The Rhythm of Success
by Jeff Olson
Knowledge without practice is useless.
Practice without knowledge is dangerous. —Confucius
I can read a book like
As A Man Thinketh, return it
to my bookshelf, then come back a year later to read it again—and it feels
like somebody sneaked into my room while I was sleeping and completely rewrote
the book! Why? Because of the learning by doing I've gone through in the interim.
My experiences have changed my perspective. Now, when I read a particular passage
or point the author makes, I understand it in a way I could not have possibly seen
a year ago. And that in turn informs my behavior; now, when I go to engage in my
activity of the next day, I can apply what I've learned from James Allen in a
way that I would not have thought of even twenty-four hours
ago.
Book smarts, street
smarts. Learning by study, learning
by doing. Read about it, apply it, see it in action; take that practical
experience back to my reading, deepen my understanding, take that deeper
understanding back to my activity...it's a never-ending cycle, each aspect
of learning feeding the other. Like climbing a ladder: right foot, left foot,
right foot, left foot.
Can you imagine trying to climb a ladder with only your
right foot? The two work together. What’s more, they not only work better
together, each amplifying the other, but the truth is, they really cannot
work separately. At least not for long.
You can't go to the top based purely on knowledge learned
in study; you can't go to the top purely through knowledge gleaned through
action. The two have to work together. You study, and then you do activity.
The activity changes your frame of reference, and now you are in a place
where you can learn more. Then you learn more, and it gives you more insight
into what you experienced in your activity, so now you re-approach activity
with more insight. And back and forth, it goes.
This back-and-forth rhythm is worth noting. It is the
rhythm of success.
This learning-and-doing sense of rhythm is something you learned
even before you learned to walk, and it’s even more basic. Psychologists have found
crawling is one of the most important activities we ever accomplish, because it
profoundly affects the brain and its capacity to learn. The right-hand-left-leg,
left-hand-right-leg rhythm of alternation acts upon our nervous system like the surf
upon the coastline, developing it, shaping it, and preparing it for all sorts of more
sophisticated levels of learning and awareness later in
life.
You've heard the expression, "Before you can walk, you have to crawl." There is more profound truth to this than most of us ever realized. That alternating
rhythm, and your capacity to coordinate the behavior of opposites, is a critical
Slight Edge skill.
Remember, you can't go to the top based purely on knowledge
learned in study; you can’t go to the top purely through knowledge gleaned through
action. The two must work together. It is the rhythm of
success....
Create your success,
Jeff
P.S. If you're interested in achieving success in
all areas of your life—health, finances, personal relationships, family life, and your
MLM business, then get this book!
Here's
why
>>>

© 2011 by Jeff Olson. All Rights Reserved.
About the author:
Jeff Olson, author of The Slight Edge, has built
multi-million-dollar sales and marketing
organizations, hosted seminars in every major
city in the United States and produced over 900
television programs with such personal
development legends as: Les Brown, Jim Rohn, and Brian
Tracy. Over the past 20 years Jeff has helped
hundreds of thousands of individuals achieve
better levels of financial freedom and personal
excellence.
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