“Why, then, ’tis none to you, for there is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so. To me it is a prison. Well, then it isn’t one to you, since nothing is really good or bad in itself—it’s all what a person thinks about it.” This is from Shakespeare’s Hamlet Act 2 Scene 2. Little did I know that the above statement fits perfectly into today’s podcast. Today’s podcast is entitled Personal Paradigms. Paradigms was first introduced to me back in 1993. I was seven years into my personal recovery and was looking for a way to grow beyond the material I was currently involved with. The material was working; I wanted more. I knew there was more out there for me to go get it, I just didn’t know what it looked like or how to find it. A friend of mine had introduced me to Stephen Covey. Stephen had just produced “principle centered leader ship”. It was the first time I had heard about a paradigm. I was looking for a new way of thinking. This is what this podcast is all about.
Directions are best accompanied by a map. The more defined and accurate the map the more likely I am to get from point A to point B. Once we address the aspects of a paradigm and the personal application, we will then have a fuller understanding. We will dig a little deeper into this as we examine our present thinking.
If I am not where I want to be, then what adjustments do I need to make to get there?
First,
- What is a paradigm?
a philosophical and theoretical framework of a scientific school or discipline within which theories, laws, and generalizations and the experiments performed in support of them are formulated - Practical example of paradigm
- How do they affect us negatively and positively?
- Identifying erroneous paradigms
- Removing or displacing paradigms that are not consistent with our direction, commitment or environment
- Adopting new positive paradigms that are in alignment with our direction, commitment, environment
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