The Journey from Fear to Effectiveness: So I call it “A Principle-Centered Approach."

The Journey from Fear to Effectiveness: So I call it “A Principle-Centered Approach."

Begin with the end in mind: Sitting again at the crossroads of anxiety and opportunity, a young professional clenches a small blue piece of paper that reads the best truth ever penned: Everything you’ve ever wanted is on the other side of fear. This is the moment of outside-in to inside-out transition and indeed a critical paradigm change.

Let us examine the seven key principles that emerged through his journey so far:

  1. Be Proactive: In the midst of a reactive society that often overlooked his potential, our protagonist faced a fundamental choice: Whether to continue to be a product of his environment or for him to be a product of his actions. The blue slip of paper became the cue event that led him to become aware that in between the stimulus and the response is our freedom.
  2. Begin with the End in Mind: Instead of accepting society’s inability to care as his fate, he created a mission statement for himself – one can argue, this mission statement was not ever on paper, but in the choices he made in his life. He makes vision to be his guide, a kind of lightning in the dark which leads one to the brightest light in the darkness.
  3. Put First Things First: The urgent liked to disguise itself as the comfortable, the familiar. But genuine efficiency called for the introduction of the crucial yet non-urgent tasks – these are the moments that looked frightening but yielded great personal development to help you muster some courage. Every risk taken was saving in his fiftieth personal security account.
  4. Think Win/Win: Had his journey been a race against or a reaction to societal norms, he changed his way of thinking and embraced an attitude of wellness abundance. His peculiar way of thinking and his background were not a weakness rather the strength lead by which the general message of success should incorporate his development to serve as a model to others.
  5. Seek First to Understand, Then to Be Understood: The young man consequently realized that such feelings of frustration of being misunderstood originated from certain paradigms. Thus, having established personal self-acceptance and insight into emotional states he laid the groundwork of personality foundations for sincere and genuine vocal communication.
  6. Synergize: He learned that confidence is not an individual accomplishment it is product of synergy of values, actions and relationships. Collectively, the positive changes of his personal development were exponentially more than values of each courageous acts.
  7. Sharpen the Saw: Physical strength, mental toughness, interpersonal plus spiritual wisdom – these four that they call the warrior values had to be replenished daily. In the same view, each challenge turned out to be a way of honing these basic instruments.

The Transformation Process

Through this principle-centered approach, his development followed the natural sequence of growth:

  • Dependence: First, looking for recognition from other people
  • Independence: There are no choices that threaten personal power and thus we develop personal power through proactive choices.
  • Interdependence: This means attaining natural real confidence together with the ability to make others feel the same.

The Paradigm Shift

His journey is testimony to the transition of going from personality ethic to character ethic. Instead of seeking quick-fix solutions or social Band-Aids, he focused on universal principles:

  • Integrity in facing fears
  • Blameless in admitting their areas of developmental imperfection
  • Fidelity to personal values
  • Embracing of the process of principle centered growth

Circle of Influence vs. Circle of Concern

Rather than focusing on circumstances beyond his control, he expanded his Circle of Influence by:

  • Accepting the consequence of his responses.
  • The process of learning as the key to build competence.
  • Personal leadership leading to the development of value.

This means that there was the Private Victory before there was the Public Victory. He had to conquer in the sphere of private freedom where victories set up the ideal prior to society accepting him as worthy to be respected.

Key Learnings

  • Effectiveness Principle: The only confidence that should be embraced is that which is derived from the practice of principles, not conformity to situations.
  • Production Capability (PC): People should turn their efforts into the right character and not look for quick personality enhancement solutions.
  • Inside-Out Approach: It should be, therefore, noted that the better way to address external threats is through internal growth

The Habit of Personal Leadership

It is remarkable to note that it is his personal leadership – the accumulated set of choices one makes each day: not to be a reaction to an action; not to be driven by a principle when one has an easier way; and to be purposefully uncomfortable when comfortable is available. Every fear faced made it not only a win but also helped personal habit formation that is part of the constitution.

Remember: The hope in this change was not the big moments, but choosing courage in spite of fear – again and again. In Growth Mastery it is not the event which takes place but our principle based response which defines our growth and productivity.

Thereby, this transition from fear to genuine confidence demonstrates that the phenomenon of personal leadership is not tantamount to lack of obstacles, but it is about principle based approaches to such. The way to make it work is not to look for an outside answer from the outside world but to cultivate the inside virtues based on the tenants of morality.

Alex Wirtz

I do data / finance / code / Excel / Power* / open-source. And Charlie Parker on the guitar, with a following wind.

1 周

Great article. These pointers are obviously essential to professional development, but I think they reach far beyond. I'm going to share this and talk about it with my elder son (15) who, when he has an instrument in his hands, fears nothing and nobody but when he doesn't it's a very different story. It'll help him a lot. Thank you.

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