Today's Business Lessons
Plan your life
(The Philippine Star)
Updated April 13, 2013
I’ve attended so many seminars, read so many books on motivation and
personal development, heard thousands of audio files and learned so many
things, that it becomes impossible for me to share everything in a
lifetime. But if I could condense my learnings into two vital life
lessons, it would be these two:
I shouldn’t live my life automatically; I need to live my life skillfully.
I don’t just expect my marriage to work, and this is why I work on my marriage every day.
While business organizations pay a great deal of money for me to go
to their corporate headquarters, and update and upgrade the skills of
their leaders, many people fail to realize the importance of investing
in life skills in order to improve their lot in life. And I know many
marriages which are on the rocks, reminding me of a message I read once
on a card: “While it is true that marriages are designed in heaven, the
maintenance work has to be done on earth.” With these thoughts in mind, I
ask myself, “How’s my life plan?” This may sound like a sales pitch
from a pre-need company, but this is really valid.
How’s your life plan? Let me ask you:
Would you invest in a business that has no business plan?
Would you invest time in a seminar with a speaker or a trainer who doesn’t have a lesson plan?
Would you board a plane with a pilot who doesn’t know the destination?
Would you trust a coach who tells his players, “I just want all of you to get out there, give your best shot and wing it!”?
Most people don’t do any planning for their life. They just improvise their way through it. You’ve heard it before, that “those who fail to plan, plan to fail.” But Scripture is
even more precise: “…Those who plan what is good find love and
faithfulness. All hard work brings a profit, but mere talk leads only to
poverty” (Proverbs 14:22 – 23, NIV). In God’s opinion, planning is
good, and implementing it is essential!
Everybody should have a plan. Author Craig Groeschel said, “A farmer
plans, or he wastes his soil and his seed. A sailor plans, or the wind
decides where the boat will go (on the rocks, anyone?). A businessperson
plans, or the competition will win every time. Moms plan, or families
sit down to eat around an empty table.”
Do we simply amble through life letting circumstances, pressures and
“necessities” become our driving force for living, like a paper cup
rolling down the sidewalk blown by the breeze? We need to identify and
prioritize important things, not just urgent ones.
I plan for the future. I don’t want to waste this gift of life that
God has given me. So I plan for my family, on how to provide for them
and how to teach them to plan for their own lives as well. I have my
financial plan, health plan, self-improvement plans and
what-I’ll-do-when-I-hit- old-age plans, so I can continuously become
productive and be a blessing to others. Also, I already have my future
funeral plan in place. But you know the best plan of all? To be serious
in my relationship with God. Then all other things will follow.

No comments:
Post a Comment