September 29th, 2008
Although we know it to be true. Although our boyish bravado attempts to convince us otherwise. Every man has a limit.
From Greek myth to modern comic book ‘goodies’, mankind’s heroes are distinguished by their weakness. To paraphrase Anna Karennina: all strength is the same, but weakness comes in infinite variety.
My major weakness was laziness. Superman’s was kryptonite. Both conditions result in fatigue, reduced control and increased calamity.
Weakness should be identified early. Ignorance is bliss, in the same way that crack-addiction is bliss. Blindness to your problems, leaves you senseless (or sense-deprived at least.)
Why are you not who/what/where you want to be? Write your reasons down.
The answers to that question will identify your weaknesses. At least some of them will be in your short-term control. Tackle these first and you will make a swift impact on your destiny. The deep-ingrained bad habits will be hardest to correct, but will surely provide the most impressive benefits.
It doesn’t matter how tough you think you are. Every man has a limit, and even Superman would be a fool to wear a kryptonite necklace. What are the weaknesses that limit you?
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July 5th, 2008

credit: Rabinito
Rudyard Kipling advised us to ‘stay calm and keep your head, while all around are losing theirs‘. If you can heed those words, you possess an advantage. If you ‘lose it’, you lose it. If however, you face adversity and stress with calmness and decisive action, you are taking the shortest and most reliable route to your success.
A brilliant example of the effects of losing your head to fear and nervousness, involves a guy who attempted to assassinate the South Korean president.
“The assassin stands up, and he shoots himself in the leg. That’s how it starts. He’s nervous out of his mind. Then he shoots at the president and misses. Instead he hits the president’s wife in the head. Kills the wife. The bodyguard gets up and shoots back. He misses. He hits an eight-year-old boy. It was a screw-up on all sides. Everything went wrong.” – Gavin de Becker, The Gift of Fear
In three-point-five seconds, two men – both military trained – missed their goals, due to being overcome by the stress of the circumstance. Although it can be excused and argued away, neither man met their objective. When it came to the crunch, neither man was calm enough.
In contrast, let me refer to one of my favourite moments in film fiction. It is the moment in which Michael Corleone begins to evolve into the Godfather. It isn’t at the end of the film when Clemenza embraces him. It isn’t when he shoots Sollozzo and McClusky in the restaurant. It isn’t even as late as when McClusky punches him in the face, disfiguring his jaw, and darkening his demeanour. It is when he is still a ‘civilian’, in the moments immediately after he has bluffed a car full of would-be-assassins – as he’s lighting a cigarette for Enzo – and silently realises that his hand is not shaking. From that moment, his power begins to grow.
Similarly, in public speaking, asking the girl for her number, or sinking a jump-shot at the buzzer, being calm and focused in the present is an advantage over the alternatives. Because whether you are bluffing or not, when you decide to go all-in, the only reason you should suggest weakness is because you intend to.
Methods for doing that will be in part two. Check back soon.
By PE • Posted in
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