| Kaizen and the Art of New Year’s Resolutions |
| Released by: Darlene Hull |
| Web Site: http://www.mom-defrazzler.com |
How to succeed with your New Year's Resolutions
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Email: darlene@mom-defrazzler.com |
| Keywords: New Year's Resolutions, Kaizen, goals |
| Update Date: 12/24/2006 2:15:55 AM |
| Hits: 345 |
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Descrption: Every year, on January 1, millions of people somehow hope to wake up as a completely different person. New Year’s Resolutions in hand, they begin on that first day of the New Year with bright hopes that they will conquer all the bad stuff in their lives, and release all the good stuff, instantaneously, simply because it’s January 1. By lunch time they’ve failed, and all their good intentions go into the trash, only to be revived a whole year later on the next January 1.
Why does this happen?
Well, let’s take a look at what people are trying to change. The top ten New Year’s Resolutions are apparently:
1. Lose weight 2. Stop smoking 3. Stick to a budget 4. Save more money 5. Find a better job 6. Become more organized 7. Exercise more 8. Be more patient at work / with others 9. Eat better 10. Become a better person
And many people have ALL of those on their list, hoping to change the whole lot of them with nothing more than a wish and a prayer to back them up.
As we approach this coming January 1, we need to realize that those kinds of problems didn’t come about in a day, and they won’t disappear like magic on January 1. We need a plan. More importantly, we need a plan we can stick to.
Enter the art of Kaizen.
At the end of the war when Japan was in ruins the Allied Forces were given the task of rebuilding. This was a massive task, and so a method was developed called “Kaizen” which means “small and continuous improvement”. Through this system Japan rose from the ashes and became a country to be reckoned with.
You see, we can tackle that list of resolutions in one of two ways: 1. We can “Go for the Gusto”, waking up on January 1 and deciding that we will join a gym, exercise three times a week, eat only vegetables, cut up our credit cards, clean the house from top to bottom, never stop smiling, and flush all our cigarettes down the toilet starting at 7:00 am – guaranteeing overwhelm, burnout, frustration, anger and failure.
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2. We can practice Kaizen. On January 1 we choose one small step. Perhaps we’ll only smoke ¾ of our cigarette instead of smoking right to the filter. Maybe we’ll wake up and put on gym clothes, but then change right away into our normal clothes without working out. Maybe we’ll practice greeting our co-worker with a smile. Perhaps we’ll get out of the elevator one floor below our office floor.
You can see that the art of Kaizen encourages us to perform micro-steps to our goal, enabling us to develop small, achievable habits that build on one another. They’re too small to fail at, but each step is important enough to be able to build a foundation of success upon it.
We may not get very far in our first week,but we’ll be developing very do-able habits that will build a solid foundation for success. We may not achieve the whole list in one year, but we will do a great job with the first 2 or 3.
Kaizen. The art of 'small and continuous improvement'.
Now this, we can do.
Here’s to a year of New Year’s REVOLUTIONS! |
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