From Motivation to Motive-Action by Denis Waitley
With  the current  times, each of us needs to understand the magnitude of  social and economic  change in the world. In the past, change in  business and social life was  incremental and a set of personal  strategies for achieving excellence was not  required. Today, in the  knowledge-based world, where change is the rule, a set  of personal  strategies is essential for success, even survival.  Never again  will you be able to go to your place of business on  autopilot, comfortable and  secure that the organization, state or  government will provide for and look  after you. You must look in the  mirror when you ask who is responsible for your  success or failure. You  must become a lifelong learner and leader, for to be a  follower is to  fall hopelessly behind the pace of progress. The  power brokers  in the new global arena will be the knowledge  facilitators. Ignorance will be  even more the tyrant and enslaver than  in the past. As you look in the mirror  to see the 21st Century you,  there will also be another image standing beside  you. It is your  competition. Your competition, from now on, will be a hungry  immigrant  with a wireless, hand-held, digital assistant. Hungry for food,  hungry  for a home, for a new car, for security, for a college education.  Hungry  for knowledge. Smart, quick thinking, skilled and willing to do  anything  necessary to be competitive in the world marketplace. Working  long hours and  Saturdays, staying open later, serving customers better  and more cheerfully. To  be a player in the 21st Century you have to be  willing to give more in service  than you receive in payment.
These  are the  new rules in the game of life. These are the actions you must  take to be a  leader and a winner in your personal and professional  life. By mastering these  profoundly simple action steps, you will be  positioned to be a change master in  the new century.
 Action  Step Number One - Consider Yourself Self-Employed, But Be a Team Player.  What this means is that you are your own Chief  Executive Officer of  your future. Start thinking of yourself as a service  company with a  single employee. You're a small company that puts your services  to work  for a larger company. Tomorrow you may sell those services to a   different organization, but that doesn't mean you're any less loyal to  your  current employer. Taking responsibility for yourself in this way  does mean that  you never equate your personal long-term interests with  your employer's.
The  first idea  is resolving not to suffer the fate of those who lost their  jobs and found  their skills were obsolete. The second is to begin  immediately the process of  protecting yourself against that possibility  – by becoming proactive instead of  reactive.
Ask yourself  these questions:
How vulnerable  am I? What trends must I watch? What information must I gain? What knowledge do  I lack?
Again,  think of  yourself as a company. Set up a training department in your  mind and make  certain your top employee is updating his or her skills.  Make sure you have  your own private pension plan, knowing that you are  responsible for your own  financial security. 
Entrusting  the  government or an employer, other than yourself, with your  retirement income is  like hiring a compulsive gambler as your  accountant.
You're  the CEO  of your daily life who must have the vision to set your goals  and allocate your  resources. The mindset of being responsible for your  own future used to be  crucial only to the self-employed, but it has  become essential for us all.  Today's typical employees are no longer  one-career people. Most will have five  separate careers in their  lifetimes. Remember, your competition is a hungry  immigrant with a  laptop. Action Step Number One is to consider yourself to be   self-employed, but be a team player.
Action  Step Number Two - Be Flexible in the Face of Daily Surprises.  We live in a time-starved, overstressed, violent  society. Much of our  over-reaction to what happens to us every day is a result  of our  self-indulgent value system, where we blame others for our problems,   look to organizations or the government for our solutions, thirst for  immediate  sensual gratification and believe we should have privileges  without  responsibilities. This condition is manifested in the high  crime rate and in  the increase in violence in the work place where  employees blame their managers  for threatening their security.
I  have learned  how to be flexible in the face of daily surprises, which  is one of the most  important action traits for a leader. I really  haven't been angry for about 17  years. During that time, no one has  tried to physically harm me or someone  close to me. I've learned to  adapt to stress in life and reserve my fear or  anger for imminently  physically dangerous situations. I rarely, if ever, get  upset with what  people say, do or don't do, even if it inconveniences me. I do  react  emotionally when I see someone physically or emotionally abusing or   victimizing another. But I've learned not to sweat the small stuff.
The  Serenity  Prayer, "Grant me the Serenity to accept the things I cannot  change, the  Courage to change the things I can, and the Wisdom to know  the difference,” is  a valuable measuring tool we can apply to our  lives. Simple yet profound words  to live by. 
— Denis Waitley
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