Читать книгу Plan Be! - Becca Anderson - Страница 11
ОглавлениеFind Your Focus
You may not be able to foresee what the universe has planned for you, but that doesn’t mean your own plans should be unpredictable.
—SANDRA OLIVER
Sometimes I still lose my head, even though it is attached to my body. But if I’ve left myself a note, I can usually find it again.
—MARLO THOMAS
Detail is electric.
—BONNI GOLDBERG
To know where you can find a thing is the chief part of learning.
—UNKNOWN
Only when your consciousness is totally focused on the moment you are in can you receive whatever gift, lesson, or delight that moment has to offer.
—BARBARA DE ANGELIS
On clutter: chaos begets chaos in our homes, and in our minds.
—CAROL WISEMAN
A place for everything, and everything in its place.
—ISABELLA MARY BEETON
Just before bedtime prayers, evaluate each day. Make plans for tomorrow that will move you toward your long-range goal.
—FLORENCE S. JACOBSEN
Words are a lens to focus one’s mind.
—AYN RAND
Most of what you obtain in life will be because of your discipline. Discipline is perhaps more important than ability.
—CHRISTINE DARDEN
Never walk into or out of a meeting without a clear agenda.
—MARY JANE RYAN
Many a woman has a 'to-do' list that resembles the phone book! Don’t overdo your 'to-do' list. Keep it reasonable and keep it doable.
—LESLIE ROSSMAN
Write out your problem on a piece of paper, stick the paper in a drawer, and close it. Do not allow yourself to look at or think about the list until the end of the week. By then, you may look at your problems differently and will have solutions.
—MICHELLE STRONG
I don’t wait for moods. You accomplish nothing if you do that. Your mind must know it has got to get down to work.
—PEARL S. BUCK
Plan and Prepare
Look twice before you leap.
—CHARLOTTE BRONTË
The very best impromptu speeches are the ones written well in advance.
—RUTH GORDON
What I’ve learned from fairy tales: Invest in some good string rather than breadcrumbs. That way, you can always find the path back to the gingerbread house.
—WENDY ST. CHARLES
Failing to plan is planning to fail.
—EFFIE JONES
If one asks for success and prepares for failure, she will get the situation she has prepared for.
—FLORENCE SCOVEL SHINN
Don’t agonize. Organize.
—FLORYNCE KENNEDY
Plans are necessary to life and achievement in any sphere. But they should never overcome our powers of flexibility.
—DIXIE MARTIN
Lack of confidence is born from a lack of preparation.
—SHANNON WILBURN
Luck is a matter of preparation meeting opportunity.
—OPRAH WINFREY
You had better live your best and act your best and think your best today; for today is the sure preparation for tomorrow and all the other tomorrows that follow.
—HARRIET MARTINEAU
Winning is the science of being totally prepared.
—GRACIE ALLEN
Preparation, I have often said, is rightly two-thirds of any venture.
—AMELIA EARHART
Dream On!
Fantasies are more than substitutes for unpleasant reality; they are also dress rehearsals, plans. All acts performed in the world begin in the imagination.
—BARBARA GRIZZUTI HARRISON
What the world really needs is more love and less paperwork.
—PEARL BAILEY
If we would only give, just once, the same amount of reflection to what we want to get out of life that we give to the question of what to do with a two weeks’ vacation, we would be startled at the aimless procession of our busy days.
—DOROTHY CANFIELD FISHER
I want to so order my life that its impression, its impact, might always be positive and spiritually constructive.
—DOROTHY BROWN
For the happiest life, days should be rigorously planned, nights left open to chance.
—MIGNON MCLAUGHLIN
To stay ahead, you must have your next idea waiting in the wings.
—ROSABETH MOSS KANTER
All the flowers of all the tomorrows are in the seeds of today.
—PROVERB
Make big plans; aim high in hope and work, remembering that a noble and logical plan never dies, but long after we are gone will be a living thing.
—LITA BANE
It’s never too late—in fiction or in life—to revise.
—NANCY THAYER
Take Your Life in
Your Own Hands
It’s true that life’s gifts come with responsibilities. When I don’t feel like cleaning up my desk or my car or my house or my general existence, I try to remember the people who would be desperate to have all the things I take for granted.
—RACHEL CLARKSON
You take your life in your own hands, and what happens? A terrible thing: no one to blame.
—ERICA JONG
Make decisions in a timely fashion—rarely does waiting improve the quality of the decision.
—ODETTE POLLAR
This is a wonderful world for women. The richness, the hope, the promise of life today…are exciting beyond belief. Nonetheless, we need stout hearts and strong characters; we need knowledge and training; we need organized effort to meet the future.
—BELLE S. SPAFFORD
When planning for a year, plant corn.
When planning for a decade, plant trees.
When planning for life, train and educate people.
—CHINESE PROVERB
I don’t know that there are any shortcuts to doing a good job.
—SANDRA DAY O’CONNOR
I was taught the way of progress is neither swift nor easy.
—MARIE CURIE
Some Helpful How-Tos
I must govern the clock, not be governed by it.
—GOLDA MEIR
If only everything were as easily organized as, say, my shoe collection. And even that can sometimes be a losing battle.
—SASHA MORROW
There are so many options, so much to do, so many demands on women. There is no point in taking one hour to do a ten-minute task, nor should we slap together an hour-worthy project in ten minutes.
—ELAINE CANNON
Arrange whatever pieces come your way.
—VIRGINIA WOOLF
A team is more than a collection of people. It is a process of give and take.
—BARBARA GLACEL
Effective teamwork is all about making a good, well-balanced salad, not whipping individuals into a single batch of V8.
—SANDRA RICHARDSON
Take just a few minutes each day to sort through any miscellaneous papers on your desk at home or the office, rather than letting unorganized piles multiply and grow.
—GLADYS MORISSON
To achieve your dreams, remember your ABC’s: Avoid negative sources, people, places, things, and habits. Believe in yourself.Consider things from every angle.
—WANDA HOPE CARTER
Keep things as simple as possible…nobody wants to reorganize their system of reorganization!
—CASSIE LAWRENCE
If a problem has no solution, it’s not a problem, just a fact.
—BJ GALLAGHER
There are two ways of meeting difficulties. You alter the difficulties or you alter yourself to meet them.
—PHYLLIS BOTTOMED
Adopt the highly effective SAW inbox system: [“S” for] STAT (as in a hospital emergency room) means “do it now!” and is for urgent tasks with a deadline of today. “A” stands for “as soon as possible” and goes on your to-do list with doable deadlines. “W” stands for “whenever” and is only for ideas and wishes for the future.
—ROBERTA LEFFLER
I always say don’t make plans, make options.
—JENNIFER ANISTON
Get a three-ring binder with pocketed dividers for receipts and user manuals, and organize by need such as “birthdays,” “utility bills,” “credit cards and reports,” “computer info,” and most importantly, “taxes”!
—NINA LESOWITZ
One way to keep control over the paper in your life is to get it back in circulation. Do you have a stack of magazines that you are almost done with? Take a few moments to go through them, and then pass them on to friends, a library, a school, a hospital, or a charity thrift shop. I have a magazine “trade” system set up with some girlfriends!
—LILLIAN CRIST
The most successful people in the world break big tasks down into doable pieces. If you have a major goal that feels overwhelming to you—slice and dice it. One step at a time and the mountain is climbed—now, doesn’t that feel great?
—DEENA PATEL-WINE
I make the most of all that comes and the least of all that goes.
—SARA TEASDALE
Never rely just on your smartphone or a file on your computer to safely store your mailing addresses, numbers, and email addresses. Just one computer crash or loss of your smartphone can render you helpless if you lack backups, whether to the cloud, a hard copy, or thumb drives in safe remote locations!
—SUZANNA HARWELL
Less Can Truly Be More
You should only have possessions you really love; don’t let your things possess you. I have a neat-looking “outbox” on my front porch that I fill during the week with items I can take to the Reuse Center at my neighborhood recycling location. As the days go by, magazines, extra pots and pans, odd cups and dishes, old electronics, and any things that no longer have a place in my home go there. My partner and I go there at least twice a month, and it simply feels wonderful. The center has a lot of regulars, and we are now recognized as purveyors of 100 percent discount bounty, such as scented candles, barely-worn scarves, office supplies, crockery, and superb magazines, as we are a household of voracious readers. I have seen amazing trades at the Reuse Center, and I witnessed a musician sitting down and playing a free sitar with virtuosity while a family with young children got a sorely needed washing machine and dryer. Moments like this remind me of a novel by the visionary teacher and writer Starhawk; The Fifth Sacred Thing depicts a future where people return to a barter system and live harmoniously in community.
Take only what you need and share anything extra with your own neighbors.