The ability to concentrate and to use your time
well is everything if you want to succeed in business--or almost anywhere else
for that matter.
~Lee Iacocca
People often say they can tell how successful they are going to be in
their day based on how it begins. The better it starts, the better it will end.
Of course, the real question is how do you make your day start well?
Mark Twain was an amazing author and a very wise philosopher. He once
said, “If it's your job to eat a frog, it's best to do
it first thing in the morning. And if it's your job to eat two frogs, it's best
to eat the biggest one first.” Obviously, ‘eating a frog’ is a colorful analogy for those tasks that
you dislike but must do.
In my personal experience, when I was faced with a task I really did not
want to do – such as reprimanding an employee – I tended to push off. I always just felt that if I avoided
the pain, then it might go away.
Of course, as anyone who has ever put off an unpleasant task can attest,
it never goes away. It merely ends up weighing you down and ruining your entire
day.
Once I learned to abide by the ‘eat your frog first’ philosophy,
however, my life has seemed so much easier and more refreshing.
I have been running for decades, but I can truthfully say that the part
I enjoy most about my daily 3-mile run is when it is over. I learned early on
that doing it first thing in the morning (eating my frog) was the only way to
ensure I got it done each and every day.
When I put it off until later in the day, it just becomes too easy to
come up with reasons not to do it or to justify skipping it because I have run
out of time. On days when that happens, I just do not feel right.
Having the courage to face the things that you just do not want to do
early on is so vital for every leader as well as for every individual.
I have a very good friend, an author, who has the hardest time getting
going in the morning. Though he likes to write, he just seems to put it off to
avoid the pain of writer’s block. However, once he gets started and he really
gets into his craft, things seem to flow without interruption. The problem for
him really is just getting going.
To help him out, I suggested he try implementing the ‘eat your frog
first’ philosophy. He now tackles his writing first thing in the morning before
doing anything else, and he says he feels so much better as he no longer dreads
sitting down to write.
Now go out and try doing the things you dislike the most first. When you
learn to eat your frog first, you get those troublesome things out of the way
and open yourself up to having a great, productive and worthwhile day.
You can do this!
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