Going to the Top too fast
Administrator
I have heard from mountaineers that it is dangerous to scale a mountain too fast. If you were able to use a helicopter to reach the top of Mt. Everest, the first thing that will happen is that you will feel a shortage of oxygen, and probably feel extreme discomfort if not die.
It is important that you should scale slowly, and then acclimatize, that means stop at certain point of the lower summit, and let your body adjust to the shortage of oxygen, and then slowly go up again.
I am thinking that it is the same in the corporate ladder. A person who is not ready, or at least have certain inherent abilities, will have extreme difficulty responding properly when success is suddenly thrust upon them.
When I was small, as with my friends, we all dream and wish that one day, we will find out that we have suddenly become extremely rich. In most of us, there is a wish that we can conquer Everest in a day. Maybe we can take this lesson and ponder — because success that is hard owned, in which you are able to adjust slowly as the conditions change and respond appropriately before you scale further, is the success that will be sustainable.
Are you fit to scale the mountain? Are you willing to endure the difficulty and meed the odds ( it is important that you understand perfectly the conditions in each step of the ladder so that you will know whether you can handle it). Are you willing to pay the price?
I wish I could be more encouraging, but the truth is that success i snot as sweet as it looks. It extracts a high price, and success can destroy a person as much as failure can, and it is important that we prepare and work on it with two eyes wide open.
People going direct to the summit of Mt. Everest will have problem of acclimatizing.
It is best to spend some time first in the lower summits.
ditto with Business
del.icio.us Digg it reddit StumbleUpon
Posted in FrontPage, on Business |



August 16th, 2007 at 2:53 am
You bring important points. It is essential to, above all, view the journey to the top as an opportunity to learn and grow for the sake of it. I’m a believer in seeing small steps in that journey as successes in and of themselves instead of “obstacles”. If you view your ultimate goal as your only possible success, you’ll be too unhappy to celebrate it by the time you’re there.