Showing posts with label taking action. Show all posts
Showing posts with label taking action. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

DEMANDING ACTION

“The Universe doesn’t give you what you ask for with your thoughts – it gives you what you demand with your actions.” -Steve Maraboli
In an effort to give you a few tools to arm yourself for the task of that demand, I give you excerpts from and links to 3 different action-taking self-help type spots. 


With respect to goals, projects, and other to-do items, it’s easy to get stuck too long in the thinking and planning phase.  You can sit around writing and rewriting your goals, delving into your subconscious mind, working through emotional blocks, summoning the power of Thor… whatever.  

But if you don’t eventually get into action, you’re wasting your time.

How can you get into a sustainable mode of direct action without feeling like you have to torture yourself to get moving?  What can you do to cross the barrier between merely thinking about what you want and actually making it happen with your own two hands?

Here’s a simple technique I use.  This has worked very well for me when I’ve applied it.  It usually takes only 5-10 minutes.

     (Click the link above to see the whole post including the techniques.)
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People at the top of every profession share one quality — they get things done. This ability supercedes intelligence, talent, and connections in determining the size of your salary and the speed of your advancement.

Despite the simplicity of this concept there is a perpetual shortage of people who excel at getting results. The action habit — the habit of putting ideas into action now — is essential to getting things done. Here are 7 ways you can grow the action habit:

(Click the link above to see more…)
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"If you pay attention, you learn something from taking a smart step. More often than not, it gets you close to what you want."
This is an excerpt from Just Start: Take Action, Embrace Uncertainty, Create the Future. Note that "Creaction" is a word the authors made up by combining "creation" with "action."

What exactly is Creaction? Well, to start, it is based on acting and creating evidence, as contrasted with thinking and analysis.

Here’s one way to think about that pivotal difference. A dancer dances. Substituting thinking for dancing doesn’t work. If all you do is think, you end up just thinking about dancing. There is nothing to show for that thought.

Thinking is often a part of creating, but without action, nothing is created. This is true for even very intellectual, cerebral fields. For a task to be considered creating, you must publish, teach, or whatever. Daydreaming by itself is not creating.

How does Creaction play out in practice? How does it help us deal with uncertainty? The process has three parts, which repeat until you have reached your goal or decide you no longer want to. 

(Again, click the link above to learn more.)
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As a bonus, dear readers, I'm sharing one of my favorite 80's hair metal videos, about action, albeit a different kind of action. It was the 80s afterall.





Sunday, January 5, 2014

Taking Action - on Anything at All

Welcome to 2014 with the Word Whores!

Yes, yes - it's January 5 already. But, by the Word Whore Topic Calendar, managed by the nubile, nimble and nitpicky Kristine Krantz, we are launching a fresh new year. With that comes a slight change in the way we handle topics. At Kristine's suggestion, we're going with single words to riff upon. She snuck into our posts about favorite and hated words (like mine here), shuffled them about, did the Hokey-Pokey, and put them in our calendar.

In roughly alphabetical order.

This should be fun.

The word of the week??

(I know you're breathlessly scrolling down...)

ACTION.

Now, some of you may know that I'm into Oriental philosophy and medicine. If I claim a religion, it's Taoism (which is a philosophy, not a religion, but that's neither here nor there) and the man, David, is a Doctor of Oriental Medicine. That's him above, looking very handsome with me at our son's New Year's Eve wedding. The spiritual philosophy intertwines with the physical in dealing with health issues.

Many years ago. So many that I hesitate to count, but it had to be early- to mid-90s. I was not yet 30 and yet I had not been feeling good. For a couple of winters I'd been plagued with illnesses. I also had a knee injury and a bronchial infection that came close to killing me. I seemed to be caught in a cycle of sickness and depression, one feeding into the other.

An acupuncturist treating me explained that I had a great deal of stagnant energy, which pretty much matched how I felt. In assessing the imbalance of my organs, he suggested that I needed to take action on something in my life. The Chinese view depression as a kind of stagnation, particularly in the liver and gall bladder. (Think energetics, not organs.) He asked if there was something I'd been wanting to do that I hadn't taken action on.

Oh.

All those grand ideas about being a writer! Except.... I wasn't really writing.

So, I got serious about it, though it was the last thing I felt like doing, since I felt like crap most of the time. I made myself write. I finally took all that good advice I'd been hearing and I tried to write every day. When that didn't happen on too many days, I retrained my night-owl self to become a morning person. (Kind of.) I got up early and made sure to write SOME every damn day, no matter how groggy or surly I became due to the early hours.

Eventually, I got better at it.

It was not like being overfat, terribly unfit and starting an exercise program. Believe me, I've been there, too. It took a good six months before I didn't actively hate what I was doing to myself. It probably took at least a year before I started to like it.

But it happened.

And I developed a body of work. I improved in my craft. Publishers bought my essays and stories. Over time, that stagnant energy cleared out and flowed into writing.

Best action I ever took.

I'm not saying that everyone should be a writer, by any stretch. I am saying that, if there's something you want to do and you haven't set it in motion - do it. Do something, anything, towards it today. Then tomorrow do another thing. Every day, take a step. This is why the Taoists say "The journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step." What people leave out is that you have to keep taking the steps. Every day, more steps.

I look back now, something like twenty years later, at all the miles I've traveled. All of it goes back to that decision to take action.

See you on the road!