Create a comprehensive list of things that aren’t working out as planned. Conduct a detailed analyntesis (both in specific and global terms) of how each thing functions and how all the details intertwine. Check which principles apply to each situation. Have you adhered to these principles, or have you violated them? Identify the principle that has been compromised. Regarding your filtering process, what would you do to bring about a change? Try out at least 5 different approaches. Which one leads to the quickest and most accurate transformation?
And now, let’s analyntesis the remaining similar examples:
- “Everyone does it this way.”
- “I’m not excelling, but I’m doing quite well. After all, I’m doing something.”
- “Things aren’t perfect, but I’m on the right track.”
- “Acknowledging the facts is an achievement itself. We believe that once we’re honest enough to admit something, it means we’re already working towards fixing it or have mastered it. This self-deception is one of the most treacherous pitfalls because it reinforces the illusion that we’re taking action and achieving, while, in reality, we remain stagnant.”
- “Postponing an event for a more suitable moment” – this leads to self-deception, making us believe that we will complete the task as soon as we postpone it, yet we end up forgetting about it and losing momentum.
- The statement “I’m doing everything possible” – if we claim to do everything possible, we expect results every time. If results are absent, it means we haven’t explored all possibilities. Saying, “Several options are possible” implies that we’ve limited or halted our search prematurely.