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This week’s
article is the first in almost
two month’s time—not
a good show for a feature
that for the past year and
a half, has run just about
every week, with a few occasional
exceptions. When you commit
to writing a regular feature
and you call it Prospecting
Weekly, you had better
plan on meeting that commitment.
Which begs
the question: where the heck
have I been? Why haven’t
I written anything new? What
does that say about me and
my pledge to keep fresh new
perspectives on prospecting
and relationship building
coming your way?
The truth
is: I didn’t feel
like it.
“Okay,”
you might respond. “Wish
I could blow off every obligation
I had simply because I didn’t
feel like it.” Indeed—that
is how I would respond!
Of course
there is more to it: Over
the past several weeks I have
had many changes in my life
come to pass: I made an exciting
shift in my career; I settled
into a new home; I attended
to some improvements to my
health and I had some other
long-awaited things transpire
in my personal life. All is
well, and I am abundantly
blessed… yet I still
could have gotten my weekly
bloviating completed.
Maybe—and
yet I also felt that if I
put something together hastily
and sent it out, it might
do more harm than good. Do
the job right, or don’t
do it at all. Plus, sometimes,
you have to allow yourself
a break. Is this rationalization
because I simply didn’t
feel like it?
Perhaps.
I will admit that it is a
little of both. With all I
had going on, it was hard
to put myself into a state
in which I could produce ideas
and write productively. This
means that I have some learnin’
to do when it comes to controlling
my state. After all, if it’s
up to me to make follow up
calls to prospects and colleagues,
I can’t blow it off
simply because I don’t
feel like it.
The bottom
line: The most successful
people in the world—in
business, in family, in life,
in sports, in entertainment—are
masters of controlling their
own states. It’s
a secret to maintaining discipline.
Think about this: discipline
is sticking to a pre-desired
pattern of behavior regardless
of the circumstances—which
include counter-productive
states. Now if you learn to
master your state at any given
time, would that now help
you strengthen your discipline?
So, this
leads us to the question:
are you in control of
your state, or is your state
in control of you?
We will
continue this discussion next
week.

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