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| posted at 09:00:00 By Flipping Heck! | Posted In Motivation |
Covey takes a break from the 7 habits and introduces a new phase, one of "Public Victory" where we move from our first 3 habits of Private Victory in to the 4 habits of public victory.
The Public Phase is one where we move from our newly formed independant selves into "interdependant" people; we learn to trust and rely on people, build relationships and become trustworthy and reliable ourselves. He states:
In the first three habits, we learned to become masters of ourselves, to know our destinies and priorities and with these in place, we can now move into the "Public" phase and start building meaningful relationships with others - whether that be friends, colleagues, spouses or children.
The main thrust of becoming truly interdependant is that we need to be true to ourselves (our character ethic) rather than to be superficial (our personality ethic). People can see right through superficiality and will lose all respect for us.
In order to be interdependant, we need to have mastered the following skills from the first three habits:
Only when we have fully mastered the above core habits can we then start to move into our public interdependant phase, a quick-fix "band-aid" approach won't work - and in the end could prove damaging to the relationships you're trying to build.
In order to be interdependant, Covey tells us to look at our "Emotional Bank Account". This is where we build up captial (or expenditure) for use in our dealings with other people. In order to put a deposit in we need to be kind, keep our word, act with courtesy and honesty etc. If we act the opposite i.e. break promises, are insensitive etc. this leads us to make a withdrawal and too many of those can make us overdrawn.
The more you have in your emotional bank account, the more respect you will engender. People will be willing to help you, trust you and work with you and you will feel better for it.
If you're emotionally overdrawn, there'll be little or no trust, you'll feel uncomfortable and end up in a hostile environment with a general lack of communication.
Covey backs up his emotional bank account analogy with 6 forms of deposits (although he does list 7 - is that a typo?) that can be made into it:
It was quite nice to take a break from the overall habit structure and I like Covey's analogy of an emotional bank account. I've started to think a bit more about whether I am making a "withdrawal" or a "deposit" and it's certainly lead me to be "depositing" a lot more!
I'm going to keep trying with this "Emotional Bank Account", taking particular note of other people's needs. I'm also going to try to ensure that I keep all my promises - even if that means not making the ones I don't think I can keep (is that cheating?!)
Interested in this book? Buy the 7 Habits of highly effective peoplefrom Amazon today
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