Becoming a Person of Integrity
By: Brian
Tracy
Integrity
is a value, like persistence, courage and industriousness. Even more
than that, it is the value that guarantees all the other values.
You are a good person to the degree to which you live your life consistent
with the highest values that you espouse. Integrity is the quality
that locks in your values and causes you to live consistent with
them.
Integrity is the foundation of character. And character development is one of
the most important activities you can engage in. Working on your character means
disciplining yourself to do more and more of those things that a thoroughly honest
person would do, under all circumstances.
To be impeccably honest with others, you must first be impeccably honest with
yourself. You must be true to yourself. You must be true to the very best that
is in you, to the very best that you know. Only a person who is living consistent
with his or her highest values and virtues is really living a life of integrity.
And when you commit to living this kind of life, you will find yourself continually
raising your own standards, continually refining your definition of integrity
and honesty.
You can tell how high your level of integrity is by simply looking at the things
you do in your day-to-day life. You can look at your reactions and responses
to the inevitable ups and downs of life. You can observe the behaviors you typically
engage in and you will then know the person you are.
The external manifestation of high integrity is high-quality work. A person who
is totally honest with himself or herself will be someone who does, or strives
to do, excellent work on every occasion. The totally honest person recognizes,
sometimes unconsciously, that everything he or she does is a statement about
who he or she really is as a person.
When you start a little earlier, work a little harder, stay a little later and
concentrate on every detail, you are practicing integrity in your work. And whether
you know it or not, your true level of integrity is apparent and obvious to everyone
around you.
Perhaps the most important rule you will ever learn is that your life only becomes
better when you become better.
All of life is lived from the inside out. At the very core of your personality
lie your values about yourself and life in general. Your values determine the
kind of person you really are. What you believe has defined your character and
your personality. It is what you stand for, and what you wont stand for, that
tells you and the world the kind of person you have become.
Ask yourself this question: What are your five most important values in life?
Your answer will reveal an enormous amount about you. What would you pay for,
sacrifice for, suffer for and even die for? What would you stand up for, or refuse
to lie down for? What are the values that you hold most dear? Think these questions
through carefully and, when you get a chance, write down your answers.
Heres another way of asking that question. What men and women, living or dead,
do you most admire? Once you pick three or four men or women, the next question
is: Why do you admire them? What values, qualities, or virtues do they have that
you respect and look up to? Can you articulate those qualities? What is a quality
possessed by human beings in general that you most respect? This is the starting
point for determining your values. The answers to these questions form the foundation
of your character and your personality.
Once you have determined your five major values, you should now organize them
in order of importance. What is your first, most important value? What is your
second value? What is your third value? And so on. Ranking your values is one
of the very best and fastest ways to define your character.
Remember, a higher order value will always take precedence over a lower order
value. Whenever you are forced to choose between acting on one value or another,
you always choose the value that is the highest on your own personal hierarchy.
Who you are, in your heart, is evidenced by what you do on a day-to-day basis,
especially when you are pushed into a position where you have to make a choice
between two values or alternatives.
Ralph Waldo Emerson said, Guard your integrity as a sacred thing. In study
after study, the quality of integrity, or a persons adherence to values, ranks
as the number one quality sought in every field. When it comes to determining
whom they will do business with, customers rank the honesty of a salesperson
as the most important single quality. Even if a they feel that a salespersons
product, quality and price is superior, customers will not buy from that salesperson
if they feel that he or she is lacking in honesty and character.
Likewise, integrity is the number one quality of leadership. Integrity in leadership
is expressed in terms of constancy and consistency. It is manifested in an absolute
devotion to keeping ones word. The glue that holds all relationships together-including
the relationship between the leader and the led-is trust, and trust is based
on integrity.
Integrity is so important that functioning in our society would be impossible
without it. We could not make even a simple purchase without a high level of
confidence that the price was honest and that the change was correct. The most
successful individuals and companies in America are those with reputations of
high integrity among everyone they deal with. This level of integrity builds
the confidence that others have in them and enables them to do more business
than their competitors whose ethics may be a little shaky. Earl Nightingale once
wrote, If honesty did not exist, it would have to be invented, as it is the
surest way of getting rich. A study at Harvard University concluded that the
most valuable asset that a company has is how it is known to its customers, its
reputation.
By the same token, your greatest personal asset is the way that you are known
to your customers. It is your personal reputation for keeping your word and fulfilling
your commitments. Your integrity precedes you and affects all of your interactions
with other people. There are several things you can do to move you more rapidly
toward becoming the kind of person that you know you are capable of becoming.
The first, as I mentioned, is to decide upon your five most important values
in life. Organize them in order of priority. Then write a brief paragraph defining
what each of those values means to you. A value combined with a definition becomes
an organizing principle, a statement that you can use to help you make better
decisions. It is a measure and standard which enables you to know how closely
you are adhering to your innermost beliefs and convictions.
The second step to developing integrity and character in yourself is to study
men and women of great character. Study the lives and stories of people like
George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Winston Churchill, Florence Nightingale,
Susan B. Anthony and Margaret Thatcher. Study the people whose strength of character
enabled them to change their world. As you read, think about how they would behave
if they were facing the difficulties that you face.
Napoleon Hill, in his book, The Master Key to Riches, tells about how he created
an imaginary board of personal advisors made up of great figures of history.
He chose people like Napoleon, Lincoln, Jesus, and Alexander the Great. Whenever
he had to make a decision, he would relax deeply and then imagine that the members
of his advisory council were sitting at a large table in front of him. He would
then ask them what he should do to deal effectively with a particular situation.
In time, they would begin to give him answers, observations, and insights that
helped him to see more clearly and act more effectively.
You can do the same thing. Select someone that you very much admire for their
qualities of courage, tenacity, honesty, or wisdom. Ask yourself, What would
Jesus do in my situation? or, What would Lincoln do if he were here at this
time? You will find yourself with guidance that enables you to be the very best
person that you can possible be.
The third and most important step in building your integrity has to do with formulating
your approach based on the psychology of human behavior. We know that if you
feel a particular way, you will act in a manner consistent with that feeling.
For example, if you feel happy, you will act happy. If you feel angry, you will
act angry. If you feel courageous, you will act courageously.
But we also know that you dont always start off feeling the way you want to.
However, because of the Law of Reversibility, if you act as if you had a particular
feeling, the action will generate the feeling consistent with it. You can, in
effect, act your way into feeling. You can fake it until you make it.
You can become a superior human being by consciously acting exactly as the kind
of person that you would most like to become. If you behave like an individual
of integrity, courage, resolution, persistence and character, you will soon create
within yourself the mental structure and habits of such a person. Your actions
will become your reality. You will create a personality that is consistent with
your highest aspirations.
The more you walk, talk, and behave consistent with your highest values, the
more you will like yourself and the better you will feel about yourself. Your
self-image will improve and your level of self-acceptance will go up. You will
feel stronger, bolder, and more capable of facing any challenge.
There are three primary areas of your life where acting with integrity is crucial.
These are the three areas of greatest temptation for forsaking your integrity,
as well as the areas of greatest opportunity for building your integrity. When
you listen to your inner voice and do what you know to be the right thing in
each of these areas, you will have a sense of peace and satisfaction that will
lead you on to success and high achievement.
The first area of integrity has to do with your relationships with your family
and your friends, the people close to you. Being true to yourself means living
in truth with each person in your life. It means refusing to say or do something
that you dont believe is right. Living in truth with other people means that
you refuse to stay in any situation where you are unhappy with the behavior of
another person. You refuse to tolerate it. You refuse to compromise. Psychologists
have determined that most stress and negativity comes from attempting to live
in a way that is not congruent with your highest values. It is when your life
is out of alignment, when you are doing and saying one thing on the outside,
but really feeling and believing something different on the inside, that you
feel most unhappy. When you decide to become an individual of character and integrity,
your first action will be to neutralize or remove all difficult relationships
from your life.
This doesnt mean that you have to go and hit somebody over the head with a stick.
It simply means that you honestly confront another person and tell them that
you are not happy. Tell them that you would like to reorganize this relationship
so that you feel more content and satisfied. If the other person is not willing
to make adjustments so that you can be happy, it should be clear to you that
you dont want to be in this relationship much longer anyway. The second area
of integrity has to do with your attitude and behavior toward money. Casualness
toward money brings casualties in your financial life. You must be fastidious
about your treatment of money, especially other peoples money. You must guard
your credit rating the same way you would guard your honor. You must pay your
bills punctually, or even early. You must keep your promises with regard to your
financial commitments.
The third area of integrity has to do with your commitments to others, especially
in your business, your work and your sales activities. Always keep your word.
Be a man or a woman of honor. If you say that you will do something, do it. If
you make a promise, keep it. If you make a commitment, fulfill it. Be known as
the kind of person that can be trusted absolutely, no matter what the circumstances.
Your integrity is manifested in your willingness to adhere to the values you
hold most dear. Its easy to make promises and hard to keep them, but if you
do, every single act of integrity will make your character a little stronger.
And as you improve the quality and strength of your character, every other part
of your life will improve as well.
About
Brian Tracy
Brian Tracy is a leading authority on personal
and business success. As Chairman and CEO of Brian
Tracy
International, he is the best-selling author of 17 books and over 300 audio
and video learning programs. Copyright 2001
Brian Tracy International.
All Rights Reserved.
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