ANDThe word "the" is the most common in the English language. Hot on its heels in terms of amount of usage is the word "and."

"And" is also a very important word when it comes to high achievement.

We have all heard about the importance of focus. Most of us suffer from distraction diseases of all sorts, including "Interruptidess," "smart-phone-check-obsession," "multi-task-mania," and "involvement-overload." Our natural tendencies are toward diversion and distraction, not focus. Even so, in the accomplishment of all high achievement, there is a degree of breadth required. There is such a thing as too much focus.

We have all heard that it is critical to "major on majors," that if we "fit the big rocks in the jar we can always get the little ones in later," and similar sayings. And these are all true. However, in our rush to simplify and focus, we must not forget that life is not that simple, and nobody accomplishes worthwhile goals without the ability to handle several things at once. The key is to know which majors to major upon, and which minors not to disregard.

You see, for every major task toward an objective, there is always a supporting cast of minor details. We may ignore most details as trivial, but some are not. I am reminded of coach John Wooden teaching his incoming freshman basketball players to turn their socks inside out and remove the balls of cotton that could otherwise cause blisters. Mastery and accomplishment are to some extent the product of understanding what details are important and which can be disregarded. We must learn what minor things play a supporting role for the major things. Once we know this, only then can we ignore details and smaller things, knowing that they really play no role in achieving our overall goal.

As leaders and high achievers we must master the "art of the both." Get good at determining which tasks are primary to accomplishing your goal, but then also discern which smaller ones play an important supporting role. In fact, it is by making these distinctions that you can then focus most effectively.

Sincerely,

Chris Brady 

 

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11 responses to “AND (The Art of the Both)”

  1. Cathy - Team Rascal of Rascal Nation Avatar

    Chris,
    Thank you for this reminder.
    I know of leaders who say, “Don’t sweat the small stuff. And it’s all small stuff.” Sometimes, though, their small stuff, when ignored like those sock balls, becomes big stuff they can no longer ignore.
    I think of it as keeping both a laser and a radar focus. Laser focuse because as you said, distractability can be a big problem. (As they said in the movie UP, “Squirrel!”) Radar focus because sweeps to keep track of the surrounding terrain and horizon can bring up small stuff to deal with quickly before it becomes distracting big stuff.

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  2. Georgia Avatar
    Georgia

    That’s good !

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  3. Randy Robson Avatar

    What a great reminder of keeping my focus and learning that I can do a little bit more.

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  4. Derrick Knoff Avatar
    Derrick Knoff

    Awesome Chris! I am reminded of a principle I once stumbled across…it’s called the 1-3-5 rule. Basically it says that in order to prioritize your work you should focus on 1 major task, 3 medium tasks, and 5 minor tasks everyday. However, this seems to run contrary to Schwab’s List of 5 rule. Do you mind giving me your perspective, please?

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  5. Rob Robson Avatar
    Rob Robson

    Well said Chris!

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  6. Wes Smith Avatar
    Wes Smith

    Great stuff Chris! Major on the majors but don’t forget the minors. Thanks for all you do!

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  7. AR Avatar
    AR

    The ability to focus is direcly correlated to the person Purpose … If the person has a high degree of Purpose it should be expected that her/his level of focus to be very high …

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  8. Jim & Mary Robson Avatar

    The Art of Multi-tasking!! (and getting all the rocks in) I like to make daily lists and that help me focus and not forget even the important little things. And I get huge satisfaction in crossing them off the list!! (So if I do something of merit, not previously on the list, I put it on the list–just so I can cross it off!! Lol)Just don’t lose the list:)

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  9. Bob Pollock Avatar
    Bob Pollock

    Chris,
    This is SO true!
    How many times do we get off track by losing focus?!
    Thanks for the continued good information.
    Your Columbia, Missouri Rascal by way of Brighton, Michigan.
    Bob

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  10. Maggie Sanders Avatar
    Maggie Sanders

    I didn’t realize how important both were til I went on vacation recently. What a great article

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  11. Jessica Dehn Avatar
    Jessica Dehn

    Sometimes its easy to get caught up in the “big rocks” that I forget the lesson from Coach Wooden. Thanks for the reminder!

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