Denis Waitley Is ...

more than a best-selling author, speaker, poet and  lyricist...

He has studied and counseled leaders in every field...

- from Apollo astronauts

- to Fortune 500 top executives

- from Olympic gold medalists

- to Super Bowl champions

- from returning POW's

- to heads of state

- from the boardrooms of top multi-national corporations

- to the classrooms of students of all ages and cultures

...and now to our living rooms.

Denis Waitley has painted word pictures of optimism, core values, motivation and resiliency that have become indelible and legendary in their positive impact on society.


 

  

 

Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine
October 27, 2004
Issue 04

Denis Waitley's Homepage

 

 

Welcome!

 

To this week's issue of the Denis Waitley International online newsletter. I appreciate your interest in receiving this information, with my compliments, and promise you that we will endeavor to make it both timely and timeless in content designed to help you reach your professional and personal goals now and in the future.

I hope you will discover each weekly offering to be valuable, relevant, leading edge, and interesting, with some innovative and refreshing differences from the other ezines and newsletters you may be receiving.

My mission is to help you win in all the arenas of your life. You deserve the best and so do your family members.

Also, please feel free to let us know how we are doing and what special interests you may have.


Warm regards,
 Denis Waitley

P.S. If you've enjoyed this week's edition and found it to be valuable, then if you would do me the favor of forwarding it to your friends, family and associates, it would be very much appreciated. If they would like to subscribe, have them send an email to: subscribe@deniswaitley.com

Many Thanks!


In This Issue.....

1. Weekly Jumpstart
2. Champion Within Weekly Article
3. Weekly Seeds of Greatness
4. Winner's Edge Coaching Tips
5. Featured Product of the Week
6. Customer Feedback
7. More Information

1. Weekly Jumpstart

What each of us is doing this minute is the most important event in history for us. We have decided to invest our resources in this opportunity rather than in any other. It is helpful to remember this when we consider the passage of time.

"There are two days in every week about which we should not worry, two days which should be kept free from fear and apprehension. One of these days is Yesterday, with its mistakes and cares, its faults and blunders, its aches and pains. Yesterday has passed forever beyond our control. All the money in the world cannot bring back Yesterday. We cannot undo a single act we performed; we cannot erase a single word we said. Yesterday is gone.

The other day we should not worry about is Tomorrow, with its possible adversities, its burdens, its large promise, and poor performance. Tomorrow is also beyond our immediate control. Tomorrow's sun will rise, either in splendor or behind a mask of clouds; but it will rise. Until it does, we have no stake in tomorrow, for it is as yet unborn. This leaves only one day: Today.

Anyone can fight the battles of just one day. It is only when you and I add the burdens of those two awful eternities -Yesterday and Tomorrow - that we break down. It is not the experience of Today that drives us mad, it is remorse and bitterness for something which happened Yesterday and the dread of what Tomorrow may bring. Let us therefore, live this one full Today."

Carpe Diem! Seize this Day!
-- Denis Waitley

 

2.  The Champion Within Weekly Article

Life Balance: The Urgent vs. The Important  by Dr. Denis Waitley

Of all the wisdom I have gained, the most important is the knowledge that time and health are two precious assets that we rarely recognize or appreciate until they have been depleted. As with health, time is the raw material of life. You can use it wisely, waste it or even kill it.

To accomplish all we are capable of, we would need a hundred lifetimes. If we had forever in our mortal lives, there would be no need to set goals, plan effectively or set priorities. We could squander our time and perhaps still manage to accomplish something, if only by chance. Yet in reality, we’re given only this one life span on earth to do our earthly best.

Each human being now living has exactly 168 hours per week. Scientists can't invent new minutes, and even the super rich can't buy more hours. Queen Elizabeth the First of England, the richest, most powerful woman on earth of her era, whispered these final words on her deathbed: "All my possessions for a moment of time!"

We worry about things we want to do - but can't - instead of doing the things we can do - but don't. How often have you said to yourself, "Where did the day go? I accomplished nothing," or "I can't even remember what I did yesterday." That time is gone, and you never get it back.

Staring at the compelling distractions on a television screen is one of the major consumers of time. You can enjoy and benefit from the very best it has to offer in about seven total hours of viewing per week. But the average person spends more than thirty hours per week in a semi-stupor, escaping from the priorities and goals he or she never gets around to setting. The irony is that the people we are watching are having fun achieving their own goals, making money, having us look at them enjoying their careers.

Even so, time is amazingly fair and forgiving. No matter how much time you've wasted in the past, you still have an entire today. If you've just frittered away an hour procrastinating, you will still be given the next hour to start on priorities. Time management contains one great paradox: No one has enough time, and yet everyone has all there is. Time is not the problem; the problem is separating the urgent from the important.

Every decision we make has an "opportunity cost." Every decision forfeits all other opportunities we had before we made it. We can't be two places at the same time.

In their excellent management book Tradeoffs, Drs. Greiff and Munter discuss the difficult options that face us in all areas of our lives. One case in point illustrates a common opportunity cost. It’s a true anecdote they call, "Bicycle vs. Mother:"

"John is a precocious eight-year-old boy. Both his parents work. His mother is a management consultant and travels frequently. After being away for several days, she arrived home late one night and hugged her son.

He said, 'Mom, I missed you. Why were you away so long?'

She smiled and replied, 'One of the reasons I was away was to make enough money to buy you the bicycle you wanted.'

Young John looked at her reflectively and stated, 'Mom, I really did want the bicycle. But mothers are more important than bicycles. So please stay home more.'"

Even though we all are aware of the tradeoffs of "quality time vs. quantity time" in our relationships, we are not used to thinking specifically about how our decisions cost us other opportunities. Without this understanding, our decisions will often be unfocused and unrelated to helping us achieve our most important goals.

You may have heard the story about the analogy of the "circus juggler" to each of us as we try to balance our personal and professional priorities. I have heard the story repeated by many keynote speakers and have used it in previous books, but have never been able to trace the identity of the original author.

When the circus juggler drops a ball, he lets it bounce and picks it up on the next bounce without losing his rhythm or concentration. He keeps right on juggling. Many times we do the same thing. We lose our jobs, but get another one on the first or second bounce. We may drop the ball on a sale, an opportunity to move ahead, or in a relationship, and we either pick it up on the rebound or get a new one thrown in to replace what we just dropped.

However, some of the balls or priorities we juggle don't bounce. The more urgent priorities associated with self-imposed deadlines and workloads have more elasticity than the precious, delicate relationships which are as fragile as fine crystal. Balance involves distinguishing between the priorities we juggle that bounce from the ones labeled "loved ones," "health," and "moral character" that may shatter if we drop them.

The reason I always ask my seminar attendees to list the benefits of reaching their goals is so they can arrange them in the true order of importance to them and give them a sufficient amount of attention as they juggle them within their time constraints. Handle your priorities with care. Some of them just don't bounce!

To live a rich, balanced life we need to be more in conscious control of our habits and lifestyles. Actualized individuals have a regular exercise routine. They pay attention to nutrition, with lean source protein and fiber-based carbohydrates as their basic food choices. They relax through musical, cultural, artistic and family activities. They get sufficient sleep and rest to meet the next day renewed and invigorated.

In addition to blocking periods of time for recreation and vacations, they also schedule large, uninterrupted periods of work on their most important projects. Contrary to popular notions, most books, works of art, invention and musical compositions are created during uninterrupted time frames, not by a few lines, strokes, or notes every so often. Every book or audio program I have written has been done with the discipline of twelve to fifteen hours per day during a specific block of time.

True enough, I may have sacrificed a ski trip or an escape vacation once or twice. But by trying to focus on prime projects in prime time, the opportunity costs have been outweighed by the return on invested resources.

With your material, time and energy resources allocated well, you should be able to use your innovative powers to focus on goal achievement. Effective priority management creates freedom. Freedom provides opportunity to make decisions. We make our decisions and our decisions, over time, make us.

Freedom from urgency... That's what will allow us to live a rich and rewarding life. You may have thought your problem was "time starvation," when in truth, it was in the way you assigned priorities in your decision-making process. Have you allowed the urgent to crowd out the important?

Each day we will continue to encounter deadlines we must meet and "fires," not necessarily of our own making, we must put out. Endless urgent details will always beg for attention, time and energy. What we seldom realize is that the really important things in our life don't make such strict demands on us, and therefore we usually assign them a lower priority.

Our loved ones understand when we are preoccupied with our urgent business, but it's hard for us to understand, many years later, whey they appear preoccupied when we finally find some time for them. Harry Chapin's classic song, "The Cat's in the Cradle," is still a mirror reflecting our priorities.

All the important arenas in our life are there awaiting our decisions. But they don't beg us to give them our time. The local university doesn’t call us to advance our education and improve our life skills.

I have never received a call or e-mail from the health club I joined insisting that I show up and work out for thirty minutes each day. My bathroom scale has never insisted that I lose thirty pounds. The grocery clerks have never made me put back on the shelves the junk food I put in the cart, nor has a fast-food restaurant ever refused me a double cheeseburger and large fries because of my high cholesterol.

Nor have I ever been subpoenaed by the ocean or the mountains to appear for relaxation and solitude. Yet I receive hundreds of urgent phone messages and e-mails each week from people with deadlines.

You see, it's the easiest thing in the world to neglect the important and give in to the urgent. One of the greatest skills you can ever develop in your life is not only to tell the two apart, but to be able to assign the correct amount of time to each.

Beginning tomorrow, throughout the day, and every day thereafter, stop and ask yourself this question: "Is what I'm doing right now important to my health, well-being and mission in life, and for my loved ones?" Your affirmative answer will free you forever, from the tyranny of the urgent.


To Finding Your Unique Life Balance,
Denis Waitley




3. Seeds of Greatness: Seeds of Purpose: Focus Precedes Success

(These quotes were taken from Denis Waitley's Excerpts from The Seeds of Greatness Treasury booklet)

If you don't know where you're going, it doesn't matter if your alarm doesn't go off in the morning.

There is a gold mine, in your goal mind!

Your mind is the most marvelous bio-computer ever created. It does not deal with vague ideas; it is activated by specifics.

Purpose is the engine that powers our lives.

If you go to your place of business to see what happens, you’ll put out fires but make little progress toward your goals.

What you get is what you set!

Focus always precedes success.



4. The Winner's Edge Coaching Tips

Welcome to week four in this six weeks of covering six effectively powerful behaviors that increase self-esteem, enhance your self-confidence, and spur your motivation. You may recognize some of them as things you naturally do in your interactions with other people. But if you don't, work to integrate these important steps immediately. Here is the Winner's Edge fourth action step:

Don't make your problems the centerpiece of your conversation. Talk positively about your life and the progress you're trying to make. Be aware of any negative thinking, and take notice of how often you complain. When you hear yourself criticize someone -- and this includes self-criticism -- find a way to be helpful instead of critical.

Next week, we'll cover tip number five. Until then, practice this week's Winner's Edge tip and make it your part of your winning way!

DW
 

5. Featured Product of the Week
 

Jim Rohn's 2004 Leadership Weekend Event with Denis Waitley, Brian Tracy and more on DVD/CD -
Pre-Release Offer!

24 hours on DVD and CD! Jim Rohn, Denis Waitley, Brian Tracy and More

A special Pre-Release Offer for the Entire 2004 Jim Rohn Weekend Event on DVD and CD - good for a very limited time, plus three special bonuses for all those who order!

For the month of October, you can order the entire 2004 event featuring Jim Rohn, Denis Waitley, Brian Tracy and more, plus many bonus sessions - 3 packed days and almost a dozen bonus interviews - all on DVD and CD, and with a follow-along comprehensive 283-page workbook all for a fraction of the cost. If you missed the live event, don't miss this opportunity to own it on DVD and CD and reap the benefits for a lifetime!

Visit http://3day.jimrohn.com for the details on a Special Pre-Release Offer online or call 800-929-0434.
 

6. Customer Feedback

Here are some of the testimonials and comments we received over the past week from our Ezine subscribers. We love receiving comments and feedback from our readers - so keep it coming!

I enjoyed your second article and your poem about the robot. It helped me out. I also enjoyed the second tip on accepting compliments.
-- Andrew

I have had the pleasure of seeing Mr. Waitley in person in the Chicago area about 10 years ago, and I can tell you that he is the "real thing". Thanks for the positive and insightful newsletter, keep up the excellent work.
-- B. Maness

I am a long time disciple of yours Denis. Your material makes the most sense, to me. The morality and knowledge that Denis applies sets his material apart.
-- Stuart

Kyle, you're right... Denis is providing an excellent e-letter. I subscribed immediately upon your first mention of it. And thanks to you and your team for putting together that marvelous weekend in California. Not only were all the presentations outstanding; all of the care taken to make sure everything was first class made it a simply unforgettable occasion. I can hardly wait for the DVD package!
-- Penny C. Connerley

Please tell Dr. Denis Waitley that he is a role model for me. I respect him a lot. He teaches me how to have high self-esteem and to be a better person. I grew up in a poor family in China. After years persistence for a better life, now I am living in this great country. I feel very grateful to those who helped me along my way to get my PHD in chemistry in China, to be a senior software designer for a large company. I want to do my best to help others to achieve their goals especially youth.
-- Lisa Wang

Hello, I would like to thank you for providing us with a very readable newsletter! Denis Waitley has been one of my biggest inspirations in the personal development area. His book "Seeds of Greatness" has provided me with a lot of insights and valuable lessons and I reread it once a year (since the late 80s).
-- Niklas Daver

I took advantage of a special offer to buy your Platinum Collection, "Healthy, Wealthy and Wise". The set, even at a discount, was expensive but having heard the program, consider the lessons priceless. I guess what makes your words so touching to me is they are so much like the wisdom my now deceased aunt gave me when I was living with her and my uncle as a teenager. We were desperately poor on her Arkansas farm, but she followed the same philosophies you are teaching. She saved at least 10% of what little she earned, she owed not a single cent to anyone, she was always happy and positive, raised almost all her food from her garden and she always gave to others. Although she lived a very modest existence, at the time of her death (she was in her late 80's) she was worth well over $1Million! It's taken me years to realize the power of those simple, yet profound principles. I'm now in my 50's and through the lessons I've learned from my aunt, you and others, I'm well on my way to becoming a millionaire in my own right. I have a ways to go but I'm making tremendous progress each day. Thank you for sharing your knowledge-your much-needed inspiration is arriving at a very crucial point in my life.
-- James A. Boyd


Thank you Ezine readers, for the sincere and kind words of encouragement and appreciation you sent us this week! -- DW
 

7. More Information

Ezine Archives - To review previous issues of Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine, please click here: Ezine Archives

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No Spamming or List Sharing! - You can rest assured that your subscription email address will be kept in the strictest confidence. We do not divulge, nor make available to any third party, our subscription list. Your privacy is paramount to us! Therefore, it receives the respect it deserves!

Copyright/Reprint Info - The contents of this Ezine may be copied, reproduced, or freely distributed for all nonprofit purposes without the consent of the author as long as the author's name and contact information are included. Example: Reproduced with permission from the Denis Waitley Weekly Ezine.

All contents Copyright  (c) 2004 Denis Waitley International except where indicated otherwise. All rights reserved worldwide. **Duplication or reprints only with express permission or approved Credits (see above). All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

Contact Information:

Denis Waitley International
2835 Exchange Blvd., Suite 200
Southlake, TX 76092
800-929-0434
International and/or Dallas/Ft Worth - 817-442-5407
Fax 817-442-1390 or visit the website at Denis Waitley International

 


Denis Waitley's Homepage

 

What others say about Denis Waitley...

This material is so fresh, so relevant, so beautifully expressed, and so vital to the kind of change we must all undergo to succeed in this whitewater world today.

Stephen Covey, Author
The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People


Denis Waitley's life has placed him in the position of 'the best there is' at getting employees to think and act like owners. It's this simple: Get everybody you can to read and listen to his teachings.

Tom Peters, Co-Author
In Search of Excellence


I have studied and appeared many times through the years with Denis Waitley. My advice is to listen to and learn everything you can from this man.
John Wooden, Former Head Coach, UCLA Basketball


Denis Waitley takes us step-by-step to become more consistent, top level performers in our careers and daily lives.

Roger Staubach, Hall of Fame Quarterback, Dallas Cowboys


Denis Waitley has always been one step ahead of all of us. Denis is a mentor for all of us. This is special.

Pat Riley, Former Head Coach, Miami Heat


A Brilliant wake-up call for individual leadership and personal responsibility. Nothing more urgent than integrity and wisdom in the borderless world, and no one offers better perspective and action steps for successfully managing change than Denis Waitley.

Harvey Mackay, Author
Swim With the Sharks Without Being Eaten Alive


 
 

 

 

 

 

 

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