You’ve heard of The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People. But did you know that its author, Stephen Covey, was in his late fifties when it came out? After it became a monumental bestseller, Covey continued to work on new book ideas, one of which encapsulated his own experience with late-in-life success and his commitment to having an ever-forward-looking attitude.
A decade after his death, that book has finally been brought to fruition by Stephen’s daughter, Cynthia Covey Haller. It’s called Live Life in Crescendo: Your Most Important Work Is Always Ahead of You, and its contents really represent the capstone habit to those that came before.
Today on the show, Cynthia unpacks the crescendo mentality and how it represents a commitment to continual learning, growth, and change that you can adopt at any age. We discuss how embracing the crescendo mentality is particularly important in midlife, why that stage of life can be uniquely challenging whether you’ve achieved success or are struggling, and the shifts people in each of those situations can make to find greater fulfillment.
Resources Related to the EpisodeThe 5 Priorities of Short-Term Survival
Overdoing Democracy
Bo Jackson, The Last Folk Hero
Magic, Archetypes, and the Mysteries of the Unconscious
Life Lessons From The Twilight Zone
7 Ways to Achieve Tranquility by Tuesday
A Guide to Getting Off the Grid
What Happened to the Idea of Self-Control?
What People Get Wrong About Walden
When to Quit
The Vagabond Travel Ethos
Can Virtue Be Taught?
The Cues That Make You Charismatic
Jack London's Literary Code [Rebroadcast]
Data-Backed Answers to Personal Finance Controversies
The Power of Ritual
The 7 Types of Work Jerks (And How to Deal With Them)
A World War II Story of Survival, Love, and Redemption
The Power of Unwavering Focus
The Character Traits That Drive Optimal Performance [REBROADCAST]
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Modern West