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We've covered Habits 1-3 so far. To review:Habit 1 ? Be ProactiveHabit 2 ? Begin With the End in MindHabit 3 ? Put First Things FirstThese are the personal, independent habitsWe are moving into Habits 4-7Habit 4 ? Think Win/WinHabit 5 ? Seek to Understand, Then Be UnderstoodHabit 6 ? Princi
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1. Paradigms of Interdependence Moving From Maturation to Leadership
By. C. Kohn
2. We’ve covered Habits 1-3 so far. To review:
Habit 1 – Be Proactive
Habit 2 – Begin With the End in Mind
Habit 3 – Put First Things First
These are the personal, independent habits
We are moving into Habits 4-7
Habit 4 – Think Win/Win
Habit 5 – Seek to Understand, Then Be Understood
Habit 6 – Principles of Creative Cooperation
Habit 7 – Sharpen the Saw
Before we can move on, we must consider the differences between being independent and interdependent. Habits 1,2,3
3. When we began, we assumed you were partially dependent
Reactive people give up power and independence in order to become dependent on others
Offering excuses means you do not have control over your life and do not seek to gain it.
Rather than focus on what can be done, you are focusing on what has happened and cannot be changed.
Hopefully, you are realizing it is better to progress to independence.
Assume responsibility and you can be in charge of your life. Grab the steering wheel…No one else will! Dependent, Independent, and Interdependent.
4. However, Independence is only part of the way through this spectrum.
On the far end lies interdependence.
With Dependence, we have no control
With Independence, we have limited control
With Interdependence, we have maximum control.
Interdependence is what we think of as leadership – utilizing the collaborative resources of a group to achieve a goal that, alone, no one could accomplish.
The Spectrum
5. While interdependence provides maximum control, it requires an individual to relinquish some control as well.
You give a little to gain a lot
It is an investment – pay now to gain later
Interdependence also requires intense management – you must maintain relationships with others and give up short term gain for long term results. Interedependence
6. Everyone knows the basic story of the Golden Goose.
A man finds a goose who lays golden eggs.
Each day, the goose lays an egg made of solid gold.
The man immediately realizes his fortune, but over time he becomes greedy.
One day, he kills the goose to get all the eggs, only to find nothing.
What is the moral of this story? TPS. The Golden Goose
7. P in this case is Production, while PC is Production Capacity
P in the fable is the golden egg, while PC is the goose
When PC is compromised for short term gain, P ultimately suffers as well
I.e. When the goose was killed to get more production, production completely stopped
E.g. when we fail to maintain our lawn mower in order to mow more lawns, the lawn mower begins to fail.
E.g. when we constantly ask for favors without any chance of return, we strangle the Golden Gooses in our lives P/PC Balance
8. P/PC Balance simply means that we are working to maintain the things that provide us with the things we want.
A sort of stitch in time to save nine
These can be out of balance in either way
1. If we fail to maintain PC, P will drop off
2. If we only maintain PC with no P, we’re equally worse off
There must be a balance between P and PC
Relationships are the ultimate P/PC Balance P/PC Balance, Defined
9. An Emotional Bank Account is a metaphor for a relationship with another person.
Every time you do a favor for that person, it is like making a deposit in a “bank account”
Every time you ask for a favor, it’s like making a withdrawal.
Like any financial investment, you can overdraw your account.
You must make continuous and regular deposits if you plan on making any withdrawals. Emotional Bank Accounts
10. Asking for favors without returning them
Complaining and pessimistic tones of voice
Pointing out personal shortcomings
Unfriendly sarcasm and snide remarks
Highlighting other’s errors and mistakes
Expectations that are not communicated
Negative attitudes in general (because really, who wants to be around that voluntarily?)
Broken promises
Disregard for personal values and interests
Lack of integrity
“It is the weak who are cruel. Gentleness can only be
expected from the strong” – Leo Roskin Examples of Withdrawals
11. Understanding the Individual
Attend to the little things
Keep commitments
Clarify expectations
Show personal integrity
Apologize sincerely when a withdrawal is made 6 ways to make deposits
12. An individual's values determine what actions will result in a deposit or a withdrawal for that individual.
To build a relationship, you must learn what is important to the other person and make it as important to you as the other person is to you.
If you have no interest in , but an acquaintance does, you must make an effort to understand and appreciate why they are a passionate about it.
Understand others deeply as individuals and then treat them in terms of that understanding. Understanding the individual
13. According to an almost certainly false legend, someone once asked Queen Victoria whose company she most preferred.
She replied that of two of her prime ministers, one by far left her feeling that he was the most interesting person in the world.
However, when she ate with another, she left feeling that she was the most interesting person in the world.
Conceit is thinking “I’m great”. Charm is thinking “You’re great”.
Conceit = Withdrawal; Charm = Deposit
The greatest gift you can give anyone is to see them as they wish to be seen (F. Scott Fitzgerald). This never happened but…
14. Little forms of disrespect make big withdrawals
Snide remarks, lack of courtesy, and little unkindnesses undermine your relationships with everyone around you.
In personal relationships, the little things are the big things because they happen most often
Conceit demands, but Charm appreciates Attend to the Little Things
15. Keeping a promise is a major deposit
Breaking a promise is a major withdrawal
Never make a promise you can’t keep
If you can’t help but make a promise, you lack internal security – you are trying to gain in P by sacrificing PC; i.e. you’re killing the goose to get the eggs
Keep Commitments
16. The cause of almost all relationship difficulties is rooted in ambiguous, conflicting expectations around roles and goals.
Making an investment of time and effort up front saves time, effort and a major withdrawal later.
Never assume someone else “just knows” what you expect from them – you must communicate your needs.
“We tend to judge others by their actions and not their intentions but solely judge ourselves by our intentions and not our actions.” Nick Palkowski
Clarify Expectations
17. A lack of integrity can undermine almost any effort to create a high trust reserve.
Honesty means conforming our words to reality – we say what is true
Integrity requires conforming reality to our words, keeping promises and fulfilling expectations.
“We do what we say”
Integrity is doing the right thing even when no one is looking, because very often, someone is. Show Personal Integrity
18. The key to the many is the one, especially the one that tests the patience and good humor of the many.
How you treat the one reveals how you regard the many, because everyone is ultimately a one. We Are All “The One” At Some Point
19. Sincere apologies are deposits.
We all make mistakes from time to time
Sincere apologies require us to possess a deep sense of inner security
People with little internal security cannot do it – it makes them too vulnerable and their sense of power does not come from within but from without
Repeated apologies are interpreted as insincere, resulting in withdrawals.
If you are repeatedly making a mistake, you are knowingly making a mistake
Apologize Sincerely When Needed
20. Dag Hammerskjold, past Secretary General of the United Nations, said, "It is more noble to give yourself completely to one individual, than to labor diligently for the salvation of the masses."
It is at the one-on-one level that we live the primary laws of love and life. Our individual actions with each other matter more than our public displays of service.
Problems should be recognized as PC opportunities, a chance to build up emotional bank accounts, to sharpen the blade of our mower
These are opportunities to deeply understand and help others, which applies to all personal relationships in the family, with workers and with customers.
In the end…
21. In the next four habits, we will talk about our relationships with others.
However, we cannot have solid relationships with others unless we have control in our life, appreciation of what is important, and an ability to use this control to go where we seek to be.
Habits 1-3 are the roots.
Habits 4-7 are the fruits.
Without roots, there are no fruits. Where are we going?