There are times in all of our lives where we face challenges that appear to defy overcoming. Some are real, present threats; others are ones we imagine or distort.
We can Citrix 1Y0-308 choose to ignore the situation and hope that it goes away. However, like the ostrich, we leave some very important areas of ourselves exposed when we take this route.
We can withdraw, become depressed and wonder "Why me?" This usually leads to morose self-pity, instead of needed, accurate appraisal.
We can become aggressive and decide to bowl our way through the situation and "damn the torpedoes." This sometimes works. It can also alienate others. It can also cause us to assume wrongly that force and more hours are the solution, when, better ideas or a better mind set are what we need.
Often, what we need to find a solution are a tenacious resolve, options and time. Time is the hardest variable to estimate, since there are situations where the clock simply runs out; there is no more time and the project fails or we lose opportunity. When this occurs, immediately assess what happened. Why wasn't there enough time? If faced with the same situation later, what could be done differently? Anything?
Don't internalize the failure. Dissect it like scientist. Look for any evidence of malfunction, a breakdown in communications, decision making or invalid original assumptions. After the analysis is over, make notes on what to do or avoid doing in the future. List the "lessons learned," and begin the next project, or tackle the next challenge.
View the other two ingredients -- a tenacious resolve and options -- together. Develop the tenacious resolve or commitment Citrix 1Y0-A19 to find a solution, and options won't be a problem. Attitude, mindset and our underlying belief system determines our capacity to be tenacious.
The late Earl Nightingale had a practical approach to problem solving. Take a piece of paper and write the challenge across the top. Write the numbers 1-20 down the left column, and starting at 1, write a possible solution. Force yourself to write out 20 potential solutions. After you've written your 20 ideas, start at number 1 and see if it solves the challenge. If it does, good. If it doesn't, move on to number 2, and continue down your list. If none of the twenty solves the situation, make a new list and repeat the process.
Two realizations usually occur when you follow this procedure: First, the real solution normally is in the lower part of the list. The first few are the easy, quick remedies we've already tried or hoped would work. Second, realize how many challenges cease being a challenge when we see that we might actually have to work to find a solution. Be honest.
To develop a tenacious attitude, first view the world in its natural state as orderly. Then, any disorder, or challenge has a solution: The way to restore the BCWAA situation to its natural orderly state. Next, with feeling and belief, continually repeat to yourself as you write out your lists or try your ideas, "There is a way, there is a way." Remember: What the mind can imagine, it can also achieve.
We can Citrix 1Y0-308 choose to ignore the situation and hope that it goes away. However, like the ostrich, we leave some very important areas of ourselves exposed when we take this route.
We can withdraw, become depressed and wonder "Why me?" This usually leads to morose self-pity, instead of needed, accurate appraisal.
We can become aggressive and decide to bowl our way through the situation and "damn the torpedoes." This sometimes works. It can also alienate others. It can also cause us to assume wrongly that force and more hours are the solution, when, better ideas or a better mind set are what we need.
Often, what we need to find a solution are a tenacious resolve, options and time. Time is the hardest variable to estimate, since there are situations where the clock simply runs out; there is no more time and the project fails or we lose opportunity. When this occurs, immediately assess what happened. Why wasn't there enough time? If faced with the same situation later, what could be done differently? Anything?
Don't internalize the failure. Dissect it like scientist. Look for any evidence of malfunction, a breakdown in communications, decision making or invalid original assumptions. After the analysis is over, make notes on what to do or avoid doing in the future. List the "lessons learned," and begin the next project, or tackle the next challenge.
View the other two ingredients -- a tenacious resolve and options -- together. Develop the tenacious resolve or commitment Citrix 1Y0-A19 to find a solution, and options won't be a problem. Attitude, mindset and our underlying belief system determines our capacity to be tenacious.
The late Earl Nightingale had a practical approach to problem solving. Take a piece of paper and write the challenge across the top. Write the numbers 1-20 down the left column, and starting at 1, write a possible solution. Force yourself to write out 20 potential solutions. After you've written your 20 ideas, start at number 1 and see if it solves the challenge. If it does, good. If it doesn't, move on to number 2, and continue down your list. If none of the twenty solves the situation, make a new list and repeat the process.
Two realizations usually occur when you follow this procedure: First, the real solution normally is in the lower part of the list. The first few are the easy, quick remedies we've already tried or hoped would work. Second, realize how many challenges cease being a challenge when we see that we might actually have to work to find a solution. Be honest.
To develop a tenacious attitude, first view the world in its natural state as orderly. Then, any disorder, or challenge has a solution: The way to restore the BCWAA situation to its natural orderly state. Next, with feeling and belief, continually repeat to yourself as you write out your lists or try your ideas, "There is a way, there is a way." Remember: What the mind can imagine, it can also achieve.
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