Organized Planning| temporary defeat
Organized Planning is required to avoid failure. If you consider any set backs as temporary defeat you will not fail.
Our guest author from the 30 day mental cleanse forum Uwe Wagner nails this concept. Strap yourself in and enjoy the post.
Uwe writes
“For transmuting our desire in its money equivalent we shouldn’t leave it to chance. It rather requires purpose, energy and controlled action. The latter we can achieve with following a proper plan.
And this is what’s it all about, organized planning:
Create plans and follow them.
Oh, this does not mean to have the ultimate one it is more an iterative process and this means we’ll face a high failure rate. For better understanding of failure we have to distinguish between the failure (being the failure, a loser) and temporary defeat (the original meaning of failure).
People often feel when something didn’t work out as intended not to have failed, but to be a failure and they are afraid their life is doomed. A temporary defeat is often only noticed when something of minor importance isn’t achieved.
The failure of a certain plan Hill is talking about is nothing more than a different outcome. Nothing special if we wouldn’t put so much emphasis on it. So we just should accept it as a feedback to check with another approach or as Hill says with another plan.
This of course is easier said than done.
If there wasn’t our emotions stepping in making us feel like a loser, anticipating the achievement of our goal receded into a distance. How many times we can stand that feeling? Ten thousand times as Edison did?
Thus it’s a nice attempt of Hill to clothe this outcome in another expression, temporary defeat. A great expression, it’s soothing us (because it’s not forever) and voicing our feelings (defeat). But in the end it should tell us nothing but stop at the dead end of the road, reverse, go back to the main road, and turn into the next street … or do a more sound planning by using a city map.
Looks like I have found a good analogy here. Because many may ask why to reverse when someone else used this road to the same destination and went right through.
Well, maybe he was using a motorbike instead of a car that can’t pass through the narrow passage. So the path was okay for them, but not for us. Just take the next street which may turn out to be a bit longer. In the end we’ll reach the destination even if it takes another detour because the next street is under construction.
It’s all about not giving up looking for the path to our destination.
Hill puts it into a single nicely balanced phrase or saying:
A quitter never wins – and – a winner never quits!
Uwe
For transmuting our desire in its money equivalent we shouldn’t leave it to chance. It rather requires purpose, energy and controlled action. The latter we can achieve with following a proper plan.
And this is what’s it all about, organized planning:
Create plans and follow them.
Oh, this does not mean to have the ultimate one it is more an iterative process and this means we’ll face a high failure rate. For better understanding of failure we have to distinguish between the failure (being the failure, a loser) and temporary defeat (the original meaning of failure).
People often feel when something didn’t work out as intended not to have failed, but to be a failure and they are afraid their life is doomed. A temporary defeat is often only noticed when something of minor importance isn’t achieved.
The failure of a certain plan Hill is talking about is nothing more than a different outcome. Nothing special if we wouldn’t put so much emphasis on it. So we just should accept it as a feedback to check with another approach or as Hill says with another plan.
This of course is easier said than done.
If there wasn’t our emotions stepping in making us feel like a loser, anticipating the achievement of our goal receded into a distance. How many times we can stand that feeling? Ten thousand times as Edison did?
Thus it’s a nice attempt of Hill to clothe this outcome in another expression, temporary defeat. A great expression, it’s soothing us (because it’s not forever) and voicing our feelings (defeat). But in the end it should tell us nothing but stop at the dead end of the road, reverse, go back to the main road, and turn into the next street … or do a more sound planning by using a city map.
Looks like I have found a good analogy here. Because many may ask why to reverse when someone else used this road to the same destination and went right through.
Well, maybe he was using a motorbike instead of a car that can’t pass through the narrow passage. So the path was okay for them, but not for us. Just take the next street which may turn out to be a bit longer. In the end we’ll reach the destination even if it takes another detour because the next street is under construction.
It’s all about not giving up looking for the path to our destination.
Hill puts it into a single nicely balanced phrase or saying:
A quitter never wins – and – a winner never quits!
Thank You Uwe Wagner your insights into using organized planning and removing the fear of temporary defeat have enlightened many of my readers including me.
If you want to attract good things into your life and business then come and join us. Learn how to use organized planning to help you minimise temporary defeat.
Uwe ”
Thank you Uwe you have given me a much better insight into the need for organized planning and how to deal with any temporary defeat.
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