Tuesday, 23 July 2013

LAWS

Law of Cause and Effect; This law says that, even if you do not know the reason why
something happens, there is still a reason that explains it.

 the Law of Control. This law says that, “You
feel happy to the degree to which you feel you are in control of your own life. You
feel unhappy to the degree to which you feel you are not in control of your own
life.”

 The Law of
Belief says that, “Whatever you believe, with conviction, becomes your reality.


“Belief creates the actual fact.”

he Law of Expectations. This law says that,
“Whatever you expect, with confidence, becomes your own self-fulfilling
prophecy.

the Law of Attraction. This law says that, “You
are a living magnet; you invariably attract into your life the people, ideas and
circumstances that harmonize with your dominant thoughts.”

 the Law of
Correspondence. This law says that, “Your outer world is a reflection of your inner
world.”

the Law of Concentration. This law says that, “Whatever you
dwell upon, grows and expands in your life.”

the Law of Subconscious activity.This law says that,
“Your subconscious mind accepts any thought, plan or goal created by the
conscious mind, and then organizes your thoughts and behaviors to bring that goal
into reality.”

The Habits You Need to Succeed

The most important habit you can develop for success, achievement and happiness
is the habit of self-discipline. Perhaps the best definition of self-discipline comes
from Elbert Hubbard, “Self-discipline is the ability to make yourself do what you
should do, when you should do it, whether you feel like it or not.”

Perhaps the most helpful mental habit you can develop is the habit of optimism.

You develop the habit of practicing “back from the future” thinking. In this type of
thinking, you project forward into the future to your ideal result and imagine what
it would look like in every way.

You develop the habit of “long-time perspective.”Instead of focusing continually
on the moment, and on immediate actions and gratification, you instead think long term about what you want and where you are going

Goal-orientation is the second quality or way of thinking practiced by optimists
and all successful people

Successful people soon develop the habits of personal strategic planning.They sit
down and make a list of exactly what they want to accomplish in the short,
medium and long term.
The Seven Step Formula for Goal Setting

Step One: Decide exactly what you want in a specific area and write it down
clearly, in detail. Make it measurable and specific.
Step Two: Set a deadline for the achievement of the goal. If it is a large goal, break
it down into smaller parts and set sub-deadlines.
Step Three: Make a list of everything that you will have to do to achieve this goal.
As you think of new items, add them to your list until it is complete.
Step Four: Organize your list of action steps into a plan. A plan is organized on
the basis of two elements, priority and sequence.
Step Five: Identify the obstacles or limitations that might hold you back from
achieving your goal, both in the situation and within yourself. Ask yourself, “Why
have I not achieved this goal already?”
Step Six: Once you have determined your goal, developed your plan, and
identified your major obstacle, immediately take action of some kind toward the
achievement of your goal. Step out in faith. Do the first thing that comes to mind.
But do something immediately to start the process of goal attainment moving
forward.
Step Seven: Do something every day that moves you to toward your most
important goal. Make a habit of getting up each morning, planning your day and
then doing something, anything, that moves you at least one step closer to what is
most important to you.
An important habit of thinking developed by optimists is the habit of “excellence-orientation.”
Another key habit of thinking and acting practiced by top people is growth
orientation.

“Hawthorne Effect.” In
short, what this principle says is that, “The very act of paying attention to a
particular behavior causes you to improve your performance in that area.”

                                                                                                                                                                               BRIAN TRACY