I thinks the topic says it all! From time to time I've been able to
encourage others to read such books but often times they don't put it
into practice and they find it useless.
What approaches will you take to motivate people around you?
Thanks for any hints.
Working against this, people seem to often view internet communication as
something a lot less meaningful than communication to family, friends, or
colleagues. It can at best provide an opportunity for someone to find
fellow-travelers in the self-change process.
Books on personal productivity are a natural focal point. GTD, Do It
Tomorrow, and Do It Now are three examples I'm familiar with. Are there
more ?
What some in those groups find is that they need to work harder on
developing new habits or overcoming some particular pernicious emotion or
habit of mind in order to accomplish what others find more straight-forward.
I had been interested in the general idea of 'self-experimentation'. Now I
believe that what is more necessary and useful is to focus on the general
idea of systematic self-directed behavior change. I believe that a
course-like approach may be the most productive. As in my previous
teaching, I find that my own profound need for such an approach is what
leads me to put out the effort to get such a thing going.
Dennis C. During
"To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law
into contempt." - Elizabeth Cady Stanton, American women's rights advocate
(1815-1902)
"What is not surrounded by uncertainty cannot be the truth." - Richard P.
Feynman, Nobelist, physicist, raconteur, bongo player, safe-cracker
http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/SelfExperimenters/
Agreed. An old saying: "When the student is ready, the teacher
arrives."
About the only thing you can do is lead by example. I used to have a
boss who always knew not only what she was supposed to be doing but
also me. She didn't come across as a micromanager, but she definitely
made sure I didn't let things fall through the cracks, so I
psychologically felt like I had to be on the ball with her. This was
before GTD was published. In one of Merlin's podcasts with David he
mentions that you can map your waiting-fors to other people's to-dos
and make sure to review them periodically.,
Hi,
It's always easier to read than practice isn't it. :)
I agree with Dennis about leading by example, but more because it
allows you to understand the process and help others get out of it.
But helping others is also different because you can't assume that
telling them alone will work. You have to try to understand how they
work and steer them in the right direction in a way that works best
for them. And I feel the most important thing is to make them want to
do it for themselves, because after that they can do it themselves.
Remeber that 'self-help' is just that, helping yourself. Helping
others is totally separate skill we have to pick up :) And I'm also
trying!
Li Wei
http://brighterlife.110mb.com
On May 11, 8:36 pm, drumdance <dscru...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Mostly I don't. I think the idea of motivating others is flawed. People
> > can only motivate themselves.
>
> Agreed. An old saying: "When the student is ready, the teacher
> arrives."
>
> About the only thing you can do is lead by example
Sounds reasonable. Esp because I think leading is different from
nagging/forcing others to do sth but rather a way of guiding people
with enough POTENTIAL.
>. I used to have a
> boss who always knew not only what she was supposed to be doing but
> also me. She didn't come across as a micromanager, but she definitely
> made sure I didn't let things fall through the cracks, so
> psychologically felt like I had to be on the ball with her. This was
> before GTD was published. In one of Merlin's podcasts with David he
> mentions that you can map your waiting-fors to other people's to-dos
> and make sure to review them periodically.,
I think I can remember that podcast. It was about using GTD for
teamwork right?
On May 11, 9:08 pm, Farid Behnia <beh...@gmail.com> wrote:
> <Posting on behalf of Li Wei, who accidentally sent it only to me>
>
> Hi,
>
> It's always easier to read than practice isn't it. :)
>
> I agree with Dennis about leading by example, but more because it
> allows you to understand the process and help others get out of it.
>
> But helping others is also different because you can't assume that
> telling them alone will work. You have to try to understand how they
> work and steer them in the right direction in a way that works best
> for them.
> And I feel the most important thing is to make them want to
> do it for themselves, because after that they can do it themselves.
How can you make them WANT to do it for themselves? Just wait for an
opportunity to arise, say e.g. when THEY ask you what they should do
once the heat has gotten so hot?
>
> Remeber that 'self-help' is just that, helping yourself. Helping
> others is totally separate skill we have to pick up :) And I'm also
> trying!
>
> Li Weihttp://brighterlife.110mb.com
As a practical matter, I think there MIGHT be other things to
do, but you would have to have a lot of patience, at least. Most of the
time being an *attractive* example of the change is the most you can do.
Even a loving spouse with great intentions and skills is unlikely to be able to
motivate the other spouse effectively.
Of course, we have learned a bit
over time about the mysterious origins of a person’s OWN motivations, at least
enough to make us skeptical about ‘free will’. It seems quite possible to
influence someone to do some specific behavior, if enough conditions are
right. Motivating someone to do something complicated that requires
sustained effort, like writing an essay, quitting smoking, or leading a good
life is far beyond what can be done under all but the rarest of
circumstances.
On the other hand, there is the phenomenon of the Pied
Piper, of charismatic (sociopathic ???) gurus who have a strong influence over
others (Rasputin, Svengali, Mesmer).
Dennis C. During
"To make
laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt."
- Elizabeth Cady Stanton, American women's rights advocate (1815-1902)
"What
is not surrounded by uncertainty cannot be the truth." - Richard P. Feynman,
Nobelist, physicist, raconteur, bongo player, safe-cracker
http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/SelfExperimenters/
>
-----Original Message-----
Try encouraging, expressing sincere concern for them (and not your
agenda), simply asking questions, or modeling the behavior you hope
for.
In some cases you can place conditions, rewards, deadlines, etc. and
offer to help.
Explaining why something is important can help.
Treat them like an adult and you will more likely get an adult
response.
MIKE: I can't argued that it's not flawed, but trying to help does not
necessarily have to be nagging.
It turns into nagging when you approach the problem as you would for
yourself, often in a way that makes you as a 'helper' feel
comfortable, and that is the 'flawed' part. The idea is cater the
suggestion to the person you're helping.
Psychologists/psychiatrists/counselors have been guiding people for
decades, so there must be something that we can do. Yes, results vary,
but that's where your own skills as a 'helper' come in. Not everyone
is suited to helping. It requires a fine balance of technique and
temperament.
DRUMDANCE: That's a nice saying :) Do you think it's -possible- your
boss was a good manager able to cater her methods to suit your
particular working style, motivating you without you consciously
realising? That's the mark of a great manager/boss isn't it?
Dennis gets it spot on that we need patience. Sometimes we expect
others to change overnight simple because we felt we did. But what we
don't always realise is that we might have taken YEARS to develop the
motivation we have now, so patience is key.
Li Wei
http://brighterlife.110mb.com
On May 11, 7:59 pm, "Mike De Bruyn" <mikes.mail.li...@gmail.com>
wrote:
Hmm. I can't offer a catch-all reply to that, and I'm still learning
myself.
Opportunities are important. There are times when we're more receptive
to suggestions, and it's true for everyone, good times or bad. I'm not
sure if suggestions given during crisis work very well though, simply
because we are focused on AVOIDANCE of the negative rather than
building the positive. Solutions will be used until a level of comfort
is reached again then very likely discarded. Having a fire inches from
your ass isn't very conducive for learning :D
I think WANTING something is being able to see it's benefits for you.
The greater the benefit, the more you'll probably want it. I've found
it useful to let them see what they have done it the past and the
outcomes they have generated. For examples, perhaps they have made a
particularly tough choice that actually turned out great. Let them see
that these habits you want them to learn are good for them.
A theory I'm trying out is trying to help others develop momentum. You
start by encouraging certain habits that could be good for them, and
once they have seen that the direction you're pointing them towards is
good for them, they'll pick it up on their own.
One of the great barriers to actually taking action on things you want
is confidence. If we have fears, of any kind, it makes things
difficult. Maybe if we fear enough we might even convince ourselves we
don't want something anymore. There are a number of books on this I
believe, I can't recall them right now. Many personal development
books talk about accepting fear and getting past it.
I have to admit that ultimately you can't force the DESIRE into
someone. If they won't eat it, stuffing it down their throats won't
make it any better. We can only let them have a taste of the good
stuff, and hope it seeps into their psyche. On our part it helps if we
learn to accept as well. That way it decouples our own desires of
theirs.
Li Wei
Psychologists/psychiatrists/counselors have been guiding people for
decades, so there must be something that we can do. Yes, results vary,
but that's where your own skills as a 'helper' come in. Not everyone
is suited to helping. It requires a fine balance of technique and
temperament.
LI, Much of what you say I don't disagree with, but regarding
"Psychologists/psychiatrists/counselors", you must remember most
folks
choose to see them, and those that are forced to often make little
progress. Thats not to say that a skilled person can't motivate
change
in others, just that most folks choose to see those skilled people.
A better comparison would be to a good teacher who knows how to
motivate students, who for the most part have little choice about
being there.
I wouldn't say she was especially good in the sens of knowing what
motivated me personally. I liked and respected her, but wouldn't run
through walls for her. The main thing was, if I said "I'll do X by
next Tuesday," you could be that she would ask me about it on Tuesday.
It just made me much more aware of all the commitments I make. I still
struggled to track and meet those commitments until I latched on to
GTD a few years later, but it certainly made me more self aware.
-Derek
Li Wei
Example: Last week a co-worker noticed that I had all my e-mails in
my inbox that were sent directly to me colored in blue (since they
were only sent to me, I was directly responsible). Once I showed her
1) how to do it and 2) the different colors to choose from, she's been
slowly questioning what she can do with her e-mail client and how to
streamline some of it.
Plant the seed and watch them grow.
Multiple replies coming up!
MIKE: I can't argued that it's not flawed, but trying to help does not
necessarily have to be nagging.
It turns into nagging when you approach the problem as you would for
yourself, often in a way that makes you as a 'helper' feel
comfortable, and that is the 'flawed' part. The idea is cater the
suggestion to the person you're helping.
Psychologists/psychiatrists/counselors have been guiding people for
decades, so there must be something that we can do. Yes, results vary,
but that's where your own skills as a 'helper' come in. Not everyone
is suited to helping. It requires a fine balance of technique and
temperament.
Multiple replies coming up!
Two points here:
-----
Mike:
Why doesn't behavior modification through positive reinforcement work in
most cases ? It may be difficult for the reinforcer to get outside his own
emotionally driven responses, but it seems as if it CAN be done.
Admittedly, this discussion seemed to be focused on motivating others
through some kind of on-line contact. It may be difficult in such a context
to administer appropriate positive reinforcement for anything except sending
well-composed and otherwise appealing e-mail messages. It would be
interesting to determine circumstances in which it could work and
specifically how to deliver appropriate postive reinforcement for self-help
efforts on-line.
The question is motivated by what? What motivates a person? Is it just
"built-in" or is there an external component? If any is external, why
can't that include other people, or does it just have to be money and
hunger for food?
Were you never motivated by the cries or smiles of a mother or child?
Simplistic declarative statements add little insight, and often are
used to justify dismissal of others.
Where do you get your "record of Professionals"?
On May 20, 12:02 am, "Mike De Bruyn" <mikes.mail.li...@gmail.com>
wrote:
There is another book 'Self-Directed Behavior: self-modification for
personal adjustment' that is used as a text in college psychology courses
that could provide a framework for self-improvement, with homework, etc.
I think that this lack of follow-through is why there are professions like
psychotherapy and coaching. The social reinforcement and semi-objective
observation are useful in motivating and getting follow-through.
Dennis C. During
"To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law
into contempt." - Elizabeth Cady Stanton, American women's rights advocate
(1815-1902)
"What is not surrounded by uncertainty cannot be the truth." - Richard P.
Feynman, Nobelist, physicist, raconteur, bongo player, safe-cracker
http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/SelfExperimenters/
> -----Original Message-----
> From: 43Fo...@googlegroups.com
> [mailto:43Fo...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Farid Behnia
> Sent: Thursday, May 10, 2007 7:41 AM
> To: 43 Folders
> Subject: [43F Group] Motivating others to study and PRACTICE
> self-help material
>
>
>
db's queston is valid here. Where does motivation come from? If you
believe that motivation is entirely internal, then you might very well
be right (and your experience may tell you so) But I'm guessing that
your experience might be quite an exception, compared to others who
have helped those around them. I suppose we're all asking HOW we can
help, and not simplying rejecting the idea that we can help. Rejecting
is a dead end isn't it?
Mike:
Why doesn't behavior modification through positive reinforcement work in
most cases ? It may be difficult for the reinforcer to get outside his own
emotionally driven responses, but it seems as if it CAN be done.
Admittedly, this discussion seemed to be focused on motivating others
through some kind of on-line contact. It may be difficult in such a context
to administer appropriate positive reinforcement for anything except sending
well-composed and otherwise appealing e-mail messages. It would be
interesting to determine circumstances in which it could work and
specifically how to deliver appropriate postive reinforcement for self-help
efforts on-line.
Suffice it to say you have some unusual perspectives and, apparently,
experiences.
The question is motivated by what? What motivates a person?
Is it just
"built-in" or is there an external component?
If any is external, why
can't that include other people, or does it just have to be money and
hunger for food?
Were you never motivated by the cries or smiles of a mother or child?
Simplistic declarative statements add little insight, and often are
used to justify dismissal of others.
Where do you get your "record of Professionals"?
Hi Dennis,
On 5/20/07, Dennis C. During <dcdu...@gmail.com> wrote:
Mike:
Why doesn't behavior modification through positive reinforcement work in
most cases ? It may be difficult for the reinforcer to get outside his own
emotionally driven responses, but it seems as if it CAN be done.The initial post was, it seemed to me, to have to do with motivating others.
IMO, that can't be done. Motivation must come from within. One can nag, lead, cajole, argue, punish, reward, etc. but none of that is really motivation. It is an attempt to get a person to motivate himself by making it rewarding, or punishing the alternative.
As to modifying one's own behavior, positive reinforcement does work, but, as you say, one has to kind of get outside of one's self in order to administer the reinforcement.
It can be tricky to do.
The real problem I see, in all change work, is keeping the effort going. In the typical situation you (the rhetorical you ;-) decide you want to change your behavior. Let's say you want to lose a few pounds -- to take one of the more common examples. You decide you've had it with the current situation, you read some books, you make some plans and you get charged up. O.K. that's day one ;-) Then the next day you see the deserts as you scan the menu and your old habit kicks in. Alas, you've "failed". That failure is demotivating and you are frustrated. Now you not only have to get yourself "charged up" again, but you must ALSO overcome the negative motivation from failure.
Admittedly, this discussion seemed to be focused on motivating others
through some kind of on-line contact. It may be difficult in such a context
to administer appropriate positive reinforcement for anything except sending
well-composed and otherwise appealing e-mail messages. It would be
interesting to determine circumstances in which it could work and
specifically how to deliver appropriate postive reinforcement for self-help
efforts on-line.Alas, I think the effort will go nowhere. Those who appeal to others for "motivation" are not good candidates for change. That is not to say that people can't ask for advice or even some support. But change has to come from within. As a long time change worker, I see my role as more of an advisor than a motivator. I turn away quite a few people who come to me with the "wrong" mindset. It is not useful to waste their time or my own. I know we like to think that everyone will succeed in everything, but it just is not the way life works out, I'm afraid.
> Two points here:
>
> 1) I thought the question was "motivation", not providing information, help,
> or guidance.
>
> 2) I disagree that psychologists, etc. help much. The record of
> professionals in this area is dismal -- to say the least.
>
> In my experience, if a person is not motivated, nothing will get him to
> move.
db's queston is valid here. Where does motivation come from?
If you
believe that motivation is entirely internal, then you might very well
be right (and your experience may tell you so)
But I'm guessing that
your experience might be quite an exception,
compared to others who
have helped those around them.
I suppose we're all asking HOW we can
help, and not simplying rejecting the idea that we can help.
Rejecting
is a dead end isn't it?
I agree with the others in believing that most motivation comes from
inside, but I also believe it is possible to give a gentle nudge with
reframing.
Tricia
One external way that I think can help is reframing. Often a person is
stuck in one way of viewing something and it takes an external source
to help them see things from a different perspective. The classic
(some might say cliche) example of this is someone wanting to go back
to school but bemoaning that it would take three years. The reframing
comes in when someone says, yeah, but the time is going to go by
anyway and you can find yourself at the end of three years with a
degree or not.
I agree with the others in believing that most motivation comes from
inside, but I also believe it is possible to give a gentle nudge with
reframing.
-----Original Message-----
From: Mike De BruynHi Dennis,
On 5/20/07, Dennis C. During <dcdu...@gmail.com > wrote:
Mike:
Why doesn't behavior modification through positive reinforcement work in
most cases ? It may be difficult for the reinforcer to get outside his own
emotionally driven responses, but it seems as if it CAN be done.The initial post was, it seemed to me, to have to do with motivating others.Yes. Positive reinforcement is the most basic way to motivate someone else.
IMO, that can't be done. Motivation must come from within. One can nag, lead, cajole, argue, punish, reward, etc. but none of that is really motivation. It is an attempt to get a person to motivate himself by making it rewarding, or punishing the alternative.I think that positive reinforcement, giving people praise or other rewards that you can afford to give repeatedly and that they value, is extrinsic motivation. You are saying, apparently that only intrinsic motivation is 'true' motivation. This is a novel use of language.
As to modifying one's own behavior, positive reinforcement does work, but, as you say, one has to kind of get outside of one's self in order to administer the reinforcement.I wasn't talking about self-reinforcement. I was referring to the fact that much interpersonal communication is dominated by the communicator's own emotional needs rather than accurate perceptions of the needs of the recipient. A program of reinforcement requires careful attention to the needs of the recipient.
It can be tricky to do.Both what I had been saying and repeated above and what you thought I was talking about are tricky to do.The real problem I see, in all change work, is keeping the effort going. In the typical situation you (the rhetorical you ;-) decide you want to change your behavior. Let's say you want to lose a few pounds -- to take one of the more common examples. You decide you've had it with the current situation, you read some books, you make some plans and you get charged up. O.K. that's day one ;-) Then the next day you see the deserts as you scan the menu and your old habit kicks in. Alas, you've "failed". That failure is demotivating and you are frustrated. Now you not only have to get yourself "charged up" again, but you must ALSO overcome the negative motivation from failure.I was not talking about this.
Admittedly, this discussion seemed to be focused on motivating others
through some kind of on-line contact. It may be difficult in such a context
to administer appropriate positive reinforcement for anything except sending
well-composed and otherwise appealing e-mail messages. It would be
interesting to determine circumstances in which it could work and
specifically how to deliver appropriate postive reinforcement for self-help
efforts on-line.Alas, I think the effort will go nowhere. Those who appeal to others for "motivation" are not good candidates for change. That is not to say that people can't ask for advice or even some support. But change has to come from within. As a long time change worker, I see my role as more of an advisor than a motivator. I turn away quite a few people who come to me with the "wrong" mindset. It is not useful to waste their time or my own. I know we like to think that everyone will succeed in everything, but it just is not the way life works out, I'm afraid.I hope (but don't really expect) that hardly anyone besides me will be tempted to look for ways of delivering positive reinforcement for self-change programs on-line. I don't need any competition.
On May 11, 4:59 am, "Mike De Bruyn" <mikes.mail.li...@gmail.com>
wrote:
...
> Where I disagree is that it is a nudge. The person who wants to change must
> nudge himself. You can show him a tool and he can either use it or not. He
> can either make it work for him or not. The motivation comes from inside.
> I know you have met people who you can reframe things from sunup to sun down
> and they still will not change thier point of view. I call them the "yes
> but" gang. ;-)
>
...
I see people as scattered along a spectrum, rather than only gathered
at one extreme or the other. When the 'want' is there and it's only
the perceived insurmountability of the obstacle that keeps them from
moving forward, then helping them see that the obstacle may not be
insurmountable after all is indeed helpful. I see that as a gentle
nudge. The 'want' is inside the person. I'm not making them do or say
anything that is not already there. Not all will want that kind of
reframing. Some are more comfortable having their world view
reaffirmed. That's fine. That, as you say, is their choice.
My point, however, is that while we may believe we know how people
will react, we really don't. Human beings can get into ruts of beliefs
as much as any other kind. Sometimes it's based in how we were raised,
sometimes it's based in our fundamental personalities, sometimes those
beliefs are picked up as we grow up and move through life. Imo, a
comment that offers an alternate perspective is not harmful, as long
as it's done is such a way that leaves off judgment and coercion.
That gentle nudge I believe can possibly help someone. Why prejudge
them? Why not give them the chance to act? How they use the
information is up to them. They may, indeed, ignore the information.
That's fine. It's their choice, but at least I've given them a choice
they (possibly) didn't know they had. I do not see the harm in that
gentle nudge of reframing. I do, however, see harm in coercive dogma
couched in terms of 'suggestions' or where the sub-text of the words
is more 'I'm right and you're an idiot not to see that' than 'here's
an idea.'
Tricia
On May 11, 4:59 am, "Mike De Bruyn" <mikes.mail.li...@gmail.com>
wrote:
...
> Where I disagree is that it is a nudge. The person who wants to change must
> nudge himself. You can show him a tool and he can either use it or not. He
> can either make it work for him or not. The motivation comes from inside.
> I know you have met people who you can reframe things from sunup to sun down
> and they still will not change thier point of view. I call them the "yes
> but" gang. ;-)
>
On May 11, 4:59 am, "Mike De Bruyn" <mikes.mail.li...@gmail.com>
wrote:
...
> Where I disagree is that it is a nudge. The person who wants to change must
> nudge himself. You can show him a tool and he can either use it or not. He
> can either make it work for him or not. The motivation comes from inside.
> I know you have met people who you can reframe things from sunup to sun down
> and they still will not change thier point of view. I call them the "yes
> but" gang. ;-)
>
On May 11, 4:59 am, "Mike De Bruyn" <mikes.mail.li...@gmail.com>
wrote:
...
> Where I disagree is that it is a nudge. The person who wants to change must
> nudge himself. You can show him a tool and he can either use it or not. He
> can either make it work for him or not. The motivation comes from inside.
> I know you have met people who you can reframe things from sunup to sun down
> and they still will not change thier point of view. I call them the "yes
> but" gang. ;-)
>
On May 11, 4:59 am, "Mike De Bruyn" <mikes.mail.li...@gmail.com>
wrote:
...
> Where I disagree is that it is a nudge. The person who wants to change must
> nudge himself. You can show him a tool and he can either use it or not. He
> can either make it work for him or not. The motivation comes from inside.
> I know you have met people who you can reframe things from sunup to sun down
> and they still will not change thier point of view. I call them the "yes
> but" gang. ;-)
>
On May 11, 4:59 am, "Mike De Bruyn" <mikes.mail.li...@gmail.com>
wrote:
...
> Where I disagree is that it is a nudge. The person who wants to change must
> nudge himself. You can show him a tool and he can either use it or not. He
> can either make it work for him or not. The motivation comes from inside.
> I know you have met people who you can reframe things from sunup to sun down
> and they still will not change thier point of view. I call them the "yes
> but" gang. ;-)
>
You can delete all but one of those; click on more options top right.
db
> > If you believe that motivation is entirely internal, then you might very well
> > be right (and your experience may tell you so)
>
> Not entirely internal, but mostly so. That is to say, what we "control" (to
> use a word which is very undefined in this context) is the internal part.
> But not even all of that. That part of us which we call "personality" is
> not very easy to change, if we can change it at all. The jury is not in on
> that one, as I see it.
>
> I can see a person being "motivated" by external stimulus -- take the
> situation where the vision of a very rewarding outcome is presented if only
> a person acts. The problem is that we can't reliably use that as a tool to
> manipulate others, as many want to do. The reasons are many, for example:
>
> - We don't know what any particular person would see as rewarding. (Mother
> Teressa was motivated by suffering.)
> - We can't sustain motivation in the face of obstacles if we are only
> motivated by the perception of the possibility of success..
Mike, thanks for your replies (to many posts).
If you say that a person can have his/her 'motivation' influenced by
external stimulus, isn't it possible that as an 'advisor' a person can
introduce the right stimulus to influence someone's motivation? True,
reliability is an issue, as is absolute certainty as to what would be
viewed as rewarding. Isn't that where the hard work as an 'advisor'
comes in?
And how would you think motivation is sustained, if not by the
perception of the possibility of success?
> > I suppose we're all asking HOW we can help, and not simplying rejecting the idea that we can help.
>
> Like asking HOW we can fly by flapping our arms and not simply rejecting the
> idea that it does not work and building a plane instead? ;-)
Isn't building a plane an answer to how we can fly? ;-)
> Rejecting is a dead end isn't it?
>
> If the end is dead, then acknowledging that is very helpful -- unless
> frustration is what one is after. Time and resources are limited and we
> need to apply them where they will accomplish something. That said, if you
> want to go down a path I see as a dead end, don't let my opinion stop you.
> Who knows, you might achieve some breakthrough in psychology and we will all
> benefit. ("I'm pullin' for 'ya." - Red Green ;-)
About this, I was wondering if you've achieved any breakthroughs with
your own philosophy that we can learn from?
I'm also interested in finding out more about cases that you have
encountered of people who had the 'wrong mindset' that you mentioned
in another reply. How was it wrong? Also, what has your experience
been with people who you classify as 'not motivated' (and unmovable)?
On May 23, 4:01 am, "Mike De Bruyn" <mikes.mail.li...@gmail.com >
wrote:
> > If you believe that motivation is entirely internal, then you might very well
> > be right (and your experience may tell you so)
>
> Not entirely internal, but mostly so. That is to say, what we "control" (to
> use a word which is very undefined in this context) is the internal part.
> But not even all of that. That part of us which we call "personality" is
> not very easy to change, if we can change it at all. The jury is not in on
> that one, as I see it.
>
> I can see a person being "motivated" by external stimulus -- take the
> situation where the vision of a very rewarding outcome is presented if only
> a person acts. The problem is that we can't reliably use that as a tool to
> manipulate others, as many want to do. The reasons are many, for example:
>
> - We don't know what any particular person would see as rewarding. (Mother
> Teressa was motivated by suffering.)
> - We can't sustain motivation in the face of obstacles if we are only
> motivated by the perception of the possibility of success..
Mike, thanks for your replies (to many posts).
If you say that a person can have his/her 'motivation' influenced by
external stimulus, isn't it possible that as an 'advisor' a person can
introduce the right stimulus to influence someone's motivation? True,
reliability is an issue, as is absolute certainty as to what would be
viewed as rewarding. Isn't that where the hard work as an 'advisor'
comes in?
And how would you think motivation is sustained, if not by the
perception of the possibility of success?
> > I suppose we're all asking HOW we can help, and not simplying rejecting the idea that we can help.
>
> Like asking HOW we can fly by flapping our arms and not simply rejecting the
> idea that it does not work and building a plane instead? ;-)
Isn't building a plane an answer to how we can fly? ;-)
> Rejecting is a dead end isn't it?
>
> If the end is dead, then acknowledging that is very helpful -- unless
> frustration is what one is after. Time and resources are limited and we
> need to apply them where they will accomplish something. That said, if you
> want to go down a path I see as a dead end, don't let my opinion stop you.
> Who knows, you might achieve some breakthrough in psychology and we will all
> benefit. ("I'm pullin' for 'ya." - Red Green ;-)
About this, I was wondering if you've achieved any breakthroughs with
your own philosophy that we can learn from?
I'm also interested in finding out more about cases that you have
encountered of people who had the 'wrong mindset' that you mentioned
in another reply. How was it wrong?
Also, what has your experience
been with people who you classify as 'not motivated' (and unmovable)?
When did it move to religion? Philosophy at best, but truly cold hard
decisions.