The 7-step plan to being a positive person

We all know those unhappy people who seem to suck the life blood out of every situation and never have anything good to say. Those are the easy ones to spot, but how much of a complainer are you each day? Being positive is a strong leadership trait and one that we all have to work on.

When you make the decision to be a positive person, you become a positive influence on those around you. People will like you more and want to be in your presence. But more than this, you will have a happier life for doing so. 

Michael Hyatt outlines some reasons why persistent complaining has the potential to hurt you in 4 specific ways, but he also describes a 7-step action plan to become a happy person that others trust and want to be around.

  1. Become self-aware. How negative are you? Can you find positivity in most situations and do you think about, accentuate and highlight it? Do you know if you're a complainer? Ask someone you trust. 
     
  2. Assess your needs. What reward does complaining bring you (attention, connection) and can you satisfy those needs in a more positive way?
     
  3. Decide to change. Being negative is a habit, and like most changes in habit, you have to start somewhere and it takes conscious effort in the beginning. Lasting change will follow.
     
  4. Shift your identity. How do you see yourself? When you say to yourself each morning 'I am a positive, encouraging person' and believe it, your behaviour will follow.
     
  5. Greet with a smile. Smiling more is a very easy but effective way to lift everyone's mood. How often have you noticed the mood of a room shift when the leader is clearly angry about something, even if it's not verbalised. Smiling reduces stress hormones and increases mood-enhancing hormones. There is even evidence that the very act of smiling will make you happy.
     
  6. Catch them doing something right. You get more of what you notice. When people around you do something positive, take the time to compliment them for it. They will do more of it and so will others who see the interaction. This isn't manipulation, it's positive influence.
     
  7. Speak well of others. Avoid persistent negativity and gossip. Of course bad behaviour needs to be addressed, but with the person directly, not behind their back.

I think this is a pretty good plan. Discuss here.

If you think this is important, join the positive leadership movement and talk about these issues. Share/like on social media, so others know you believe in it and the word spreads. Be the change you want to see in our health care system.

Important people around us

There are important people around us. People who look you in the eye when you speak to them, and listen carefully to what you say. People whose immediate response when you ask them for help is 'Of course, what can I do?'. People who do more, care more, invest more in both themselves and those around them. They are always learning and share their knowledge freely. People whose names come to mind first when you're thinking who to ask.

They are leaders without a title.

Because being a leader is much more than a title, and often the best leaders aren't always those near the top of the management tree. But if they are, then it's a sure sign of a great place to work.

We can all be a leader without a title. And by doing so, you will live a more exciting, productive, fulfilling and inspiring life that you thought imaginable.

Leaders without a title:

  • Get stuff done
  • Help others get stuff done
  • Take responsibility
  • Know that self-development never ends
  • See change as a positive event
  • Are a master of their craft
  • Have a vision
  • Understand emotional intelligence
  • Cultivate relationships
  • Develop their coaching skills
  • Build community and help others succeed
  • Develop more leaders
  • Are a force of good, rather than negativity in the workplace
  • Smile. A lot.
  • Chose their words well
  • Are compassionate
  • Care deeply

If you want to become more important, move your focus from your job title. Just start being a leader where you are right now. Everything else will follow.

I know many people who sit at the lowest levels of organisations who have no authority. But absolutely are leaders. Because they’ve made the choice to look after the person at the left of them, and to take care of the person to the right of them. That is what it means to be a leader. A position of authority simply means that you get to operate at a greater scale and influence more people.
— Simon Sinek

Here is what Simon says about creating environments in which those around us will thrive.

 

Unsure where to start? Start with why. Work your strengths and utilise the powers you already have. Spend some time understanding your weaknesses, and turn them around. Find blogs, books and people who inspire you.

Ask others for reading material and join a leadership journal club. Never heard of one? Nor have I, so let's find some people and start one.

Discuss...

If you think this is important, join the positive leadership movement and talk about these issues. Share/like on social media, so others know you believe in it and the word spreads. Be the change you want to see in our health care systems.

Deep work in a superficial world

We all want to be valuable. We want to do things that are rewarding and contribute positively to the world around us. We would like the same for our children and those over whom we have influence. I finished reading a book this week that asks us to take a moment to consider carefully how we go about this. The suggestion that we need to make some specific changes to our daily lives to make it happen. 

By way of historical examples, Cal Newport outlines very eloquently how, throughout history, men and women who were highly productive and successful engaged in what he calls deep work. He argues persuasively that the creep of superficial activities which have become commonplace in our society, has the potential to either derail our best intentions or - if we manage ourselves well - make us more successful than we could imagine.

What exactly is deep work?
Deep work is professional activities performed in a state of distraction-free concentration that push your cognitive capacities to their limit. These efforts create new value, improve your skill, and are hard to replicate.

Deep work is what is necessary to achieve every last drop of value from your cognitive and intellectual capacity. Deep work is what moves you forward in your career. To be of significant value in our modern economy, we must do two things:

  1. Master the art of quickly learning complicated things
  2. Produce the absolutely best work possible

And both of these require depth.

So what’s new?
It goes without saying that the last 30 years has brought huge changes in how we interact, with both those around us and the work that we do. The change that is singularly responsible for much of the difficulty in commitment to deep work is that of network tools. This broad category includes communication services like email, SMS, social media networks like Twitter, Facebook and information websites such as BuzzFeed, Reddit and a whole host of others whose aim is to distract you from work.

Newport demonstrates that the rise of these tools - combined with ubiquitous access through smart-phones and networked office computers - has fragmented our lives. And this fragmentation cannot accommodate deep work.

But I’m busier than ever!
And the counterpart to deep work is that of shallow work. Shallow work is by contrast non-cognitively demanding, consists of logistical-style tasks, often performed while distracted. These efforts tend to not create much new value in the world and are easy to replicate.

Unfortunately, much of our days are spent engaging in shallow tasks. It is very easy to fill a significant portion of our days, remain reassuringly ‘busy’, but not moving forward in our big plans to better the world.

The addiction of distraction
Consider the scenario: you are queuing for lunch and are going to be standing there for 5-10 minutes. You’re on a 20-minute bus journey to the city. How comfortable are you at being bored? Do you reach into your pocket for your smart-phone? Check your email, Facebook feed, Twitter updates, Instagram feed etc? How difficult is it to just stand or sit there and do nothing at all?

One of the necessities for doing deep work, is the ability to sit down for significant periods of time, focused on a single activity. Newport, through a range of examples based in cognitive psychology, leads us to the inevitable conclusion that ‘The ability to concentrate intensely is a skill that must be trained.’ And an important corollary of this need for practice to strengthen our 'mental muscle' is that we must simultaneously wean our minds from a dependence on distraction.

The author walks us through the uncomfortable link between our obsession with multitasking, society’s chronic state of distraction and the resulting effect both of these have on our ability to work deeply. He highlights that the use of a distracting service itself does not reduce our brain’s ability to focus. It is the constant switching from low-stimuli/high value activities to high-stimuli/low value activities, at the slightest hint of boredom or cognitive challenge. This teaches our mind to never tolerate an absence of novelty.

The solution
The main of the book is etched around Newport’s 4 main rules for developing a rewarding life of deep work. These are:

  1. Work deeply
  2. Embrace boredom
  3. Control social media
  4. Reduce the amount of shallow activities in your day

Filled with evidence from neuropsychological research, Cal shows us how to work deeply, including the necessary approaches, rituals and the need for time out. He demonstrates the importance of embracing boredom and scheduling times for internet use - a way to take breaks from focus for distraction, rather than the other way around.

His discussion of daily scheduling is much like that of other GTD-style approaches, but with a focus on quantifying the depth in each of the activities we do. And he has a strong belief that not only can all this (usually) be completed in a 40-hour week, it actually has to be, to have available the required time for recharge. 

Summary
For me, his book has opened my eyes to my own overwhelming inability to just do nothing. It came at an opportune time, as I’m also spending time focusing on the importance of mindfulness meditation, so the two are complementary.

I believe that his writing is even more important for our children, whose brains have developed in this distracted and dopamine-dominated world. We need to make some of these decisions for them, and teach them the importance of his methods. Because in a world of distraction and superficial work, only those who can go deep will be the ultimate winners.

I purchased Deep Work through Book Depository. This is not an affiliate link.

Discuss...


If you think this is important, join the positive leadership movement and talk about these issues. Share/like on social media, so others know you believe in it and the word spreads. Be the change you want to see in our health care systems.

Handwriting vs computer based note-taking

More evidence and discussion this month suggesting that writing by hand is superior to taking notes on a computer. An article in the Wall Street Journal references a Princeton & UCLA study that found students who wrote their notes appeared to think more intensely about the material as they wrote and digested it more thoroughly. Laptop users on the other hand took longer notes, writing much verbatim. As one of the researchers stated 'Ironically, the very feature that makes laptop note-taking so appealing - the ability to take notes more quickly - was what undermined learning'.

Congnitive neuroscientist Jared Horvath at The Science of Learning Research Centre in Melbourne said in The Australian newspaper article, 'We like to think that the brain is like a computer … but everything we know about how memory works suggests it’s all relational and conceptual. We don’t necessarily remember facts, we remember concepts.'

For those of us who like to have our notes on a computer for ease of access in multiple locations, this is somewhat depressing. There is always the option of handwriting and scanning. I've personally tried a range of options including direct notes into the software by which I run my life: Evernote.  I've used standard journals, note cards and Livescribe, the pen that writes in ink but automatically syncs to online storage.

The answer to this is in Dr Horvath's quote above: memory is relational and conceptual. It is exceedingly difficult to take memorable notes as pages of linear text, whether handwritten or typed. The benefit of handwritten notes are the inevitable drawings that accompany them: the doodles, words within circles, red pen underlining and arrows underscoring relationships between ideas.

Mind maps as a solution?
I do believe we can have the best of both worlds and recently I've been testing various mind map solutions. The advantage of mind mapping is that it forces you to interact with the content, to think deeply about concepts and how it all fits together.

When I read a text, I like to have a summary to come back to. Something to remind me later about the key relationships and messages. And to prompt me about the various detail and how it all fits into the bigger picture.

I recently wrote an article on the three ways that healthcare has to change, summarising some evidence on leadership and engagement. Here is the mind map summary that I created as I brought together the information, organising it into a format that allowed me to fit it into my bigger conceptual picture of how these things work. Click on the images below to see them larger, or pinch-zoom on a mobile.

After trying several different solutions, I have settled on iMindMap, developed by Tony Buzan, who is said to be the inventor of mind mapping. I've used it in various settings, e.g. whilst reading, in meetings to take summary notes of discussions, and to brainstorm ideas and help me nut out concepts I'm learning. I've used it for teaching too. The software has a few options for brainstorming or note taking on the fly, the idea being that you come back and tidy up the relationships and final layout afterwards. Once you have a map created, you can add images; visualisations with content have been found to aid long term memorisation. The software's presentation mode can be used to share ideas to an audience, focusing on one area at a time, slowly building up the bigger picture and emphasising conceptual relationships: here's an example. There's a mobile version of the software too.

Finalised mind maps can be stored as images, PDFs or printed out on paper; I have several on my wall at work to remind me of important information. It's easy to quickly review a large text that has been detailed in a mind map, prompting the memory of not only the main concepts, but keywords anchoring the detail too. 

The question is whether students in a lecture can mind map at speed on a computer, keeping up with a tutor. Generally content is available in books and via university online learning portals, so if they keep it broad & conceptual, I bet they can.

Buzan has written a book 'Use your head: unleash the power of your mind'. It covers much more than just mind mapping, and for anyone looking to improve deep learning & memory, it's a great read.

I haven't seen any research comparing mind mapping on a computer with hand written notes, but if you're looking for a way to achieve the deep learning gains of handwriting in an electronic storage solution, computer-based mind maps are definitely worth a try. Let me know how you get on if you do. A free online mind mapping tool is GoConqr - by example, here's a map I created to summarise a medical study published last year.

Either way, we should probably be advising our students that typing their notes in class isn't the best idea for learning. 

Discuss...

If you think this is important, join the positive leadership movement and talk about these issues. Share/like on social media, so others know you believe in it and the word spreads. Be the change you want to see in our health care systems.