I just finished reading the first chapter and was having trouble understanding it. I was hoping someone whos read it could help me to draw the correct conclusion.
It says not to criticise people, complain, etc...
How do you do this??
If I rely on someone to do a job, and they do a shitty job because they were just lazy, for example, Id get angry. Thats a pretty legitimate response, Id say, but I dont understand how in that situation, where someone's choice to be lazy, should not be criticised.
Or, if someone is just acting immature, wouldnt you want to call them out and repremand them for acting so.
I mean if someone makes a conscious decision to be lazy, how can you NOT criticise that? It would seem like not criticising them would be letting them get away with it, perpetuating the cycle of lazyness.
Also, how would one repremand people in those instances? It seems like Carnegie almost wants someone to be a 'crafty pushover'. Crafty in the sense that we should make some kind of witty comment about someone messing up and pushover in the sense that we should let/hope they take that witty comment into consideration and correct themselves.
It says not to criticise people, complain, etc...
How do you do this??
If I rely on someone to do a job, and they do a shitty job because they were just lazy, for example, Id get angry. Thats a pretty legitimate response, Id say, but I dont understand how in that situation, where someone's choice to be lazy, should not be criticised.
Or, if someone is just acting immature, wouldnt you want to call them out and repremand them for acting so.
I mean if someone makes a conscious decision to be lazy, how can you NOT criticise that? It would seem like not criticising them would be letting them get away with it, perpetuating the cycle of lazyness.
Also, how would one repremand people in those instances? It seems like Carnegie almost wants someone to be a 'crafty pushover'. Crafty in the sense that we should make some kind of witty comment about someone messing up and pushover in the sense that we should let/hope they take that witty comment into consideration and correct themselves.