Day-31-101 Day Reading Challenge-List your Problems--Who will cry when you die
Day-31-101 day Reading Challenge- a Mine2Shine initiative-9789186428
List Your Problems
“A problem well stated is a problem half
solved,” said Charles Kettering. There is something very special that happens
when you take out a piece of paper
and list every single
one of your problems
on it. It is very
much like the peaceful feeling you get after telling your best friend about something
that has been troubling you for weeks. A weight
somehow falls from your
shoulders. You feel lighter, calmer
and freer.
I have discovered that while
our minds can be our best friends, they can also be our worst enemies. If you keep thinking about your problems,
pretty soon you will find you think about little else. The mind is a strange
creature in this regard: the things you want it to remember
it forgets, but all those
things you want it to forget,
it remembers. I have people coming to my seminars who tell me they are still
mad about what someone did to them
fifteen years ago or still annoyed
at what a rude salesclerk said to them last month.
To let go of the mental
clutter that your problems tend to generate, list all your worries on a piece
of paper. If you do so, they will no
longer be able to fester in your mind and drain your valuable energy. This simple exercise will also permit you to
put your problems into perspective and tackle them in an orderly, well – planned sequence. Among the many
successful people who have used this technique are martial arts master Bruce Lee and Winston Churchill, who once
said, “It helps to write down half a dozen things which are worrying me. Two of them, say, disappear;
about two, nothing can be done, so it’s no use worrying; and two perhaps
can be settled.”
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