Phase Four - Sentou Kaishi “As human beings, our greatness lies not so much in being able to remake the world―that is the myth of the atomic age―as in being able to remake ourselves.” ―Mahatma Gandhi Sentou kaishi means to start the battle. It is a war cry used by the Japanese. As the translation suggests, Sentou Kaishi is all about taking action. Unlike Katanakaji, where we think about the day that just passed, here we'll be planning for the day ahead. (Don't do Sentou Kaishi before you to Katanakaji. It'll work but you might be going the wrong direction in life.) With Sentou Kaishi, we for plan for, and only for, the day ahead. This is a revision of Sentou Kaishi. You can see the original here. So the original focused on making a …show more content…
Honestly, I really like this book, you should check it out. The above is very similar to Connection Algorithm's swamp, mountain, and beach analogy (I love it when I see two different people converge to the same idea/principal, because then you really know it's true). You have to work out of your current situation (but many things like escapism, enablers, and comfort will hold you back). You have to cross that fear threshold (fear often becomes disguised as apathy and comfort). But then comes the mountains. The mountains are hard, but worth the pain. Finally, you get to the other side and realize the grass is greener on the other side and the pain was worth it. By looking at this picture each day, you remind yourself of what you really want in life. But what I want you to add to this picture is items from our vision outline. Add about one or two items for the "swamp", "mountains," and "the beach." Remember, keep it simple. So don't go overboard. Land of Mark Minard Plus Other This way you get a daily reminder of what you are working for each day. But we aren't done yet. We have a diagram to put on the other side of this piece of paper. This focuses on the GROW life coaching