This is a wonderful analogy used by Stephen Covey in his fantastic book ‘The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People’, in which he describes the sorry state of a person working long and hard to cut down a tree, sweated and worn out from the effort. When it is suggested he take a break and sharpen the saw he replies ‘Goodness I don’t have time to sharpen the saw, I’m far too busy sawing!’ and carries on sawing away with the blunt blade.
India is my favourite place to go and sharpen my saw. Last time I was there several ideas for articles came to me in a matter of minutes and I have since written and published those pieces. There were also spontaneous ideas for workshops, which I have run in this last year. Plans which came to mind so effortlessly in India, have matured now and blossomed into wonderful projects. And of course it’s not just the creative saw which is sharpened but also the physical, emotional and spiritual, through rest, being close to nature and having time to reflect.
Tuesday, 26 January 2010
Friday, 8 January 2010
Happiness Formula
I appreciate simplicity and this little formula is very dear to me.
‘Eat well, sleep well, think positive thoughts and move your body’
I find it an easy check list to hold in the front of my mind as I go about life.
Eat well – eating what suits my particular body (a vegan diet) and saying no to ‘plastic’ food (junk food).
Sleep well – means good routine and a well rested body that’s raring for the world in the morning.
Think positive thoughts – remembering I always have choice, I can step back and ask: ‘is this train of thought going to take me to a positive destination or a negative one?’, before I jump on it.
Moving the body – energy spent is energy earned, exercise is a fantastic investment!
For me these are the roots of the wellbeing tree, the fruits are clarity of thought, informed decisions, energy, motivation and action.
‘Eat well, sleep well, think positive thoughts and move your body’
I find it an easy check list to hold in the front of my mind as I go about life.
Eat well – eating what suits my particular body (a vegan diet) and saying no to ‘plastic’ food (junk food).
Sleep well – means good routine and a well rested body that’s raring for the world in the morning.
Think positive thoughts – remembering I always have choice, I can step back and ask: ‘is this train of thought going to take me to a positive destination or a negative one?’, before I jump on it.
Moving the body – energy spent is energy earned, exercise is a fantastic investment!
For me these are the roots of the wellbeing tree, the fruits are clarity of thought, informed decisions, energy, motivation and action.
Labels:
Health,
Personal Development,
Wellbeing,
Wisdom
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