Hi Virak P.

I will think more clearly if I discard some of the clutter that surrounds me. 

I believe I met your daughter once at The Conference @ Houston (2005).

Warmest regards,


Perom Uch
http://www.ibuddhi.blogspot .com/http://perom.businesscard2. com/
http://www.linkedin.com/in/ peromuch
http://www.thinkmassmedia.com/ PUINT01.html


--- On Tue, 12/1/09, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:

From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: In the new year, 'think better to do better'
To: [email protected]
Date: Tuesday, December 1, 2009, 11:57 AM



 

Groby,
 
Some of us think really hard until we have become hairless. 
Others, think until all hair turned white or gray. The last time I tried to 
think, I thought that I have thought too much and my brain refused to let my 
think again. Then, I borrowed some thoughts from son which turned out 
to be the thoughts that I used to think years ago. However, my 
son thought that the thoughts that I used to think belonged to him. I 
don't think so.
 
My new year's resolution last year was to organize myself and become a 
better person. My daughter, the smartest one, bought me a book called "how 
to organize yourself". I took the book and intended to read it, but I lost 
the book before I started to organize myself. 
 
Then I changed my resolution to become a better person by stop 
procrastinating and got a book called "how to stop procrastinating." It 
still sits on a shelf in my home library because I keep telling myself that I 
will read that book tomorrow.
 
This year, I will set my new " new year's resolution" again. 
I will become a courageous man and not to become a pessimist bout 
Cambodian politics. I want to believe that everything will be okay with 
Cambodia and all bad guys will become good, ...but I am "afraid" that they 
won't. 
 
Have a thoughtful day.
 
==========
 

In a message dated 12/1/2009 1:48:53 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, 
[email protected] writes:



  
  ---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Dec 1, 2009 at 
  10:24 AM
Subject: In the new year, 'think better to do better'
To: 
  



  PACIFIC DAILY NEWS
  December 2, 2009 

  
  In the new year, 'think better to do better'
  
  A Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D.ge
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  In four weeks, the New Year will be upon us. Usually, around 
  this time of the year, I dust off reading material from my library shelf, 
  looking for something that will energize me for the new year 
  ahead.
  
  A Christmas present from my wife, given several years ago as I settled into 
  my retirement from teaching, "Think Better," by Tim Hurson, a specialist of a 
  firm that provides training, facilitation and consultation in productive 
  thinking and innovation, is, again, what I read: "Your future will depend 
less 
  on what you know and more on what you think."
  
  A lifelong student, I try to learn something new every day. Since my 
  retirement, each day seems extra special and precious -- for which I give 
much 
  thanks. I smile as I read what Winston Churchill, who led Britain to victory 
  against the Axis powers in World War II, said: "It is a good thing for an 
  uneducated man to read books of quotations."
  
  My regular readers know I am a real quotations buff. Some may see them as 
  platitudes, but I find a kernel of truth in those I share in this column. As 
  each presents a way of looking at the world, I learn from them. As 19th 
  century American poet Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote, "Our best thoughts come from 
  others."
  
  So I find this time is a good time to remind, and reconnect with Hurson, 
  who has a pragmatic, readable style: "It's not what you know but how you 
  think" that determines your future and your life. His philosophy may be 
  summarized in five words: "Think better to do better."
  Quality of thought
  Surely each of us thinks. That ability separates us from 
  animals, which operate on instinct. But some people confuse opinion -- an 
idea 
  unsubstantiated by knowledge -- with thought -- which involves careful 
  analysis. This careful, reasoned thought can be characterized as critical 
  thinking.
  
  The Foundation of Critical Thinking posits, "all thinking is not of the 
  same quality. ... Much of our thinking, left to itself, is biased, distorted, 
  partial, uninformed, or downright prejudiced." High-quality thinking improves 
  our quality of life and the quality of everything we 
do.
  
  The Foundation's publications describe the pitfalls of 
  "aimless thinking" -- the "monkey mind," as Hurson calls it. Rather, we 
should 
  engage our mind in generating further questions -- the foundation sees this 
  process as a "substantive learning" -- "A mind with no question is a mind 
that 
  is not intellectually alive."
  'Essential questions'
  Without further questions, a mind does not know how to proceed 
  or to process. Recall Aung San Suu Kyi's call on her compatriots to maintain 
a 
  "questing mind."
  
  Hurson, an optimist, assures us that whatever intelligence quotient, IQ, or 
  creative quotient, CQ, your brain may have, "every brain ... can be taught to 
  think better: to understand more clearly, think more creatively, and plan 
more 
  effectively."
  
  Thus, any person can develop and grow.
  
  Like the foundation, Hurson urges us to "keep asking new questions," even 
  if it seems clear and obvious what the answers are, because to stop asking 
  questions is to stop productive thinking and deny ourselves new 
possibilities. 
  We need to ask "essential questions" in order for us to deal with "what is 
  necessary, relevant, and indispensable to a matter at hand," whether in 
  reading, writing, speaking, or doing anything.
  
  Recently, I logged on to a Web site and spent time dissecting a former 
  Cambodian professor's call for a "progressive and systematic overhaul" of 
  Cambodian society to enable the country to gradually resolve its current 
  economic, institutional, legal, political and social problems. As I found Dr. 
  Tith's explanations of the main causes of the inertia and the failure of new 
  ideas, capable leadership and entrepreneurial spirit to grow in Cambodia, to 
  emanate from a dearth of quality thinking, I wrote about his call in my 
  columns.
  
  I also wrote in this space of my thinking about how it is desirable to have 
  a hundred different thoughts bloom in the garden of ideas to enable us to 
  choose from the best, to develop and improve society. My recent columns deal 
  with ideas, commitment and change. Change upsets some people as their world 
is 
  disturbed.
  
  Yet, as we are the product of thoughts, what then do we become 
  when ideas and thoughts are seen as damaging to progress and development? I 
  dread what authoritarianism can do to mankind.
  
  
  Last week, I wrote about Thomas Friedman's "The Power in 11/9" 
  when people power brought down the Berlin Wall in 1989 without firing a shot. 
  Friedman's thoughts: "Where there is people power wedded to progressive 
ideas, 
  there is hope -- and American power can help. Where there is people power 
  harnessed to bad ideas, there is danger. Where there is no people power and 
  only bad ideas, there will be no happy endings."
  Imagination
  On Nov. 22, Friedman's "Advice From Grandma" says most seem to 
  agree that "it's all but certain that China will own the 21st century." But 
  Friedman is "not ready to cede the 21st century to China just yet," because 
  America still has important things that can't be commoditized -- one is 
  "imagination," and Americans still have the ability to "imagine and spin off 
  new ideas" to thrive. The other is "good governance, which can harness 
  creativity."
  
  Friedman is worried about America's ability to forge "optimal" solutions to 
  her biggest challenges, and suggests America "need(s) better 
  citizens."
  
  As we're prepared to leave the old year behind, I look to renewing "Think 
  better to do better" for myself, and wish the same for my readers in the New 
  Year 2010!
  
  A Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D., is retired from the University of Guam, 
  where he taught political science for 13 years. Write him at 
[email protected].
  
  
http://www.guampdn.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/200912020300/OPINION02/912020319







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