The Sasquash Metaphor for a Living Time Management
For some reason people have too much fun in the zoo watching at those anthropomorphic creatures.
Chimps, Gorillas, Orangutans and all kind of little monkeys capture the imagination of the people of all ages with their ways of living.
Not that I want to bring Darwin to the table, but those partners make a good example for the metaphorical understanding of mankind's ways and actions.
We can take some advantage of our zoological perception of reality to help ourselves manage our time more effectively.
Sometimes you have those little shores, run errands, take the garbage out, iron your clothes, and wash the dishes.
Those things take you maybe five, ten, fifteen or twenty five minutes the most.
But it's a pain you now where, to feel tied to those forever.
So the first thing you have to do is to address them differently.
Don't call them little unimportant dumb things to do.
Call them Monkey Time.
Get used to figure how many Monkey time things you can do before going to work; or before going to the supermarket; or before picking up your kids from school.
Soon it will become a game you play, and you will almost see the monkeys running to take care of the shores without spending your energy.
Then follows the Gorilla Time, which is the main alpha male or female ways of keeping their status in the clan to keep things working.
Talking to your boss or employees about the new projects of the company, going for a job interview, ask for a favor to a friend or take care of some one in your circle to take him out of trouble.
Those are things that the big Daddy Gorilla chief of the clan does, to keep the kingdom running, I guess.
Then it comes the Sasquash time, the time to dream, to meditate and to reach the tops of your own mountains, when you realize that life is something more than monkey and gorilla stuff.
Use these metaphors and have great fun with your life, these are ways to set your ego aside and take responsibility on your own life.
Your perception is so powerful that you can't even imagine how many things will align just by playing this simple game in your life.
Remember always that life is also metaphorical and is not only what it seems to your eyes, but what it represents to your spirit.
Chimps, Gorillas, Orangutans and all kind of little monkeys capture the imagination of the people of all ages with their ways of living.
Not that I want to bring Darwin to the table, but those partners make a good example for the metaphorical understanding of mankind's ways and actions.
We can take some advantage of our zoological perception of reality to help ourselves manage our time more effectively.
Sometimes you have those little shores, run errands, take the garbage out, iron your clothes, and wash the dishes.
Those things take you maybe five, ten, fifteen or twenty five minutes the most.
But it's a pain you now where, to feel tied to those forever.
So the first thing you have to do is to address them differently.
Don't call them little unimportant dumb things to do.
Call them Monkey Time.
Get used to figure how many Monkey time things you can do before going to work; or before going to the supermarket; or before picking up your kids from school.
Soon it will become a game you play, and you will almost see the monkeys running to take care of the shores without spending your energy.
Then follows the Gorilla Time, which is the main alpha male or female ways of keeping their status in the clan to keep things working.
Talking to your boss or employees about the new projects of the company, going for a job interview, ask for a favor to a friend or take care of some one in your circle to take him out of trouble.
Those are things that the big Daddy Gorilla chief of the clan does, to keep the kingdom running, I guess.
Then it comes the Sasquash time, the time to dream, to meditate and to reach the tops of your own mountains, when you realize that life is something more than monkey and gorilla stuff.
Use these metaphors and have great fun with your life, these are ways to set your ego aside and take responsibility on your own life.
Your perception is so powerful that you can't even imagine how many things will align just by playing this simple game in your life.
Remember always that life is also metaphorical and is not only what it seems to your eyes, but what it represents to your spirit.