Commit To Applying Lessons LearnedBy Brian Maloney
When growing up as a child, the concept of learning a lesson becomes so routine, that many of us just set it aside as unimportant like many other principles that otherwise should be heeded.
It is so true that all of us are mortal. Furthermore, all of us are fallible and no one is absolutely perfect. However, there are some people who would argue this about themselves or someone they know.
My contention is the people who perpetually make many crucial mistakes in their lives and continue to make the exact ones again, are not taking the necessary steps to correct themselves.
Simply put, carelessness, laziness, or mere insecurity in oneself are the primary reasons lessons due to mistakes are not applied.
Changing ones mindset and attitude towards self progression has significant importance in this area of growth.
Sure, there are many people out there who will almost always be making mistakes in perpetuity, but certainly that shouldn't mean that you have to be one of them. Taking control of your life is an excellent first step.
Life does not have to be extremely complicated. It is a known fact that when people simplify their lives they are not only more happy, but more productive in any given task because the mind has less to wonder about.
Listing or ranking things of importance in one's mind assists in shaving down the myriad of less important things that always seem to hinder our lives. Moreover, examining mistakes much like a football player watching film the Monday after a big game and then deciding a better approach will change the outcome to a positive rather than a negative.
So why is it so hard to apply a learned lesson?
Just learning the lesson is what many of us do, but that is merely half the battle. The other aspect is actually setting your mind by consciously programming it to steer away from this mistake. It is like staring at the problem with a microscope and discovering reasons why you made this choice.
This part is what I call conscious recognition, where your conscious and subconscious are on the same wavelength rather than opposing each other.
The concept of consciously recognizing something as wrong can be applied not only in lessons learned, but practically every facet of life. In taking a little more time to think a mistake out, you are literally dissecting apart each area that needs to be addressed.
Certainly, most people will not apply a learned lesson unless they want to or unless the law forces them to. Yet, one must truly desire to apply a lesson before it happens again, or that person will only know that it is a mistake and not do anything about it.
Much like an alcoholic must will him or herself into treating the disease by coming to peace with the thought of living their lives without a drink, people must make firm resolutions to fix the areas of their lives that are broken.
Procrastinating and lying to oneself about applying lessons today, rather than tomorrow, makes for a compromising environment when one already knows that applying the lesson is in their best interest.
Wanting to make changes and becoming a better person is a daily task, not yearly. Work is what it is, but the rewards of living cleaner always outweigh that work.
About The Author
Brian Maloney -ValuePrep.com
Want to improve your personal values? Get high-quality relationship advice for guys and women from a 'Logical' standpoint. Visithttp://valueprep.com
**Attn Ezine editors / Site Owners** Feel free to reprint this article in its entirety in your ezine or on your website as long as you leave all links in place, do not modify the content and include our resource box as listed above.
valuepre@valueprep.com
This article was posted on January 12, 2005
Full List of Articles
Latest Relationship Advice News:
MALE CALL | ADVICE FROM A GUY: Confused by a guy? Look for inner 6th-grader (The Charlotte Observer)
Q. What are the subtle and not-so-subtle indicators that a male friend or co-worker may want to be more than just platonic? For 30 years, I have been one of the guys. Now that I am in a relationship, my guy is concerned that I am naive when it comes to the feelings my male friends may have for me. I want to know what the flags are that a friend may want more.
Read More ...
Gadget Corner: (State Press)
Every week thousands of strangers across the country tell Frank Warren their deepest secrets. No, Warren isn't some advice guru with a relationship column. He's just a dude living in Germantown, Md. who started a blog called Post Secret as a community art project.
Read More ...
Providing strategic advice is not the same thing as lobbying, according to former Conservative Party MP John Reynolds (Powell River Peak)
Reynolds, who co-chaired the Conservative's national election campaign but didn't run for re-election, has been hired by Lang Michener, a national law firm with offices in Toronto, Ottawa and Vancouver.
Read More ...
AMY ALKON: THE ADVICE GODDESS: Great or not, potential girlfriend is still married (Contra Costa Times)
Q: I'm a 30-year-old guy. It's always been against my rules to date someone from the workplace, but I let a good friend and co-worker fix me up with a really nice woman who also works for our company. "Sally" and I went on several dates before I learned she's married. The friend who set us up concealed this, knowing I'd never date a married woman. She justified it later, telling me Sally's been
Read More ...
What bankers want (River Valley Business Report)
Dennis Boyle has some upfront advice for entrepreneurs planning to start their own businesses. One of the main reasons fledgling businesses fail “is because they don’t have enough upfront capital,” said the senior vice president of Merchants Bank in Onalaska.
Read More ...
|
|