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Six Major Deposits

Let me suggest six major deposits that build the Emotional Bank Account

Understanding the Individual

Really seeking to understand another person is probably one of the most important deposits you can

make, and it is the key to every other deposit. You simply don't know what constitutes a deposit to

another person until you understand that individual. What might be a deposit for you -- going for a

walk to talk things over, going out for ice cream together, working on a common project -- might not be

perceived by someone else as a deposit at all. It might even be perceived as a withdrawal, if it doesn't touch the person's deep interests or needs.

One person's mission is another person's minutia. To make a deposit, what is important to another

person must be as important to you as the other person is to you. You may be working on a high

priority project when your six-year-old child interrupts with something that seems trivial to you, but it may be very important from his point of view. It takes Habit 2 to recognize and recommit yourself to

the value of that person and Habit 3 to subordinate your schedule to that human priority. By

accepting the value he places on what he has to say, you show an understanding of him that makes a

great deposit.

I have a friend whose son developed an avid interest in baseball. My friend wasn't interested in

baseball at all. But one summer, he took his son to see every major league team play one game. The

trip took over six weeks and cost a great deal of money, but it became a powerful bonding experience in

their relationship.

My friend was asked on his return, "Do you like baseball that much?"

"No," he replied, "but I like my son that much."

I have another friend, a college professor, who had a terrible relationship with his teenage son.

This man's entire life was essentially academic, and he felt his son was totally wasting his life by

working with this hands instead of working to develop his mind. As a result, he was almost

constantly on the boy's back, and, in moments of regret, he would try to make deposits that just didn't

work. The boy perceived the gestures as new forms of rejection, comparison, and judgment, and they

precipitated huge withdrawals. The relationship was turning sour, and it was breaking the father's

heart.

One day I shared with him this principle of making what is important to the other person as

THE SEVEN HABITS OF HIGHLY EFFECTIVE PEOPLE Brought to you by FlyHeart important to you as the other person is to you. He took it deeply to heart. He engaged his son in a project to build a miniature Wall of China around their home. It was a consuming project, and they

worked side by side on it for over a year and a half.

Through that bonding experience, the son moved through that phase in his life and into an increased

desire to develop his mind. But the real benefit was what happened to the relationship. Instead of a



sore spot, it became a source of joy and strength to both father and son.

Our tendency is to project out of our own autobiographies what we think other people want or need.

We project our intentions on the behavior of others. We interpret what constitutes a deposit based on

our own needs and desires, either now or when we were at a similar age or stage in life. If they don't interpret our effort as a deposit, our tendency is to take it as a rejection of our well-intentioned effort and give up.

The Golden Rule says to "Do unto others as you would have others do unto you." While on the

surface that could mean to do for them what you would like to have done for you, I think the more

essential meaning is to understand them deeply as individuals, the way you would want to be

understood, and then to treat them in terms of that understanding. As one successful parent said

about raising children, "Treat them all the same by treating them differently."

 


Date: 2015-02-03; view: 1170


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