Personal Development is the critical phase that is the cornerstone
of the entire foundation to building the structure that will lead us to Kingdom
Success in our life! It is the un-assuming core of our being that is
tremendously neglected, which leads us to a minimal portion of our potential
that is rarely realized by individuals in our society on a wide scale!
Our educational system focuses on areas of
study such as mathematics, language arts, economics, science etc. The system
often neglects to provide extensive concentration on our mental mindset, and
addressing imperative responsibilities that we encounter throughout our lives.
Many of us struggle to understand the importance of time management, and how to
live a balanced and prioritized life, etc. catering to the essentials that
provide the platform on which the other areas of study should build off of!
From mindset, to vision, leadership, habits, time management and
beyond, personal development is significantly important in the foundational
building of Kingdom Success; as it is the heart that pumps the actions that we
make in every other aspect of our lives.
Take television watching for example,
according to a statistics study done by the Nielsen Company, the average person
watches approx. 6.5 hours of TV per day! And that’s just the average, which
leads to the conclusion that some people watch even more than that! So in the
calculation of the average lifetime, that means that we’ll spend +/- eleven
years of our lives just watching television! That number also includes the
commercials, which equal three years of time by themselves!!! This is an
example in personal development, of our time management, habits, and priorities
that we subconsciously designate to each day of our lives, depriving us of
productivity that could go towards exponentially growing our net-worth, or
learning a second language, giving back to the community, etc.
In the book, “The
Power of Focus,” Jack
Canfield remembers his time with W. Clement Stone that went like this:
When I went to work for W. Clement Stone
in 1969, he sat me down for a one-hour interview. His first question was, “Do
you watch television?” He then asked me, “How many hours a day do you think you
watch?’ After a short calculation I answered, “About three hours a day.”
Mr. Stone looked me directly in the eye
and said, “I want you to cut out one hour a day; reduce your TV watching time
down to two hours per day. If you do that, you’ll be saving 365 hours per year.
If you divide that by a forty-hour work week, you’ll see that you’ll have added
about nine and a half additional weeks of productivity to your life. That’s
like getting two additional months per year!”
I agreed that this was a great
leveraging concept, and then I asked Mr. Stone what he thought I should do with
this extra hour every day. He suggested I read books in my field of motivation,
psychology, education, training and self-esteem. He also suggested that I
listen to educational and motivational cassettes, take classes and study a
foreign language.
You see, this is something that is very
simple, but can make a world of difference when it comes to the big picture
which is our lives as we know it! Change doesn’t happen overnight, but it is
the consistent action of mundane tasks that create the extraordinary results
that we seek to accomplish!
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