Monday, October 19, 2009

Management of Time

TIME CRESIS MANAGEMENT:

Crisis involves two aspects. The cresis created by factors within one’s control and such crisis can be avoided. Then those crisis created by factor’s beyond one’s control and have to be faced.
Major cresis can be avoid, if we act upon a situation at the right time. More often than not, there are two tendencies that present us from acting at the right time.

Postponement of the unpleasant
Non recognition of the problem

PROCRASTINATION CREATES CRESIS:

The tendency to do what is easy, trouble free, and pleasant and leave for the future the issues that are difficult, Thus the difficult issues keeps piling up. They become irritants. We do not want this because it remind us of our inefficiency and incapacity to face unpleasant issues. A thing undone always remain with us.

DO THE UNPLEASANT FIRST:

We can not expect every thing in life to be pleasant. Like the two sides of the coin, the unpleasant always goes with the pleasant.
The one who does not postpone making a decision, right or wrong, to fulfill a responsibility, that person alone can be successful.
Postponing something because it is unpleasant is wrong. It has the potential to create a crisis and when it occurs, we will be inadequately equipped to face it.

RECOGNIZE THE PROBLEM AND ACT:

We get used to the problem so much so chronically, that we don’t recognize it as a problem. When there is a problem, we tend to say, “There is no problem, Everything will be alright”. But it will not be all right.

MURPHY’S LAW:

What can go wrong, will go wrong. The possibility of something going wrong is much greater than its going right. One can act upon a problem, however small it is, only when the problem is first accepted. Action presupposes a decision, a will, and the will can exists, only when there is recognition.