by Dr. John C. Maxwell
He opens also their ear to discipline, and commands that they return from iniquity.
Job 36:10
H.P. Liddon said, "What we do on some great occasions
will probably depend upon what we already are, and what we are will be the
result of previous years of self-discipline." I believe that with all of
my heart.
Discipline is doing what you really do not want to do, so
you can do what you really want to do. What makes it hard is that in our own
human nature, we do not want to do certain things, and so therefore, what
happens is we have a tendency to be undisciplined in the areas that we do not
care to do.
Three areas to develop discipline:
1. Disciplined Thinking.
George Bernard Shaw said, "Few people think more than
two or three times a year. I have made an international reputation for myself
by thinking once or twice a week."
While writing my newest book, the focus of the whole book
was based on the idea that people who understand how to get to the top and stay
there are people who think their way to the top.
One of the major differences in this discipline of thinking
is that people who think their way to the top have the ability to do what I
call "sustained thinking." They have the ability to think on an issue
for a long period of time, until that issue becomes clear on the decision that
should be made.
People who do not think their way to the top have the
unwillingness of discipline to master sustained thinking. They will think about
something for a while, and then they will get off it and go on to something
else.
They have never learned how to discipline their thoughts by
writing them down. I always keep a pad with me of things that I am thinking. I
write thoughts down so that I can stay concentrated and disciplined in that
area.
2. Disciplined Emotions.
We have choices when it comes to our emotions:
1. We can master them, or
2. They can master us.
1. We can master them, or
2. They can master us.
I was playing golf the other day at East Lake Country Club,
a great golf course here in Atlanta. It is known for being the links where
Bobby Jones played. As you may or may not know, he is a legendary golfer who
won a major tournament at twenty-one. By age twenty-eight, he had already won
the grand slam and retired.
Jones had an uncle who said that by the time he was
fourteen, Bobby was probably already the best golfer in the world. He certainly
was popular. However, Jones was also known for his temper because he would
throw his clubs when he got irritated. Jones' uncle sat down with him and said,
"Bobby, your problem is you've mastered the game of golf, but you haven't
mastered your emotions; and until you master your emotions, you'll never be a
champion in golf."
3. Disciplined Actions.
I call the two actions of initiating and closing the
"bookends of success" because I really think they are.
I know some who can initiate but they can never close; I
know some people who can close but they can never get it cranked up. You have
to kick-start them every time. When you can do both, initiate and close, you
have the bookends to success.
Allow me to leave you with this closing thought about
developing discipline: You cannot give what you do not have, and
self-improvement precedes team improvement.
The only way that I can keep leading is to keep growing. The
day I stop growing, somebody else takes the leadership baton. That is the way
it always is.
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