Wednesday, December 27, 2023

The Freedom to Change and Grow

Book the Second

In Pursuit of Change, Growth, and Freedom:
An Introduction to Self-Action Leadership



Dedicated to...

Men and women of conscience and character everywhere who have dedicated their educations, careers, and sometimes their lives to upholding the liberties and expanding the freedoms of nations, states, communities, families, and individuals—including themselves.  



"Freedom is not something that anybody can be given. Freedom is something people take [earn], and people are as free as they want to be."

James Baldwin


Chapter 1


Freedom to Change and Grow

 




"You have brains in your head.
You have feet in your shoes.
You can steer yourself
any direction you choose."


Theodore Geisel
         aka Dr. Seuss


I can change.

These three words express one of the greatest powers that YOU, I, and everyone else on the planet possesses as human beings. This remarkable human endowment fundamentally separates us from the rest of the animal kingdom. Unlike an ant, bird, dog, fish, horse, lion, or lizard, you and I possess higher-level cerebral capacities and spiritually-oriented hearts and wills that empower us to reason, plan, behave, persist, love, and endure in ways that rise above our natural inclinations and base desires.

Members of the animal kingdom cannot begin to compete with human beings in this regard. However beautiful, curious, and magnificent a praying mantis, eagle, cheetah, marlin, or shark might be, an indisputable primal fact remains: insects, birds, amphibians, reptiles, and all other mammals are different from human beings in a fundamentally existential and metaphysical manner. 

Despite our remarkable retinue of human endowments, which theoretically grant us such a significant advantage over the rest of the animal kingdom, our natural desires and base inclinations are surprisingly similar to animals. What are some of these inclinations and desires? 

Food,
   Drink,
      Sleep,
         Sex,
            Sociality,
               Variety,
                  Action/indolence,
                     Power,
                        Popularity,
                           Gain,
                              Defiance/rebellion,
                                 Superiority,
                                    Revenge,
                                       Escaping reality through artificially induced "highs"
And...

You get the picture. 

To the "better angels of our nature," (1) this list may seem sad—even pathetic. But let's face it: our base natures are programmed to operate under the same basic operating system as animals, meaning...

If it feels good in the moment, do it.

        If someone crosses you, seek revenge.

                Do whatever it takes to satisfy your ego and other innate urges, regardless what those urges are,

And...

When others disagree with you and/or your group, hurl vicious verbal epithets upon them and then shun them from the herd.  

Sometimes it is good—and quite necessary—to satisfy natural desires. Other times it is wiser—and certainly more mature—to discipline, regulate, and in some cases, deny them entirely.

Not all natural inclinations are bad. Some, like the instinct of a parent to love and care for one's children, are thoroughly good. But most of the time, most of us are not naturally motivated to exemplify the higher characteristics and ideals of humanity; we usually have to pay a price in time, effort, and sacrifice to practice and develop them until they do feel natural.  

What, then, are some of humanity's higher and nobler characteristics? 

SAL is about developing the
nobler, royal characteristics
of which human beings are 
capable of developing.

Humility,
   Discipline,
      Perseverance,
         Honesty,
            Integrity,
         Hard work,
      Patience,
   Courage,
Self-awareness,
   Self-control,
      Moderation,
         Tolerance,
            Compassion,
         Forgiveness,
     Cleanliness,
  Magnanimity,
Empathy, etc.

The purpose of SAL is to assist and motivate us to eschew our baser inclinations and develop the higher and nobler characteristics of which we are capable. The message and miracle of SAL is that if you really want to change; if you genuinely seek liberation from self-defeating inclinations and damning desires, then it is possible to do so. I know this is true because I've experienced real, lasting changes in my own mind, heart, and soul over time throughout my life. In other words, I have experienced my thoughts, speech, actions, attitudes—even my very being—fundamentally transformed over time. I therefore speak literally when I say: I am not the same person I was five, ten, fifteen, twenty, or thirty years ago.

I'm a different person than I used to be.

        I'm a better person than I used to be.

Over the course of my life, I have been continually and gradually evolving into a greater being than I was before. Such changes rarely came quickly or easily; but through determination, persistence, and the grace and mercies of Serendipity, they eventually came... and continue to come.    

And I'm not the only one. I have both observed and studied similar changes in the minds, hearts, and souls of many other people as well. While such changes may not always be scientifically visible or empirically measurable, they can always be practically observed, enjoyed, and appreciated in the experiences of real life. Such real life testimonies and anecdotes are proof enough that human change is not only possible, but highly desirable.

It is, in part, the very purpose of life itself.   

There are many voices in the world that will tell you otherwise—that you are who you are and there is nothing you can do about it. These voices will try to convince you that you were simply born this or that way—that the makeup of your soul was already set in immovable concrete at your birth—and that there is nothing you can do to alter any of the variables that accompanied you upon your entrance into this world. 

Don't listen to those voices; they are NOT telling you the truth.

        Moreover, what a boring lie! 

The truth is this: as an independent human being with a mind, heart, and spiritual essence of your own, you possess both the liberty and capacity to change—if change is what you sincerely seek. And how do you know if you sincerely desire to change? The answer to that question is: if you are willing to pay the price in time, effort, and self-sacrifice that change always demands.

Talk is always cheap unless backed up by action. 

        Thus, it is your ACTIONS that ultimately determine your destiny.  

If, on the other hand, you do not want to change, you also possess the liberty to remain as you are. This text was not written to try and brainwash you into thinking, saying, doing, or being something or someone against your will. Quite to the contrary, nothing is more sacred to us at Freedom Focused than FREE WILL—our own and yours. Rest assured, I—and we—will always honor and respect your liberty to choose. Personal agency (freedom of choice) is absolutely sacrosanct to us. At Freedom Focused, we consider it to be fundamentally inviolable. After all, we don't want anyone else telling us what to think about, say, do, or be against our will.

I want everyone to respect my agency

        And you can be certain that I will always respect your agency.

Nor were these books written to try and convince you that you have to change. You don't have to change. You do have to deal with the consequences of your choices—whatever they may be—but you are always free to choose what you will or will not think about, say, or do. But if you sincerely want to change more than you desire to remain as you are, the message of this book is that you can. Just as importantly, this textbook is filled with principles and practices you can readily apply to begin making change real in your life and career.  

This book was not written to coerce or force you—or anyone else—to think about, say, do, or be anything you don't want to be. They were written to expand your vision of your own personal, professional, and existential potential and then invite you to pursue a pathway that promotes the highest realization of that potential. They were written to help you to help yourself—but only if you want to help yourself. And when I use the word want, I am not talking about a mere passing whim or passive wish to change. I am talking about a deep and authentic desire backed up by the will to devote whatever amount of time and energy that authentic change may require. After all, the price for real change is rarely small; but the rewards are big—and incredibly worth it.

What a privilege it is to be a member of the most advanced species on the planet—the only species capable of authentic, existential change. This textbook outlines a way to exercise this unique, personal power to transcend potentially destructive desires and inclinations.

If you'd like to learn more...

        Then read on!



Facts vs. Feelings

Typically, the exercise of noble and royal characteristics does not feel natural. You must pay a price in time, effort, and self-sacrifice to practice them until they do feel natural. The miracle of being human is that you possess the power to align your desires with deeply help values, goals, and beliefs—even when they may deviate significantly from natural predilections with which you were born. 

Unlike animals, YOU have an existentially advanced brain that allows you to reason logically. Animals can feel and respond to situations according to natural instinct, but they cannot critically analyze their past or consciously plan their future in the same way that human beings can; nor can they develop strategic existential goals or otherwise make concrete plans to change and grow in a long-term, existential sense. 

This means that YOU—unlike an animal—are not predetermined to act merely according to how you feel. You possess the power to transcend natural feelings and respond in deference to consciously determined values, facts, beliefs, and goals. This is good news because no matter how important or meaningful feelings may be, facts must usually trump feelings if we are to act strategically and successfully in pursuit of worthy targeted objectives.  

This is not to say that you should disregard or steamroll your feelings (or someone else's) just because you are in possession of the facts. A wise man once taught me that in most practical cases, it is better—and certainly wiser—to be easy to live with than it is to be right.


"There are times in life when it is important to be right.
But most of the time it is more important to be easy to live with."

Christoffel Golden


With this in mind, I do not encourage you to stomp on other people's feelings (or your own) with facts—even if you can prove that you are right. Efforts at persuasion should always be accompanied by compassion and love, including a sincere interest in—and tender regard for—another person's feelings (including your own). 

Nevertheless, when viewed through a lens of your own long-term growth and development, it is absolutely essential that YOU do not let your own feelings blind you from facts, reality, and consequences. It is better to suffer through the short-term emotional pain from delaying gratification or admitting wrongdoing than it is to endure the long-term agony that usually results from allowing your feelings to trump facts and otherwise react emotionally based strictly on your feelings in the heat of the moment.

It's not that feelings don't matter; they do—a great deal, in fact. After all, I believe our ultimate purpose as human beings involves becoming the recipients of lavish and lasting feelings of satisfaction, pleasure, joy, love, and fulfilment. Without feelings, life would be an insipid and meaningless journey to nowhere. On the other hand, without the guidance of facts, feelings alone my influence you to engage in baggage-laded behaviors that carry devastating long-term consequences, which, in-turn, produce some of the most unpleasant feelings of all—the very thing you were trying to avoid by caving to your feelings in the first place. 

The purpose of focusing on facts is not to obscure, diminish, or deny feelings. The purpose of focusing on facts is to motivate and empower your will to channel the powerful energy of feelings into the positive production of lasting achievements, success, and states of mind marked by happiness and inner peace. Facts must therefore inform your feelings in order for feelings to flourish to their fullest and most positive potential. 

The surest way to maximize positive feelings in the long-run is to control and regulate your behavior in the short-run. Thus, the willingness to sacrifice what you want now for what you want most is the essence of wisdom and character. 


SAL Mantra


The willingness to sacrifice what you want now
for what you want most is the essence of character and wisdom.


Note: This is the first of many SAL Mantras to come. Dr. JJ encourages you to commit these mantras to memory as a means of empowering your mind with positive affirmations and helpful reminders of the core material contained in this Life Leadership handbook. We also encourage you to record each SAL Mantra and reflect upon it in your SAL Journal.  


A Culture of Complacency and Victimization

Think about the last time you heard someone say:

"This is just who I am."

    "I can't change." 
        
        "I was born this way." 

            "I am who I am because of 'so-and-so' or 'such-and-such.'" 

                "It's someone or something else's fault." 

                    "The fault is in my stars and there is nothing I can do about it." 

                        "I blame the universe for my lot in life." 

                            "I am a victim of my ancestry, parenting, background, social status, economic stratification, race, culture, poor choices, destructive habits, bad luck, etc." 

There are many manifestations of the culture of complacency and victimization, but all of them are ultimately rooted in choices to embrace short-sighted desires and inclinations instead of treading the higher pathways of principle and personal responsibility. Instead of rising up to their true potential and choosing their own way as a capable member of a superior species (the Human Race), those cruising around in the complacency crowd or van of victimization choose to view their value as being severely limited and perhaps even pre-determined by forces beyond their control. 

As human beings, we are potential royalty—rulers of the
animal kingdom and guardians and protectors of a planet

in possession of unlimited innate worth and potential.
The TRUTH is that none of us are bound by whatever tendencies we have towards laziness, lust, immaturity, dishonesty, gossip, addiction, malice, revenge, ill-temperament and ill-will, bigotry, intolerance, etc. Each of us possesses the power of choice. This power grants us the potential to change, to become better, to rise beyond the status of mere animals in human form to rise above negativity and tragedy and live up to our extraordinary potential for ontological achievement and Existential Growth.  

Yes, I can change; and you can change.

        That is the miracle of being human.

It is what makes all human beings potential royalty—rulers of the animal kingdom and guardian- protectors of a planet—in possession of unlimited worth and potential.

Our personal power to elevate ourselves begins in our capacity to think and reason on a higher plane than the rest of the animal kingdom. Our thoughts then lead to concrete actions, which, in-turn influence our self-determined habits.  Over time, our habits begin to shape our character, which, in-turn carves out our destiny. As Ralph Waldo Emerson so eloquently put it: You become what you think about all day long. Sow a thought and you reap an action; sow an act and you reap a habit; sow a habit and you reap a character; sow a character and you reap a destiny.


1803-1882
"You become what you think about all day long
."

Ralph Waldo Emerson


"Sow a thought and you reap an action; sow an act and you reap a habit; sow a habit and you reap a character; sow a character and you reap a destiny."

Ralph Waldo Emerson


This comprehensive life leadership textbook has three fundamental purposes:
  1. Proclaim the good news that personal change and Existential Growth are possible.
  2. Provide a toolbox full of knowledge and skills to aid you in successfully initiating change and growth processes.
  3. Inspire you to animate change and growth on an on-going basis throughout your life and career.
The possibility of—and freedom to—initiate personal changes will create opportunities for some of your life's greatest adventures, challenges, fulfillments, and rewards. SAL provides a vehicle whereby you may proactively pursue and successfully embrace these adventures and challenges to become a happy, successful, and full-actualized human being. 

Self-Action Leadership and Education

Making SAL real in your life requires that you learn and then do. It starts with education, advances with action, and continues with consistence, persistence, and endurance. But it always begins with the acquisition of knowledge. 

Freedom Focused exists to support a Pedagogy of Personal Leadership and Character Education and Development (PPLCED) in governing bodies, nations, communities, businesses, schools, homes, and individual lives. PPLCED refers to: Educational curricula that focuses a student's attention and efforts on taking individual responsibility and developing high character


PEDAGOGY OF PERSONAL LEADERSHIP
AND CHARACTER EDUCATION & DEVELOPMENT

Educational curricula that focuses a student's attention and efforts
on taking individual responsibility and developing high character.  


This textbook provides a Pedagogy of Personal Leadership and Character Education & Development (PPLCED) in the form of the SAL Theory and Model, which provides the instruction necessary to successfully change and grow into the person you are capable of becoming as a human being. 

Exercising self-discipline is harder than giving in to what feels natural. Authentic change requires a sincere commitment from your body, mind, heart, and spirit. Making such a commitment is not always easy. As a result, changing can be extremely challenging and time-consuming. Two of the most important variables in your success will be the strength of your desire to change and your will to persist through difficulties along the way. 

As the famous psychiatrist, M. Scott Peck, MD once said, a "patient's will to grow is the one crucial determinant of success or failure in psychotherapy." (2)  The same can be said of any SAL endeavor or personal change initiative.

How much do you really want to change? A sincere answer to this question cannot be fully expressed in words alone. It can only be answered authentically in ACTION. Talk is cheap unless backed up by action
in the same way that paper currency lacks value unless backed up by precious metals and/or a strong and vibrant economy.

How hard are you willing to work to achieve change in your life and/or career? And how patient are you willing to be along the way? Your action-oriented "responses" to these questions will provide the ink that composes the existential tale of your time here on planet Earth. 

The good news is that change is possible. Weak people can become strong. Diffident people can develop confidence. Poor people can grow wealthy—financially or otherwise—over time. Bitter, vengeful people can learn to forgive and let go of the past. The adversities of your personal history do not have to define your present life; nor are they destined to shape your future—unless you let them.

You can choose to change the direction of your life's journey at any given moment along that journey. In so doing, you can write a whole new story for yourself that generations to come will admire, venerate, and even reverence for its grace and nobility. Don't let anyone try to convince you otherwise; and believe me when I say that some will try very hard to do so! We will speak more about this craven crowd of existential "crabs" later on in this work. In the meantime, always remember that: to err is human; but to repair and change is divine


SAL Mantra


To err is human.
To repair and change is divine


Taking personal responsibility is often inconvenient and uncomfortable. Human beings are not always naturally inclined to work hard, exercise self-discipline and self-denial or delay gratification and sacrifice for the well-being of others. Our base natures simply do not seek after anything that might be challenging, painful, or selfless. Bucking these base trends in our nature requires desire, will, and effort expended consistently over time. But for those who are willing to pay the price, the rewards are rich, wondrous, and wildly worth it!

Whether you know it or like it—or not—we are all members of one mighty interrelated human family, deeply connected to each other in ways that transcend the understanding of even the wisest among us. As such, we carry certain responsibilities towards each other. The neglect of these duties we hold and share can bring about devastating consequences for individuals and groups alike. Selfish behavior is ruinous to relationships and can lead to depression and despair. On the flip side, selfless behavior will often fertilize back to life relationships that have atrophied or even died, and, in-turn lead to much happiness and hope. 

Whatever your past and present may be, there is always HOPE for the future. Despite what countless voices may croon to the contrary, I can change and you can change; but only if we really want to change—and only if we prove the sincerity of our desire by our willingness to pay the high price that authentic change often demands. 

This Textbook for Life was written for those who yearn to escape the menacing metaphysical pulls of adversity, temptation, and peer pressure by owning up to the duties they hold to themselves and others around them. YOU are obviously one of these people, or you wouldn't be reading this book right now. I congratulation you for your desire to be a responsible human being. 

NOW is the time to put your desires into ACTION!  



In Your Journal

1. In what areas of your life do you seek to change and grow?

2. Are your desires for change and growth merely passing whims and passive wishes or deep and authentic yearnings?  How do you know?  

3.  What is something you will begin doing TODAY to start putting your desires into action?   


Dr. JJ

Wednesday, December 27, 2023
Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, USA


Author's Note: This is the 367th Blog Post Published by Freedom Focused LLC since November 2013 and the 179th consecutive weekly blog published since August 31, 2020.   

Click HERE for a compete listing of the other 366 FF Blog Articles 

Click HERE for a complete listing of Freedom Focused SAL QUOTES  

Click HERE for a complete listing of Freedom Focused SAL POEMS   

Click HERE to access the FULL TEXT of Dr. JJ's Psalms of Life: A Poetry Collection

Click HERE for a complete listing of Self-Action Leadership Articles

Click HERE for a complete listing of Fitness, Heath, & Wellness Articles

Click HERE for a complete listing of Biographical & Historical Articles


Click HERE for a complete listing of Dr. JJ's Autobiographical Articles

.........................

Tune in NEXT Wednesday for another article on a Self-Action Leadership related topic.  

And if you liked this blog post, please share it with your family, friends, colleagues, and students—and encourage them to sign up to receive future articles for FREE every Wednesday.

To sign up, please email freedomfocused@gmail.com and say SUBSCRIBE, or just YES, and we will ensure you receive a link to each new blog article every Wednesday.  


Click HERE to buy the SAL Textbooks    


Chapter 1 Notes

1).  The phrase, The Better Angels of our Nature, appears in the final paragraph of Abraham Lincoln's First Inaugural Address delivered in Washington, D.C., on Monday, March 4, 1861.

The full paragraph reads: "I am loath to close. We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, by the better angels of our nature."

2).  Peck, M.S. (1978). The Road Less Traveled: A New Psychology of Love, Traditional Values and Spiritual Growth. New York, NY: Touchstone. Page 299. 

Wednesday, December 20, 2023

Know THYSELF


Chapter 9


Know Thyself



More than two millennia ago, ancient Greece's most famous philosophical martyr—SOCRATESuttered one of the shortest quotes of all time. It's brevity, however, did not prevent it from becoming one of the most well known and thought-provoking statements of all time. 

Socrates
470-399 BC
His advice was to simply know thyself.


"Know thyself!"

Socrates


Know thyself... it's a paradoxical principle in that it is both incredibly simple and incredibly complicated all at the same time!

At Freedom Focused, we are passionate about this little two word injunction; and we are not alone in our enthusiasm. Hamilton Collegea liberal arts college in Clinton, New York—is so passionate about this little two-word philosophical gem that they have inscribed it (in Greek) atop their campus seal.

According to their website:

"Socrates believed the first step to true wisdom is to 'know thyself' because only then can one appreciate what one understands and what remains to be learned. Hamilton's founders agreed. ... Today, more than 200 years later, that motto — Know Thyself — remains a guiding principle as Hamilton prepares students to become critical thinkers in order to address our world's most pressing problems. For only after gaining a full appreciation of your strengths, skills, and interests can you make valuable contributions to society and achieve the professional success and personal satisfaction you seek."  (1) 

At Freedom Focused, we wholeheartedly concur. It is crucial that self-action leaders come to truly Know Themselves—not only from a philosophical and theoretical standpoint, but from a practical, day-to-day perspective as well.

At first glance, it sounds simple enough. How hard can it be to get to know yourself? You do, after all, spend an awful lot of time with yourself. In fact, you spend all of your time with yourself! In theory, this fact alone should guarantee that all of us come to know ourselves very well over time.

Why then can it be so difficult to come to truly know yourself?

The answer is because human beings are deep and complicated beings with many different layers of needsas Abraham Maslow so clearly and cogently elucidated in his theory of Hierarchical Needs introduced way back in 1943. I know this because after 44 years of diligently searching my own mind, heart, and soul, I am still coming to terms with and discovering new insights into my own relationship with self. The paradoxical quality of this simple statement of complex meaning reminds me of the savvy words of Oliver Wendell Holmes: I wouldn't give a fig for the simplicity on the near side of complexity; but I would give my right arm for the simplicity on the far side of complexity.  (2)


"I wouldn't give a fig for the simplicity on the near side of complexity; but I would give my right arm for the simplicity on the far side of complexity
!"

Oliver Wendell Holmes


It has taken me 44 years of education and trial-and-error-laden experience, but I am finally coming to get a taste of what the land of "simplicity on the far side of complexity" looks and feels like. I still have a long way to go before I become a full-time inhabitant of this wonderful locale; but even a taste of it makes me earnestly want more and motivates me to keep traveling deeper into this wondrous land that can only be accessed by traveling through the crucible-laden pathways that lead thereto.


There is no other way.

Coming to truly know yourself and then effectively utilizing that valuable insight borne of hard-wrought introspection is a big part of what Self-Action Leadership is all about. At Freedom Focused, it is our sincere hope that you might come to better know yourself as you read this textbook and complete the SAL Master Challenge homework exercises. As you seek to tackle this lifelong challenge, opportunity, and struggle, consider the following list as a "food for thought" guide or map along your way:

  • What are my strengths?
  • What are my weaknesses?
  • What is the nature of my genetic makeup (the good, the bad, the ugly, and the beautiful)?
  • What is the nature of my mimetic makeup (my background and the influence of my ancestry, parents, siblings, extended family, friends, teachers, coaches, mentors, and other associates).
  • What do I believe?
  • What do I value?
  • What do I seek to accomplish and become in my life and career?
  • What do I want to avoid in my life and career?
  • What do I need to overcome to realize my personal and professional vision, mission, and goals? 
  • What are my deepest fears, inadequacies, and insecurities?
  • What is holding me back from accomplishing and becoming all of which I am capable?   
  • How committed am I to personal and professional change and growth?
  • How much am I willing to battle and sacrifice for what I believe in and value? 
  • Is there anything I would be willing to lay down my life for?  If so, what (or who)? 


Productivity & Self-Esteem

When I was a teenager, I read a book written by my uncle, Hyrum W. Smith, who cofounded FranklinCovey Company with Stephen R. Covey. The name of the book was: The 10 Natural Laws of Successful Time and Life Management. I highly recommend this self-help guide to you. It is an excellent book that significantly influenced my life and my thinking about my life at a young age. Perhaps the single most important lesson I learned from that book is that "there is a causal relationship between self-worth and productivity." (3)

Hyrum W. Smith
1943-2019


"There is a causal relationship between self-worth and productivity.
"

Hyrum W. Smith


For whatever reason(s), this principle really rang true to me at the time—and has continued to resonate deeply and powerfully within my mind, heart, and spirit in all the years since I first read it. I believe the reason for its deep and powerful resonance is because after putting the principle into practice on countless occasions along a spectrum of different circumstances spread across four decades of my life, I know the principle is sound and true. My self-worth really is connected to my level of productivity. In other words, when I accomplish things, start projectsand more importantly finish themand otherwise get stuff done, I feel better about myself than when I am listless and idle.  

In a sense, life really is that simple!

Any ACTION you take as a human being that leads to positive and productive results will produce positive feelings and combat anxiety, depression, and insecurity.

Let me say that again: any ACTION you take as a human being which leads to positive and productive results will produce positive feelings and combat anxiety, depression, and insecurity.  

Knowing that this is true, the next time you feel anxious, depressed, or insecure, try taking ACTIONany action—that is bound to lead to positive and productive results. It doesn't have to be something grand, dramatic, or otherwise showy. Simply getting off the couch (or out of bed) and taking a walk in the sunshine or opening up a good book (like the SAL textbook) is an action that is virtually certain to positively affect your mood and make you feel better about yourself. And since positive action tends to build momentum, you are more likely to feel more motivated to take additional positive actions after you have taken that first step—which is usually the hardest step to take! As my good friend, Dr. Chris Neck, has said: If you don't feel like exercising, commit to exercising for just five minutes. If you do, chances are good you'll end up exercising for a lot longer than five minutes

Dr. Chris Neck

"If you don't feel like exercising, commit to exercising for just five minutes. If you do, chances are good you'll end up exercising for a lot longer than five minutes.
"

Christopher P. Neck, Ph.D. 


I promise you unequivocally that no matter who you are or what your background, culture, gender, race, personality, or occupation may be, this same principle will be as true for YOU as it is for me. If you are a human being, then you will feel better about yourself when you are productive than when you are idle.

As such, it behooves all of us to be conscious and intentional about planning our lives and careers in ways that maximize our opportunities to act, accomplish, achieve, contribute, and produce. And this textbook is filled-to-overflowing with examples, exercises, and other opportunities to do just that. If you will embrace it, endure it, and exhaust its possibilities, you will find that your own self-worth and esteem will go through the roof. 


The Power of the Present

Far too many of us spend far too much time in the past or the future. We live in the past whenever we muse about, mull over, and otherwise focus on either reminiscing about or regretting what happened in the past. We live in the future whenever we worry about what may be coming down the line in our lives. We also live in the future when we unduly waste time daydreaming of what could be. 

The most important time of all is NOW
We should all learn from our past mistakes. And from time-to-time we should all reflect warmly and gratefully on blissful memories from our past. But we should not live our lives in the past. 

Likewise, we should all plan for our future. And from time-to-time we should all fuel hope for the future by virtue of productive envisioning exercises. But we should not live our lives in the future. 

In practical terms, the past and future are not accessible to us and in that sense don't really exist. The only thing that is truly REAL for us in this world is the PRESENT. As such, the present is where all self-action leaders live. The present is where we all must live if we are to minimize the baggage of our past and maximize the potential of our future.  

There is great POWER in the PRESENT. 

One author (Eckhart Tolle) felt so powerfully about this fact and reality that he wrote an entire book entitled The Power of Now: A Guide to Spiritual Enlightenment.  (4)

As a self-action leader, you must focus your energies on and otherwise live in the PRESENT. It is the present where you will make restitution for past mistakes and forge ahead courageously into a new and brighter future. It is the present where you will, by degrees, become something and someone better and greater and holier than you were before embarking upon your SAL journey. And it is in the present where you will someday look back joyfully to reflect upon how far you have come. 


Living in Day-Tight Compartments

One of the best ways to live in the present is to focus on living your life ONE-day-at-a-time; or better yet, one hour at-a-time; or best-of-all, one moment at-a-time. Dale Carnegie referred to this approach to life as living in "day-tight compartments." He learned this phrase from Sir William Osler, a founding physician and professor of Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland.

Thomas Carlyle
1795-1881
In his famous book, How to Stop Worrying and Start Living, Carnegie explains that in 1871, Osler was a young medical student worried about passing his final examination when he came across upon a quote from Thomas Carlyle that changed his life. The quote read: Our grand business is not to see what lies dimly at a distance, but to do what lies clearly at hand."  (5)


"Our grand business is not to see what lies dimly at a distance,
but to do what lies clearly at hand."

Thomas Carlyle


More than four decades later, in 1912, near the end of a highly successful career, Osler was invited to speak to a group of students at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. His advice to them was as follows:

"Shut off the past! Let the dead past bury its dead. ... Shut out the yesterdays which have lighted fools the way to dusty death. ... The load of tomorrow, added to that of yesterday, carried today, makes the strongest falter. Shut off the future as tightly as the past. ... The future is today. ... there is no tomorrow. The day of man's salvation is now. Waste of energy, mental distress, nervous worries dog the steps of a man who is anxious about the future. ... Shut close, then, the [past and future] ... and ... cultivate the habit of a life of 'day-tight compartments."  (6)

Nearly 1900 years previous to Dr. Osler's address at Yale, Jesus taught this same principle, which is recorded in the New Testament as follows: Take therefore no thought for the morrow: for the morrow shall take thought for the things of itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.  (7)


"Take no thought for the morrow: for the morrow shall take thought for the things of itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof!"

Jesus


If we, as self-action leaders, are to live productively and have high self-worth, we must practice the art of living in "day-tight compartments."

Learn from the past; yes!

    Plan and prepare for the future; of course!

        But for Heaven's sake (and your own sake); LIVE in the PRESENT!  

Samuel Clemens
aka Mark Twain
1835-1910

There is perhaps no greater cure for anxiety than so simply throw yourself unstintingly into whatever must be done at any given moment. In the pithy parlance of the great humorist and writer, Mark Twain: I am an old man and have suffered a great many misfortunes, most of which never happened


"I am an old man and have suffered a great many misfortunes, most of which never happened."

Mark Twain


Another version of this quote is as follows: I have suffered a great many calamities in my life; 97% of them never happened!

Oh, the unnecessary suffering we heap upon ourselves by failing to live in the PRESENT moment! 

Did you know that the human mind can only think about ONE thing-at-a-time. We are smart beings, who can think many thoughts in rapid succession one-after-the-other. But even the smartest among us cannot think about TWO things at the exact same moment in time. Human brains simply aren't wired to do that. Once you realize the truth of this fact, you can begin to channel your thoughts into more productive avenues of action and achievement. By living in "day-tight compartments," you can better harness the POWER of the PRESENT.  

Back in 2006, I lived in Marietta, Georgia—a suburb of Atlanta. One Sunday after church, I drove to a local high school (Pope) and sat down all by myself in the bleachers of the school's track complex. A random hobby of mine is to visit different track complexes around the world and then add to a growing journal list of tracks I've visited. This is likely what prompted my solitary and otherwise random visit to Pope High School that early Sunday afternoon. As I sat there pondering all by myself in the bleachers looking out at the racing track before me, my Muse inspired me to write the following poem:


The Power of the Present   

Dr. JJ, before he was a doctor, leads the
pack 600 meters into an 800 meter race
at Weber State University in the spring
of 2003. Running and racing has been an
important part of his life and identity.

Our grand business is not to see what lies dimly at a distance,
but to do what lies clearly at hand.

 ~ Thomas Carlyle


Beyond the haze of what we face,
There lies the track on which we'll race;
But what we often soon forget:
It's also 'neath our current pace.

We always look beyond the mists,
Squint through the fog toward future lists,
And rarely opt to seize the day:
The here, the now—so often missed!

In the best shape of my
life while running track
in college.  Spring 2003.
For what we fail to contemplate,
The present's where we carve our fate,
And future's bliss' only secured,
By mastering what's now on our plate.

But if we grasp on to what's ours,
That's how we'll break our prison bars,
And rise in ways we'd never thought,
To mighty deeds and distant stars!

O man, no longer cast your view,
On things that aren't in front of you,
Do your best now, and trust in faith
That all things in their time shall find you.  

By: Dr. JJ

At Freedom Focused, we sincerely hope that your journey through this textbook—and your commitment to embark upon and complete the SAL Master Challenge—will be the beginning of a special journey that will endow you with much self-understanding. We know that this self-understanding can lead to endless growth and positive change the likes of which can absolutely transform your life in the most wonderful of ways. 

How do we know this?

Because that is what SAL has done for us in our own lives and careers!

This is the end of BOOK the FIRST. Having clearly and boldly laid out our educational vision and the priority we place on communication skills, cultural literacy, and living in the present, it is now time to move on to BOOK the SECOND, where we will shift our focus to a discussion about the most powerful freedom we possess as human beings: the freedom to change and grow.



In Your Journal

1. What are some of the things you worry about that are highly unlikely to ever actually happen? 

2. What is something you could do today to better live your life in the present and practice living in "Day-tight compartments?" 

3. What activities make you feel the most alive and productive?

4. What is something you could do today to be a more productive person in your life or career?  



Dr. JJ

Wednesday, December 20, 2023
Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, USA


Author's Note: This is the 366th Blog Post Published by Freedom Focused LLC since November 2013 and the 178th consecutive weekly blog published since August 31, 2020.   

Click HERE for a compete listing of the other 365 FF Blog Articles 

Click HERE for a complete listing of Freedom Focused SAL QUOTES  

Click HERE for a complete listing of Freedom Focused SAL POEMS   

Click HERE to access the FULL TEXT of Dr. JJ's Psalms of Life: A Poetry Collection

Click HERE for a complete listing of Self-Action Leadership Articles

Click HERE for a complete listing of Fitness, Heath, & Wellness Articles

Click HERE for a complete listing of Biographical & Historical Articles


Click HERE for a complete listing of Dr. JJ's Autobiographical Articles

.........................

Tune in NEXT Wednesday for another article on a Self-Action Leadership related topic.  

And if you liked this blog post, please share it with your family, friends, colleagues, and students—and encourage them to sign up to receive future articles for FREE every Wednesday.

To sign up, please email freedomfocused@gmail.com and say SUBSCRIBE, or just YES, and we will ensure you receive a link to each new blog article every Wednesday.  


Click HERE to buy the SAL Textbooks    


Chapter 9 Notes

1).  Hamilton College website.  See URL: https://www.hamilton.edu/about/know-thyself#:~:text=Socrates%20believed%20the%20first%20step,top%20of%20the%20College%20seal.

2).  This quote appears in various syntactical forms online and elsewhere and has been attributed to both Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. and Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.  Both father and son were accomplished intellectuals, so either one could have reasonably authored this thought-provoking quote.  Dr. JJ selected the syntax as quoted in Covey, S.R. (2008). The 8th Habit: From Effectiveness to Greatness. New York, NY: FreePress. Page 103. In this location, neither Senior nor Junior is affixed to the name, suggesting that Covey and his researchers were also unable to determine exactly which Holmes originally came up with this particular quote.    

3).  Smith, H.W. (1994). The 10 Natural Laws of Successful Time and Life Management: Proven Srategies for Increasing Productivity and Inner Peace. New York, NY: Warner Books. Page 210. 

4).  Tolle, E. (1999). The Power of Now: A Guide to Spiritual Enlightenment. Novato, California: New World Library and Vancouver, BC: Namaste Publishing.

5). Carnegie, D. (1948). How to Stop Worrying and Start Living. New York, NY: Simon and Schuster. Page 1.

6). Ibid. Page 2.  

7). Matthew 6:34 (New Testament).

Thursday, December 14, 2023

SAL Master Challenge EXERCISE #2


 SAL Master Challenge

Homework Exercise #2


Self-action leaders BUILD WORD POWER


Intelligent, culturally literate self-action leaders pay the price to develop large vocabularies. Doing so builds confidence and empowers them in a variety of ways in their lives and careers.

Exercise #2 of the SAL Master Challenge is an opportunity to develop the habit of Building Word Power as you read and study books and other written material or hear new words from teachers or other professionals.     



TASKS to COMPLETE

1).  Select 100 words you do not know from challenging reading material (like this book) and record them in your SAL Journal. 

2).  Record each word's part/s of speech, etymology, and definition/s. 

3).  Practice using the word in your journal by writing a unique sentence for the definitions of each word.

Note: This exercise is not meant to be done all at once or in a few days time; that would be exhausting! Take your time and work on this bit-by-bit over-time while concurrently completing other SAL Master Challenge exercises.  



....................................................................................................................................................


I have completed the SAL Master Challenge, EXERCISE #2


Your initials:__________         AP initials:__________



Dr. JJ

Thursday, December 14, 2023
Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, USA


Author's Note: This is the 365th Blog Post Published by Freedom Focused LLC since November 2013 and the 177th consecutive weekly blog published since August 31, 2020.   

Click HERE for a compete listing of the other 364 FF Blog Articles 

Click HERE for a complete listing of Freedom Focused SAL QUOTES  

Click HERE for a complete listing of Freedom Focused SAL POEMS   

Click HERE to access the FULL TEXT of Dr. JJ's Psalms of Life: A Poetry Collection

Click HERE for a complete listing of Self-Action Leadership Articles

Click HERE for a complete listing of Fitness, Heath, & Wellness Articles

Click HERE for a complete listing of Biographical & Historical Articles


Click HERE for a complete listing of Dr. JJ's Autobiographical Articles

.........................

Tune in NEXT Wednesday for another article on a Self-Action Leadership related topic.  

And if you liked this blog post, please share it with your family, friends, colleagues, and students—and encourage them to sign up to receive future articles for FREE every Wednesday.

To sign up, please email freedomfocused@gmail.com and say SUBSCRIBE, or just YES, and we will ensure you receive a link to each new blog article every Wednesday.  


Click HERE to buy the SAL Textbooks    


Notes:


Expanding YOUR INFLUENCE through SAL

  Chapter 26 Expanding YOUR INFLUENCE through SAL   Plutarch A.D. 46-119 "What you achieve inwardly changes your outer reality ." ...