Tag Archives: focus

Focus – Fight For Your Focus Daily

Focus is something you must be acutely aware of every minute of the day. So often people are quick to dump on, interrupt us, and complain about meaningless things. Before you know it, they’ve depleted your energy and burned an hour of your day …if not more considering the level of exhaustion you feel after leaving their presence. Hence your productivity is destroyed and your focus broken.

Guard your heart and avoid emotional frenzies caused by turbulent and tormentuous individuals whose lives are in disarray. They find meaning in hearing themselves talk and complain. Ironic, agonizing, but true it is. These folks are like leeches and parasites that suck the life right out of you.

Wisely guard your time and the daily interactions you have with people. Handpick those you allow access to you. Otherwise many thieves and dream killers will surface in your life to waste your time and break your focus.

www.PaulFDavis.com – worldwide speaker, life-changing author, and executive consultant

Invite Paul to speak to your company and within your city. – RevivingNations@yahoo.com

Advertisement

Leave a comment

Filed under annoying people, clear focus, fighting for undivided focus, fighting for your focus, focus and your future, focus despite what others say, focus on your future, focus on your goals, focus without distraction, focus without guilt, relentless focus, saying no to focus fully, time wasters

Coworkers Driving You Nuts – What Do Your Coworkers Do That Drive You Crazy?

My co-workers come into my office too often and break my focus, hindering my work productivity. Talking about non-work related matters, complaining about their latest irritation, and calling to ramble on about nothing of importance.

As a conflict resolution specialist and life coach, I suggest the following to deal with such annoyances.

1. Don’t answer the telephone when you are working.

2. Screen calls and attend to only those that are important.

3. Lock your office door.

4. Put in ear plugs while working at your cubicle to minimize distractions.

5. Politely ask your co-workers not to disturb you.

6. Ask your boss to relocate you to a more quiet place in the office so you can minimize distractions and be more productive.

7. Tell your colleagues at work your ears aren’t garbage cans, neither are you a dumping ground for all their complaints. Tell them to be proactive and solve their own problems.

Paul F Davis

http://www.PaulFDavis.com

Orlando, FL

Paul F. Davis is a world-changing leadership & diversity speaker who has touched over 50 countries & 6 continents building bridges cross-culturally and empowering people throughout the earth to live their dreams!

Paul is the author of 14 books, two nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. Paul has appeared on numerous internationally broadcast radio shows from Oprah & Friends to Fox News Radio to talk about conflict resolution, peacemaking, foreign policy, and diplomacy. Playboy Radio host Tiffany Granath calls Paul an “awesome” relational coach and recommends his books on love, dating, and sexuality.

Academically outstanding Davis was trained in transformative mediation & conflict resolution (Hofstra Law School); strategic negotiations (Harvard Business School & U. of Washington); advanced interrogation (Reid & Associates founders of the polygraph); and NLP & Life Coaching (NLP & Coaching Institute of California).

Paul humorously and elegantly transforms individuals and organizations.

Paul’s organization Dream-Maker Inc. builds dreams, transcends limitations, & reconciles nations.

Paul worked at Ground Zero in NYC during 9/11; helped rebuild a home at the tsunami epicenter; comforted victims of genocide in Rwanda; spoke to leaders in East Timor during the war; inspired students & monks in Myanmar; promoted peace & reconciliation in Pakistan; and has been so deep into the bush of rural Africa where villagers had never before seen a white man.

Paul empowers people to love passionately and live fearlessly.

http://www.PaulFDavis.com

Leave a comment

Filed under business, economics, commerce, leadership