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Name of author Rick Baker, P.Eng.

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Sense of Accomplishment

by Rick Baker
On Mar 27, 2014

When it comes to work, does sense of accomplishment mean anything to you?

Do you think work is a necessary evil, devoid of anything satisfying or fulfilling?

Or, do you experience gratification when you complete a work-task?

Are you proud when your work-tasks are well done?

When you struggle with or fail at work-tasks, do you experience negative feelings like frustration, annoyance, or even anger?

Or, when your work-tasks go poorly do you feel little one way or the other?

Does your work trigger a sense of accomplishment?

If your work does not trigger a sense of accomplishment, why do you subject yourself to doing it?

Do you think your work is the place where you exchange your time and effort doing things that provide you no internal rewards for money...that is, you get paid?

If so, do you think that's sustainable?

Do you think you can carry on working without positive feelings...working on and on like that until the day comes when you don't work any more?

Will your job survive if you approach your job that way?

Will your employer want to keep you?

Whether or not you are still there, will your place of work survive with workers who approach their jobs that way?

 

Thought Tweet #963

by Rick Baker
On Mar 26, 2014

Thought Tweet #963 Here's what's in the cards: If we don't deal Solutions to Problems then Problems deal Stress to us.


The Thinking Behind The Tweet

Problems don't care how busy we are. Problems don't care how smart we are. Problems only react to what we do.

Problems gang up and hunt us down when we try to hide or shrink away.

 

Thought Tweet #960

by Rick Baker
On Mar 21, 2014

Thought Tweet #960 The great teachers didn't dwell on stress. They focused on the human virtues.

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

'Stressed' is a modern mindset.

Stressed: don't forget it's just a reverse palindrome for desserts.

Tags:

Attitude: Creating Positive Attitude | Thought Tweets | Wisdom: Surviving the Test of Time

Thought Tweet #947

by Rick Baker
On Mar 4, 2014

Thought Tweet #947 Fear is neither our birthright nor our destiny...it is simply a bad habit we picked up and chose to live with...or overcome.

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

To overcome fear people must do small amounts of the thing they fear and experience small successes. 

Positive thinking is helpful. Positive action is truly powerful.

Fear crumbles when assaulted repeatedly by methodical small actions.

Fear of Failure

by Rick Baker
On Mar 4, 2014

I recently read an article posted at the Engineering Leadership LinkedIn Group.

In the article, the author stated fear of failure is something like a bad heritage from our ancestors”.

I shared the following thoughts...

What an interesting viewpoint…genetic predisposition to fear failure…

Certainly we are born with the ‘ability to fear’. [We see evidence of that when newborns respond to loud noises.]

But, are we born with a predisposition to ‘fear failure’?

I mean, are we genetically wired to fear failure?

Or, do we learn to fear failure?

To the extent we accept we learn to fear failure we can be confident we can reverse that learning and learn to not fear failure.

To the extent we accept we are hard-wired to fear failure we are less confident about our ability to overcome the fear of failure.

***

I prefer to believe we are born with the ability to fear and our reactions to life experiences determine the role fear plays in our lives.

I believe about 25% of people are predisposed to be natural-born optimists, 25% of people are predisposed to be natural-born pessimists, and the remaining 50% are predisposed to be middle-of-the-road optimist-pessimists. I also believe those who are not natural-born optimists can increase their level of optimism if they choose to work at it.

If our experiences have caused us to fear failure then we can remedy that if we want to and are prepared to work at it. To remove fear of failure we must first take steps to understand the specifics about our fears of failure, which may be quite different than the fears of failure experienced by others. We cannot fix our overall fear of failure so we must isolate each specific fear of failure and work on one at a time. When we work on a single fear of failure, we need to take baby steps of action aimed in the direction of the failure we fear. 

As an example, consider the fear of failing at Public Speaking.

Many people fear public speaking because they, for one reason or another, believe they will fail when they 'public speak'. They believe their public-speaking failure will be accompanied by negatives such as criticism or ridicule and those negatives will lead to embarrassment or loss of stature or some other form of pain. To overcome this fear of failure, the person needs to experience a small success tied to performing a small act of speaking in public. This first step can be done very easily. Here's how: take the person to lunch and ask a simple question...any simple question will do...for example, you can ask "What do you think of the weather?" When the person answers the question, bring it to his or her attention that he or she just public spoke without experiencing any fear or any failure. Compliment the person on his or her public speaking success. Then progress the public-speaking activity slowly...building on that first, small, positive, successful step.

NOTE: There is no need to send the fearful person to a public-speaking course. In fact, that would be a mistake, a particularly damaging mistake if it is done early in the process of overcoming the fear. To overcome fear of failure, people need to experience small doses of exposure to the feared task and experience small successful actions. This is especially important during the early steps of change...when sensitivities will be running high. And, to maximize your ability to help - lighten it up...use your positive personality...and a little properly placed humour will guide attention in constructive directions and help reduce negative feelings such as anxiety.

Thought Tweet #942

by Rick Baker
On Feb 25, 2014

Thought Tweet #942 Good things don't 'just happen'. First we do good things. Then other good things 'just happen'. Luck is what you make it. 

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

There's human being.

There's human doing.

And...

Luck is what you make it. 

Tags:

Attitude: Creating Positive Attitude | Optimism & Pessimism | Thought Tweets

Copyright © 2012. W.F.C (Rick) Baker. All Rights Reserved.