Your Mind and Change

Your Mind and Change
Everything we do is first modeled inside the mind.
The Sniper Mind (currently p.14) by David Amerland
You enact the change in your life.
Although snipers must make split second decisions, we often have the luxury in time to fine-tune awareness, look for and recognize the choices, monitor change as it happens, and act. The process works in personal life and in business.
The process begins with awareness. Simple steps like naming the emotion we feel helps get to the next step of observing how it affects us, evaluating the options, and then responding with action.
Preparation and training are as important in business as they are in skilled military function.
For instance, as a boat captain, I had a checklist of activities to perform every time before unhitching the vessel from the anchor or dock. And as a semantic writer, I have a checklist for each article or web page. Teodora Petkova shared today, the basic list of actions in "Content Cards" https://goo.gl/KHTfPW
Just as snipers train in physics, aerodynamics, body positioning, distance estimation, and the like, businesses need to develop a plan and refine it for each situation to grow skills.
#thesnipermind
Originally shared by David Amerland
If you can't think it, it doesn't exist. #TheSniperMind
My mind is V taird
ReplyDeleteIn a sense we create our own unique, personal reality. Zara Altair
ReplyDeleteDavid Amerland At first that concept feels disorienting, and then the implications of the power to change and the possibilities that open are astounding.
ReplyDeleteZara Altair I didn't know you were a boat captain! How cool is that? :)
ReplyDeleteTeodora Petkova I lived on my boat for almost 5 years. A wonderful life. But the captain is responsible for everyone on the boat.
ReplyDeleteZara Altair :))) I can't say anything different from wow. I admire that :) You are a true adventurer. And now that I have Alexander, I understand that being a captain is cool but also brings you lot of responsibilities :))
ReplyDeleteTeodora Petkova Yes, my son was with me. A great sailor and navigator.
ReplyDelete