop-up demanding a feeding down the road a piece. -- Dan Butler Bigger than your average tips book... |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Other recent posts on the forum...
Get the report on Harvey Brody's Answers to a Question-Oriented-Person