Is this a discipline problem?

Saying that all problems is due to psychological ones seems to me as an excuse for lacking vision of concrete path to improve oneself. Staying in abstraction, opinions and fuziness allow to discuss endlessly about one's problem but doesn't help to find a solution. Deming said that you can make all the effort you want from inside and that it is at the end useless because the knowledge comes from outside of you. So you must acquire knowledge because it can't be found inside you - so that he opposed many psy gurus he also encountered in Management of Industries when he was consultant since he is dead since a few years. He means you must study variation concepts in DETAILS and not content with generalities on noise or psychology although he deals much with psychology too but he advocates concrete paths and knowledge and not only placebo effects like pure psy gurus.
 
Quote from Albert:

I don't think you have a discipline problem.

He should use the "5 whys" method :)
http://www.hr.doe.gov/HR6/PIGUIDE/IB.htm

"Five whys is a creative technique used to determine the underlying cause of a situation, This technique can also help spur understanding of how different causes might be related."

Example given:
"Production workers wanted to discover why they kept missing their delivery dates. So they asked "Why?" and here's what they learned:

We missed our delivery date. Why?

Our subcontractor's delivery date slipped. Why?

We made too many changes. Why?

The subcontractor misunderstood our project requirements list. Why?

The requirements list was unclear, because we had only a week to prepare it.

Group members discovered that poor requirements planning was a root cause of their problem. To improve their process, they decided to budget "up-front" time for analyzings requirements.
"
 
Quote from Lobster:



Thank you. I believe this is the answer I was looking for. How could I have been so blind? It was simple greed. Case closed.

I wouldn't bet on your conclution at all; not for one minute.
 
Quote from Grob109:



I wouldn't bet on your conclution at all; not for one minute.

Would you care to explain what you think might have been the reason for my failure?
 
Quote from peterfigliozzi:

How about this for a possible explanation:
...
Would you be writing about a lack of discipline if the market tanked and you made a grand?

Nice post Pete. I too am coviced that most times, the failure to acknowledge or take a loss is more often greed than fear. It's all so true. We're greedy when we should be fearful. and fearful when we should be greedy.
 
Quote from Lobster:



Would you care to explain what you think might have been the reason for my failure?

[Edit: RLB]

Read C G Jung's "The Undiscovered Self" for what it is worth. I have read it and I particpated at one time in Zurich at JI in a colleagual manner.

[Edit: RLB]
 
Quote from Grob109:



[Edit: RLB]

Read C G Jung's "The Undiscovered Self" for what it is worth. I have read it and I particpated at one time in Zurich at JI in a colleagual manner.

[Edit: RLB]


LOL

What a load.
 
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