Key Traits of Successful People

Great article in Huffington Post about the  common traits of successful people.

Definitely worth a read and consideration.

Which character traits do you need to have if you want to work effectively and get ahead? The answer depends, to some extent, on the kind of work you do — but there’s one trait that everyone needs to have if they want to succeed, and that’s trustworthiness. Technically, it’s not so much being trustworthy, but being perceived as trustworthy, that matters. You can be as honest, fair, and reliable as the day is long, but if nobody else sees you that way, it won’t help you.

When your boss doesn’t trust you, you don’t get key assignments, promotions or the latitude to do things your own way and take risks. When your colleagues and employees don’t trust you, you don’t get their best effort, or all the information you need from them to make good decisions.

If you want other people to believe that you are trustworthy, you should be aware that you may be seriously undermining that belief if you appear to lack self-control. New research shows that people just won’t trust you when you seem like you might have a willpower problem. If you think about it, this makes a lot of intuitive sense. We trust people because we know that when things get hard, or when it might be tempting for them to put their own interests first, they’ll resist temptation and do what’s right.

Studies show that when you engage in behaviors that are indicative of low self-control, your trustworthiness is diminished. In other words, all those things you know you shouldn’t do — smoking, overeating, impulsive spending, being lazy, late, disorganized, excessively emotional or having a quick temper — may be even worse for you than you ever realized, because of the collateral damage they are doing to your reputation.

So if you want to be trusted, you’re going to have to conquer these trust saboteurs. To do that, you’ll need to understand how willpower really works, and how you can get your hands on some more of it.

The Secret to Earning Trust: Willpower

Read More ….

 

It’s Tax Freedom Day, but only death brings real tax freedom

By Gordon Clark, The Province June 5, 2011

Stick a candle in a cake and blow it out: we’ve all got something to celebrate. (On second thought, you’d better not light those candles. You don’t want to add to your carbon footprint.)

If you believe the Fraser Institute (and who doesn’t?) Monday is Tax Freedom Day in British Columbia, the day “the average Canadian family has earned enough money to pay the taxes imposed on it by the three levels of government.”

We’re lucky we remain such a cosmically underdeveloped species and so far classified as “untaxable” by the Intergalactic Council, or we’d have a fourth level of government to worry about.

I suppose I should be more excited by Tax Freedom Day, but I’m not. I’m holding off our household’s carbon-neutral celebrations involving Judeo-Gaelic folk-dancing and rooibos tea until Mortgage Freedom Year, which should occur, given our dubious decision to buy a house in Vancouver, sometime in the 2070s as long as we stick to our accelerated bi-daily payment schedule with the bank.

According to the Fraser Institute, the average B.C. family earning an average of $85,745 in 2011, will pay an average of $36,611 in total government-imposed income, sales, liquor, tobacco, amusement, excise, auto, fuel, carbon, motor-vehicle licence, transit, social security, pension, medical, hospital, property, import, profit, natural resource, and other taxes, duties, levies and fees.