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Covey - The 7 habits of highly effective people

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But fundamentally, your mission statement becomes your constitution, the solid<br />

expression <strong>of</strong> your vision and values. It becomes the criterion by which you measure<br />

everything else in your life.<br />

I recently finished reviewing my own mission statement, which I do fairly regularly.<br />

Sitting on the edge <strong>of</strong> a beach, alone, at the end <strong>of</strong> a bicycle ride, I took out my organizer<br />

and hammered it out. It took several hours, but I felt a sense <strong>of</strong> clarity, a sense <strong>of</strong><br />

organization and commitment, a sense <strong>of</strong> exhilaration and freedom.<br />

I find the process is as important as the product. Writing or reviewing a mission<br />

statement changes you because it forces you to think through your priorities deeply,<br />

carefully, and to align your behavior with your beliefs. As you do, other <strong>people</strong> begin to<br />

sense that you're not being driven by everything that happens to you. You have a sense <strong>of</strong><br />

mission about what you're trying to do and you are excited about it.<br />

Using Your Whole Brain<br />

Our self-awareness empowers us to examine our own thoughts. This is particularly<br />

helpful in creating a personal mission statement because the two unique human<br />

endowments that enable us to practice Habit 2 -- imagination and conscience -- are<br />

primarily functions <strong>of</strong> the right side <strong>of</strong> the brain. Understanding how to tap into that<br />

right brain capacity greatly increases our first-creation ability.<br />

A great deal <strong>of</strong> research has been conducted for decades on what has come to be called<br />

brain dominance theory. <strong>The</strong> findings basically indicated that each hemisphere <strong>of</strong> the<br />

brain -- left and right -- tends to specialize in and preside over different functions, process<br />

different kinds <strong>of</strong> information, and deal with different kinds <strong>of</strong> problems.<br />

Essentially, the left hemisphere is the more logical/verbal one and the right hemisphere<br />

the more intuitive, creative one. <strong>The</strong> left deals with words, the right with pictures; the left<br />

with parts and specifics, the right with wholes and the relationship between the parts.<br />

<strong>The</strong> left deals with analysis, which means to break apart; the right with synthesis, which<br />

means to put together. <strong>The</strong> left deals with sequential thinking; the right with<br />

simultaneous and holistic thinking. <strong>The</strong> left is time bound; the right is time free.<br />

Although <strong>people</strong> use both sides <strong>of</strong> the brain, one side or the other generally tends to be<br />

dominant in each individual. Of course, the ideal would be to cultivate and develop the<br />

ability to have good crossover between both sides <strong>of</strong> the brain so that a person could first<br />

sense what the situation called for and then use the appropriate tool to deal with it. But<br />

<strong>people</strong> tend to stay in the "comfort zone" <strong>of</strong> their dominant hemisphere and process every<br />

situation according to either a right- or left-brain preference.<br />

In the words <strong>of</strong> Abraham Maslow, "He that is good with a hammer tends to think<br />

everything is a nail." This is another factor that affects the "young lady/old lady"<br />

perception difference. Right-brain and left-brain <strong>people</strong> tend to look at things in different<br />

ways.<br />

We live in a primarily left-brain-dominant world, where words and measurement and<br />

logic are enthroned, and the more creative, intuitive, sensing, artistic aspect <strong>of</strong> our nature<br />

is <strong>of</strong>ten subordinated. Many <strong>of</strong> us find it more difficult to tap into our right-brain<br />

capacity.<br />

Admittedly this description is oversimplified and new studies will undoubtedly throw<br />

more light on brain functioning. But the point here is that we are capable <strong>of</strong> performing<br />

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