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THE 7 HABITS OF HIGHLY EFFECTIVE FAMILIES Stephen R. Covey Franklin Covey, Golden Books, 1997, 364 pp. ISBN 0-307-44008-7 |
Stephen Covey, grandfather and
father of nine children, is the celebrated author of The Seven Habits of
Highly Effective People, First Things First, and several other
well-known management books. This
book applies the seven habits to the family.
Or, alternatively, it organizes his recommendations for the family
under the seven topics. This book
contains much practical wisdom. It is
full of illustrative stories that really make the points. It will be very helpful for people who are
naturally organized and goal oriented and almost impossible for those who are
unstructured. But I have to think
that one absolutely determined family member can wreck the whole thing. “When we’re trying to live what
we believe, struggling but moving in the right direction, our children will
usually accept our values.” (4) “Parenting is basically a life
of sacrifice.” (5) “The key is in having a
destination, a flight plan, and a compass. (10) “What you can envision for the
future ... is more powerful than ... whatever situation you are confronting
in the present.” (12) “All true and lasting change
occurs from the inside out.”
Instead of trying to change the situation or your child, go to work on
yourself. (15) You need a basic framework of
fundamental principles that you can apply in any situation. (18) Effective
families mean families with a beautiful family culture. (20) Habit 1. Be Proactive. Between the stimulus and the
response there is the freedom to choose. (27) When you react you do things you
regret. But you have the ability to
act on principles and values rather than reacting based on emotion or
circumstance. (29) Develop the gifts vital to
proactivity: self-awareness, imagination, willpower, and conscience. (40) Focus on the areas that you can
do something about, your circle of influence. (40) Learn to say, “I’m sorry.”
(52) “If you’re going to bow, bow
low.” (53) Be loyal to family members when
they are not present. Don’t talk about
them. (55) “Make and keep promises.” (56) “You will always be a victim
until you forgive.” (60) Three primary laws of love to
make the foundation of a beautiful family culture: ·
Acceptance rather than rejection ·
Understanding rather than judgment ·
Participation rather than manipulation (61) Make deposits in the emotional
bank accounts of others. (64) Habit 2. Begin with the End in Mind “Create a clear, compelling
vision of what you and your family are all about.” Define your destination and make every decision based on that
destination. “A family mission
statement is a combined, unified expression from all family members of what
your family is all about and the principles you choose to govern your family
life.” (71-2) At seminars he often asks each
individual to write a one-sentence answer to the question: “What is the
essential mission or purpose of this organization?” “It’s vital to have the entire culture aligned—to head toward a
mutually agreed upon destination.” (73) Putting principles first gives a
sense of appropriate priority to everything else. (74) Marriage problems almost arrive
out of conflicting role expectations and are exacerbated by conflicting
problem-solving strategies.” (83) “With a clear sense of shared
vision and values, you can be very demanding when it comes to standards.”
(95) “Through a family mission
statement you can let your children know that you are totally committed to
them, that you have been from the very moment of their birth or adoption.”
(99) “Creating a family mission
statement enables you and your family to examine, clarify, and renew those
promises—and to keep them constantly before you so that those commitments
become written in your mind and your heart, and affect the way you live your
life every day.” (99) Habit 3. Put First Things First. Two family organizing
structures: a weekly ‘family time,’ and one-on-one bonding times. (113) “If you really want to
prioritize your family, you simply have to plan ahead and be strong.” (114)
Start with the assumption that family is non-negotiable, not work. (118) “Does watching television make
you kinder? More thoughtful? More loving? Does it help you build strong
relationships in your home? Or does
it make you feel numb? Tired? Lonely? Confused? Mean? Cynical? “The media can literally drive the culture
in the home.” (124) There is so much good on TV – but it’s like digging a
lovely tossed salad out of the garbage dump. (125) “Cultural forces fundamentally
alter our moral or ethical sense of what is, in fact, right.” “We lose our moral bearings.” (127) Moral armament is developed in
the family. (132) “If we don’t build better homes, we’ll
have to build more prisons....
Emotionally starved children will turn into angry adults....” “Who’s going to raise my children—today’s
alarmingly destructive culture or me?” (133) “Probably no single structure
will help you prioritize your family more than a specific time set aside
every week just for the family.” (137) “By creating and living b y a
mission statement, families are gradually able to build moral authority in
the family itself. In other words,
principles get built right into the very structure and culture of the
family.” (142) Family time is also a great opportunity to teach basic
principles of life. (143) “The greatest thing you can do
for your children is love your spouse.” (154) “Nothing communicates the value
you place on a child or your relationship with that child more than giving
your time to the child.” (156) Habit 4. Think “Win-Win” “Most people are willing to
think win-win if others will, but all it takes is one proactive person to
think it deep inside and to genuinely want a solution that is ultimately
win-win.” (172) “The concept of
trying to develop a win-win relationship is always applicable, but all
decisions and agreements won’t necessarily be win-win. Sometimes you may make an unpopular or
win-lose decision with a child because you know it’s wise.” (178) “Win-win is really the only
solid foundation for effective family interaction.” (179) “Develop an abundance mentality,
the idea that there’s plenty for everyone and that there is an infinite
number of third-alternative solutions....” (181) “Parenting is not about being
popular and giving in to every child’s whim and desire. It’s about making decisions that truly are
win-win—however they may appear to the child at the time.” “You can let them win in the little
things.” (184) “Discipline is not
emotional. It’s handled in a very
direct and matter-of-fact way, carrying out the consequences agreed to
beforehand. Whenever a child
misbehaves, it’s important to remember Habit 2 (Begin with the end in mind)
and to be clear about exactly what it is you’re trying to do. Your end in mind as a parent is to help
the child learn and grow, to nurture a responsible person. The objective of discipline is to help the
child develop internal discipline—the capacity to make right choices even
when there are influences to do otherwise.” “Affirm, rather than deny, the
child’s ability to make choices.” (197) Habit 5. Seek First to
Understand...Then to Be Understood. “Without understanding, you
might as well be yelling into the wind.
No one will hear you.” (203) “Until we gain the capacity to
... set aside our own glasses and really see the world through the eyes of
others—we will never be able to build deep, authentic relationships and have
the capacity to influence in positive ways.” (204) “Much of the pain in families is
caused by lack of understanding.” (207) “Basically our satisfactions
come from our expectations.” (208) “The problem with judging or
labeling is that you begin to interpret all data in a way that confirms your
judgment. This is what is meant by
‘prejudice’ or ‘pre-judgment.’” (209) “It’s a common tendency to
project our own feelings and motives on other people’s behavior.” “Because everyone is unique, each person
needs to be loved in his or her own special way.” (214) “All people are very, very
tender and sensitive.” “This is why
it is so important to create a loving, nurturing environment in the home....”
(216) “Temper gets us into problems,
and pride keeps us there.” (220) “Really listening to get inside
another person’s mind and heart is called ‘empathic’ listening. It’s listening with empathy.” (222) “When you really love someone,
you need to care enough to confront—but in ways that have positive energy and
show respect.” (233) Habit 6. Synergize “Synergy is...the magic that
happens when one plus one equals three—or more.” (249) “Because it’s stepping out into
the unknown, the process of creating synergy can sometimes be near
chaos. The ‘end in mind’ you begin
with is not your end, your solution. It’s moving from the known to the unknown and creating
something entirely new.” The first
three habits ... enable you to develop the internal security that gives you
the courage to live with this kind of risk.”
(250) “The key to creating synergy is
in learning to value—even celebrate—the difference.” (251) Often the delightful differences
that attract people in the beginning become irritants and cause distress.
(255) “We know we’re better together
than we are alone. And we know that
one of the primary reasons is that we are different.” (257) “Synergy is creative
teamwork, creative cooperation.” (258) “Synergy unleashes tremendous capacity.” (260) “Involve people in the problem and work
out the solution together.” (264) “Work on the easier issues. Small victories lead to larger ones. Don’t bag the process and don’t bag each
other. If necessary, go back to the
smaller issues.” (273) Habit 7. Sharpen the Saw “Every family must take time to
renew itself in the four key areas of life: physical, social, mental, and
spiritual.” (277) “...the family itself must
constantly nurture its collective conscience, social will, social awareness,
and common vision. Family traditions
include rituals and celebrations and meaningful events that you do in your
family.” For example, family dinners,
birthdays, vacations, holidays, extended family activities, worshiping
together, working together, and having fun together (the most important of
all) (280 ff.) These traditions are the things people
remember, that bond and unify and renew families. (310) The 7 Habits Family Worksheet –
p. 356. * * * * * |