Think Like a Sailor

Build your relationships first….then your dentistry. ~ Bob Barkley

Think Like a Sailor

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Imagine your brain is a computer, and at the beginning of each day you have 100% of available memory. And as you proceed through each day, bits and pieces of that memory become preoccupied with focusing upon tasks and responsibilities which must be accomplished that day or in the near future.

This memory is much like the RAM – random access memory- on your computer, which is fragile and lost if the power goes out… and the larger the number and frequency of obligations we are confronted with each day, the less capacity we have left for creative problem solving – the only pathway to potentially making tomorrow a more effective day than today, and a day more in alignment with what we want to see happen long-term…our “preferred future”.

In other words, our here-and-now obligations and distractions easily become barriers to our long range goals and vision.

So how do we get around our natural tendency to over-focus on immediate needs at the expense of critical long range goals in our ever-more swamped schedule?

Strategic Planning and curating – curating out of our schedule low priority items and keeping our strategic plan top-of-mind.

AND THEN setting aside time each day to focus and steer our practice and life in the direction of our long-term vision.

The key point here is making the DAILY commitment to doing this. The DAILY re-focusing and the DAILY adjustments demanded by current conditions.

You see, our brain functions much like a computer on some levels, but our life never follows the plan created by our objective thinking. On this, Dwight Eisenhower accurately said, “Planning is essential, but plans are useless”, because navigating our life is more like sailing than programming a guided missile.

A good sailor has both destination and current conditions in mind, and they are constantly re-assessing, while making course corrections and resource utilization adjustments to insure the port of choice is reached.

So too then, we must manage the direction of our practice. Because without doing so, the prevailing economic winds, tides, and weather will easily throw our dreams upon the rocks.

Paul A Henny, DDS

Thought Experiments LLC, ©2017

Read more on www.co-discovery.com

Plans Are Useless, But Planning – Priceless

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The key part of the successful long-term management of a relationship-based, health-centered practice is strategic development:

In what direction should we attempt to grow? What technologies and trends should we commit to following? Which ones should we abandon? And what emerging market trends are worth pursuing?

So, strategic planning must begin with awareness – awareness of where we are, where we want to go, what is important to us, and what is happening around us.

From there, an unrestricted envisioning of an optimal future is created while taking into consideration your values, mission, and intuition. This is a fully right brain activity.

It is expansive.

It is highly qualitative.

But what comes next, is rarely discussed. It’s a step that the Stoic philosophers like Marcus Aurelius and Seneca called “premeditatio malorum”, which translates into “premeditation of evils”.

This next step envisions the negative things which can happen and barriers present while attempting to execute our strategic plan. And it might include, compromises to our health, weather damage to our facility, loss of a strategic ally, inadequate funding, or the retirement of a key team member

The Stoics believed that by first imagining the worst case scenario ahead of time, they could more easily overcome their fears of potential negative experiences, and consequently make better strategic plans, as well as calm their limbic brains and better keep themselves in creative thinking mode when obstacles occurred on their pathway toward the Vision.

This way of thinking, where we consider the opposite of what we actually want to happen is also called “inversion”. And it is both important and powerful, because if we focus on the opposite of what we are trying to achieve, the solutions to our real goals often come more easily to us.

Inversion is a mental trick used by many great thinkers. Great thinkers and innovators think forwards and backwards, because the process tends to yield unconventional solutions to complex problems.

Consequently, strategic planning isn’t just daydreaming about an optimal future -it is that PLUS a hard dose of reality. And when envisioning and reality are combined in the right order (right brain thinking first then followed by left brain thinking) more adaptive and adaptable plans are created.

Just remember, strategic planning is a process not an event, where a plan is a set and fixed thing. Planning is ongoing and ongoing plans require analysis and adjustments all along the way.

To this thought Eisenhower wisely said , “Plans are worthless, but planning is essential.”

Paul A Henny DDS

Thought Experiments LLC, @2018

Read more www.codiscovery.com

Use Your Brain Like a Sailor

Posted on

Imagine your brain is a computer, and at the beginning of each day you have 100% of available memory. And as you proceed through each day, bits and pieces of that memory become preoccupied with focusing upon tasks and responsibilities which must be accomplished that day or in the near future.

This memory is much like the RAM – random access memory- on your computer, which is fragile and lost if the power goes out… and the larger the number and frequency of obligations we are confronted with each day, the less capacity we have left for creative problem solving – the only pathway to potentially making tomorrow a more effective day than today, and a day more in alignment with what we want to see happen long-term…our “preferred future”.

In other words, our here-and-now obligations and distractions easily become barriers to our long range goals and vision.

So how do we get around our natural tendency to over-focus on immediate needs at the expense of critical long range goals in our ever-more swamped schedule?

Strategic Planning and curating – curating out of our schedule low priority items and keeping our strategic plan top-of-mind.

AND THEN setting aside time each day to focus and steer our practice and life in the direction of our long-term vision.

The key point here is making the DAILY commitment to doing this. The DAILY re-focusing and the DAILY adjustments demanded by current conditions.

You see, our brain functions much like a computer on some levels, but our life never follows the plan created by our objective thinking. On this, Dwight Eisenhower accurately said, “Planning is essential, but plans are useless”, because navigating our life is more like sailing than programming a guided missile.

A good sailor has both destination and current conditions in mind, and they are constantly re-assessing, while making course corrections and resource utilization adjustments to insure the port of choice is reached.

So too then, we must manage the direction of our practice. Because without doing so, the prevailing economic winds, tides, and weather will easily throw our dreams upon the rocks.

Paul A Henny, DDS

Thought Experiments LLC, ©2016

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