Eisenhower’s law

When we work or plan, we do urgent and important work first and all in. But looking at Eisenhower’s law makes you rethink what matters and how to prepare for it.


Instead of just doing things the way U.S. President Eisenhower used them, he classified them into four first and then dealt with them.


His classification is as follows.


A. An urgent and important matter

B. Important but not urgent

C. Something urgent but not important

D. It's not important, it's not urgent. 


President Eisenhower is the first.

It handled the "urgent yet important" A.


And in case of C, which is urgent but not important, 'not directly dealt with, but delegated it to someone else.'


And D, which is neither important nor urgent, has been left untreated.


The problem is B.

It is not urgent now, but it is important.

This work eventually becomes urgent (A) over time.


Eisenhower spent a lot of time dealing with B. B was relatively easy to handle because it was not urgent at the momentarily.


Then, an urgent yet important A rarely happens. This is the Eisenhower law, which works the same way and is relaxed.


Napoleon says, 'The disaster we will encounter one day is retaliation for a certain time we have neglected.' 


We are not in a hurry right now, but it is also up to us to take care of the important things that will come soon in the future. 



◇ Food in the world that is good for preventing colds 


• Sweden: Eat raspberries and blueberries to take vitamin C.


• Russia: Eat strawberries and take vitamin C. 


• Japan: Put mustard pack on the chest or back of a cold patient. 


• Ethiopia: Eat lemon juice with honey. 


• France: Drink a boiled banc show with cinnamon and oranges in red wine. 


• Korea: Scrape the stomach of a ship and then put honey, jujube, balloon flower, bank and so on in a bath.

 

• other: omija tea, ogwa tea, ginger tea, etc. are recommended.

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