FSS Newsletter :: November 2002
FSS Spotlight :: Evaluating Your Association
by Jim Rohn
If you were to evaluate the major influences in your life
that have shaped the kind of person you are, this has to be
high on the list: the people and thoughts you choose to allow
into your life. Mr. Shoaff gave me a very important warning
in those early days that I would like to share with you. He
said, "Never underestimate the power of influence."
Indeed, the influence of those around us is so powerful! Many
times we don't even realize we're being strongly affected
because influences generally develop over an extended period
of time.
Peer pressure is an especially powerful force because it is
so subtle. If you're around people who spend all they make,
chances are excellent that you'll spend all you make. If you
are around people who go to more ball games than concerts,
chances are excellent that you'll do the same thing. If you
are around people who don't read, chances are excellent that
you won't read. People can keep nudging us off course a little
at a time until finally, we find ourselves asking, "How
did I get here?" Those subtle influences need to be studied
carefully if we really want our lives to turn out the way
we've planned.
With regard to this important point, let me give you three
key questions to
ask yourself. They may help you to make better analysis of
your current associations. Here is the first question: "Who
am I around?" Make a mental note of the people with whom
you most often associate. You've got to evaluate everybody
who is able to influence you in any way.
The second question is: "What are these associations
doing to me?" That's a major question to ask. What have
they got me doing? What have they got me
listening to? What have they got me reading? Where have they
got me going? What do they have me thinking? How have they
got me talking? How have they
got me feeling? What have they got me saying? You've got to
make a serious study of how others are influencing you, both
negatively and positively.
Here's a final question: "Is that okay?" Maybe everyone
you associate with has been a positive, energizing influence.
Then again, maybe there are some bad apples in the bunch.
All I'm suggesting here is that you take a close and objective
look. Everything is worth a second look, especially the power
of influence. Both will take you somewhere, but only one will
take you in the direction you need to go.
It's easy to just dismiss the things that influence our lives.
One man say's, "I live here, but I don't think it matters.
I'm around these people, but I don't think it hurts."
I would take another look at that. Remember, everything matters!
Sure, some things matter more than others, but everything
amounts to something. You've got to keep checking to find
out whether your associations are tipping the scales toward
the positive or toward the negative. Ignorance is never the
best policy. Finding out is the best policy.
Perhaps you've heard the story of the little bird. He had
his wing over his eye and he was crying. The owl said to the
bird, "You are crying." "Yes," said the
little bird, and he pulled his wing away from his eye. "Oh,
I see," said the owl. "You're crying because the
big bird pecked out your eye." And the little bird said,
"No, I'm not crying because the big bird pecked out my
eye. I'm crying because I let him." It's easy to let
influence shape our lives, to let associations determine
our direction, to let pressures overwhelm us, and to let tides
take us. The big question is, are we letting ourselves become
what we wish to become?
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