Prioritizing Your Relationships – Part 7

In Part 6 of this series of posts on prioritizing your relationships, I described Bentham’s take on utilitarianism and advocated using his seven factors as part of a method for deciding what is the globally optimal developmental choice in each moment. Doing this requires considering as many as possible of the Bentham’s utilitarian relevant factors of intensity, duration, certainty or uncertainty, propinquity or remoteness, fecundity, purity, and extent.

Bentham balances almost everything in terms of Continue reading “Prioritizing Your Relationships – Part 7”

Prioritizing Your Relationships – Part 6

“In case of emergency,” the flight attendant tells us, “oxygen masks will appear from the overhead bins. Put on your own oxygen mask first and then assist those around you in putting on theirs.” “In case of emergency,” the cruise ship’s purser tells us, “put on your own life jacket and then help others put on theirs and proceed to your designated emergency area.”

“Don’t wait for an emergency!” I say. “Practice persistently taking care of your self first, so you can best take care of those to whom and for your values make you responsible.” Why? Continue reading “Prioritizing Your Relationships – Part 6”

Prioritizing Your Relationships – Part 5

In Part 4 of this series of posts about prioritizing your relationships, we discussed why and how God comes first, then you, and we left off saying next comes a close family triad level comprised of your parent(s), your spouse, and your child(ren). The three parts of this triad come and go and shift priorities as they do so. Continue reading “Prioritizing Your Relationships – Part 5”

Prioritizing Your Relationships – Part 4

In Part 3 of this series of posts on prioritizing your relationships, we left off listing the average person’s responsibilities and priorities as follows: God, self, spouse, children, parents, family, true friends, community, investors, employers, employees, customers, and a mission driven by a vision and values.

In Part 4 of this series, we will begin looking at the essences of those things, so we can start to understand how to prioritize and balance between them. Continue reading “Prioritizing Your Relationships – Part 4”

Prioritizing Your Relationships – Part 3

Now that we have covered Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs and the need to prioritize your relationships, in this post we are going to apply those two things and discuss the Great! Hierarchy of Relationships.

Your next question then must be, “How should I prioritize my relationships?” A good way to order your relationships is to arrange them in a pyramid on three axes of importance, number of participants in each type of relationship, and the resource leverage flowing from servicing those relationships.

Let’s explore one example (not the only way this can be done, but a good example) of a structure of relationships. Look at the big picture of this structure first and then we can discuss how and why things are ordered the way they are in this example.

As we stated in Part 2 of this series of posts on relationships, most people’s relationship complex comprises one or more of the following: God, self, spouse, children, parents, family, true friends, business associates (owners, investors, employees, vendors and your customers), acquaintances, and community. In a similar way to how Maslow classifies our needs in life in a hierarchical pyramid, we can prioritize the various categories of our relationships according to their importance, the relative number of participants in each category, and their resource leverage as follows:

Hierarchy of Relationships

Looking at this relationship pyramid, you should begin to see what we are talking about when we say in the definition of Greatness!, “the optimal balance of the highest priority and most number of those people, places, and things with whom or which we have relationships and to whom or which and for whom or which our values make us responsible.” Let’s probe this priority and number idea a little bit more and see how the balance of resources aspect of things comes in to play as well.

The planning process of the P10 Principle, which we will discuss in much detail later, requires us to consider how much of each kind of our life’s precious resources (of self, time, effort, energy, emotion, intellect, property, and people) we should invest in each of our major ongoing projects, such as being better at our religion, being a better spouse, parent, child, friend, or citizen, or having a better business with better employees and customers. All of those relationships seem to need constant care and feeding and each of us is only one person with a limited amount of those resources.

All of these competing relationships can create problems. We have a house and cars to pay for; a family that needs to be fed and clothed, bought the niceties of life, and taught the big and little things in life like how to swim, fish, ride a bike, cook, hammer a nail, whatever; a business that we have to stay at and watch all the time; and we have to concern ourselves with making the world a better place to live in while reducing our footprint in the community and our contribution to global warming, among other things. In addition to work, we have to pray some, eat some, play some, and sleep some.

Each of the things we want to do in life and any one of our relationships could individually take up all of our time if we let it. So, in order to survive the competition in life, we have to learn how to prioritize our relationships, first, and then figure out how to balance the use of our resources to move all of our projects along and take care of all of our relationships, a little at a time, but, still, all the time. That is the trick of being Great! All the time!

The Beauty is in the Details

Let’s poke at these ideas a little bit more. First, let’s review what we said about our relationships, to see who are the highest priority and the most of those to whom and for whom we are responsible.

Each of us is responsible to our self and at least some of those around us. In addition to our self and the people around us, to whom and for whom our values make us responsible, there are some intangible things, such as ideas, values, or beliefs, to which and for which our values make us responsible; but we are limiting our discussion at this point to people relationships.

The natures, types, quantities, and priorities of those responsibilities may ebb and flow and otherwise change, from time to time, depending on our circumstances. You may or may not have a religious grounding. You may or may not be married. You may or may not have living parents or children. You may or may not have investors, employers, employees, or customers. You may or may not have a core value system.

Regardless of each of your specifics, however, you can probably be classified as a “reasonable person” and are at least a minimally religious, married, with one or two children, at least one living parent, and a few true friends. You have a job at a company with investors, one or more bosses above you, one or more employees underneath you, and customers. You have all of these relationships in addition to having some acquaintances with whom you live in a community. You have some set of core values that says some intangible things have significance and are worth spending resources on. You have some vision of how to live a life in accordance with those values. You have some mission consisting of steps required to fulfill that vision.”

Given such a scenario, your average person’s responsibilities and priorities may be listed as follows: God, self, spouse, children, parents, family, true friends, community, investors, employers, employees, customers, and a mission driven by a vision and values.

In Part 4 of this series of posts in relationships, we will begin looking at the essences of those things, so we can start to figure out a way to prioritize and balance between them.

So let’s continue.

Prioritizing Your Relationships – Part 2

In this post, we will build upon Maslow’s hierarchy of needs and learn why we need to prioritize our relationships with all the people, places, and things to which and for which our values make us responsible. If you have not read the post entitled Part 1 – Maslow’s Heirarchy of Needs, then it will greatly benefit you to do so now.

Each of us is somehow connected to all three of the categories of the “stuff” of our lives — the people, places, and things that surround us. The major relationships upon which we should initially focus, however, are our relationships with other people. Continue reading “Prioritizing Your Relationships – Part 2”

Prioritizing Your Relationships – Part 1

Near the end of the definition of Greatness!, we reach “the highest priority” of those people, places and things with whom and which one has relationships and to whom and which and for whom and which one’s values make one responsible. Exploring and understanding the priorities of our relationships, of course, requires us to discuss some way of organizing our relationships in life.

Our relationships contend with each other in a hierarchical manner. To develop a frame of reference against which we can understand our hierarchy of relationships (sorry, that will have to wait until the next post), let’s first revisit a more familiar psychological hierarchy (today’s prerequisite to tomorrow’s Great! Stuff!). Continue reading “Prioritizing Your Relationships – Part 1”

Your Life is the Sum of Your Relationships

“Life” itself is a fairly indefinable concept. “Your life,” however, is a little bit easier to qualify and quantify. Your life is the sum of your relationships with the people, places, and things surrounding you.

This is a very simple, but very big and important concept when it comes to being Great! All the time!; so it bears repeating in a focused way. Continue reading “Your Life is the Sum of Your Relationships”

Almost Always Run at the Inconvenient Truth

My Grandma Rose often said, “Always tell the truth and then you won’t have to remember what you said.” In 56 years of living, 38 years of marriage, 159 kid years of parenting (the sum of my six practically perfect children’s ages), and 25 years as a lawyer with a lot of experience getting people divorced from spouses and business partners, I have unfortunately heard a lot of lying and told my share of them as well (I’m only as human as you are).

Almost all of the lies I have heard (and told) have been innocent white lies, some of which are allowable in their circumstances. The really unfortunate ones I have heard, however, (and told) have been lies to avoid confrontation about an inconvenient truth. Continue reading “Almost Always Run at the Inconvenient Truth”

7 Steps to Greatness!

Many people get less done in their lives than they really can, simply because they flounder about, lost in their forests, unable to achieve much, because they see no way to use all the trees around them. Any discussion of Greatness! would be quite useless if there was no good way to attain that Greatness! It would be patently unfair to reveal to you a superior level of existence and then fail to show you how to get there.The P10 Principle

The definition of Greatness!, however, contains the manner and means of achieving it, namely the P10 Principle, which is a practically perfect method to use to own your life and be Great! All the time! Continue reading “7 Steps to Greatness!”