Covian Spirit
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People By Stephen R. Covey In this book Dr. Covey advances a theory for solving personal and professional problems, through a structured process of what he terms ¿Habits¿ or steps. The author formats this ¿handbook¿ of sorts in four parts, developing in often redundant and tedious detail, a roadmap for conscious control over personal change to manage realty. The central premise is rather simple: approach or live life from the inside out. The author gives a great deal of space, through a maze of Blakian charts, to sensitizing oneself to negative responses to public (interdependent) and private (independent) stimuli toward an inward revelation (private victory). Some 340 pages later, he reveals that he discovered, while on vacation in Hawaii, that there is a ¿gap between stimulus and response¿ which we must observe, engage heightened awareness to, in order to rid ourselves of the ¿negative scripting¿ inculcated into our bones by our parents and all those nasty, negative ancestors. This reader found Dr. Covey¿s characterization of this all-important inner process (¿living from the inside out¿) to, in large parts, belie the theory by over rationalizing a process that is premised as natural. For example, Dr. Covey instructs that we must learn not to control our observations of daily stimuli, lest we respect the negative, scripted responses we have inherited, yet he encourages us to analyze the ¿space between the stimulus and response¿ in order to become personally victorious over change, realty, relationships, and, in short, life as we knew it. It¿s all so ¿holistic,¿ ¿integrated,¿ it¿s so beautiful and ultimately habitual. Permit me here, totally in keeping with the Covian spirit of alluding to great authors and thinkers of the 20th century, to capsulate my thoughts about this book with a quote from a leader who was certainly a ¿transition person¿ as phrased by Anwar Sadat. In reviewing the galleys for one volume of his book The History of the English Peoples, Sir Winston Churchill wrote back to the editor¿s instructive corrections of sentences ending with a preposition: ¿This is an errant pedantry up with which I will not put. ¿ Certainly, there must be some truth to the revelation that we control both our bad relationships and our good ones-whether with loved ones, others, or ourselves. So noted, Dr. Covey. I found the book interesting, unoriginal, far too much for such a simple and rather ancient process of the human condition, and overall too mechanical. The Covian ¿correct principles¿ and ¿natural laws¿ offer more philosophical and unnecessarily religious proof than the pudding for such a simple palate as mine. I prefer meat and potatoes, anyway. Simple girl.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback.
Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.
Overview
THE 7 HABITS OF HIGHLY EFFECTIVE PEOPLE is recognized as one of the most influential audio-books ever recorded. In this seminal work, Stephen R. Covey presents a holistic, integrated, principle-centred approach for solving personal and professional problems. With penetrating insights and pointed anecdotes, Covey reveals a step-by-step pathway for living with fairness, integrity, honesty and human dignity - principles that give us the security to adapt to change, and the wisdom and power to take advantage of the opportunities that change creates. The 7 Habits have become so famous because they work. From Habit 1: Be Proactive and Habit 2: Begin with the End in Mind, millions of people have worked their way through the 7 ...