Christophe Ruelle Published on October 13, 2007
by Christophe Ruellepro

Christophe Ruelle's blog

Browse posts
Can't wait to tell you some good news...
Posted on May 18, 2008
20 comments (latest 19 months ago)
Happy birthday Bigoode
Posted on March 10, 2008
6 comments (latest 19 months ago)
Berlin meeting video delayed
Posted on February 26, 2008
9 comments (latest 21 months ago)
On vient de livrer nos meubles!
Posted on February 17, 2008
3 comments (latest 21 months ago)
Of Stones, Pebbles and Sand. What are the Stones in your Life?
16 comments (latest 21 months ago)
You've got to find what you love
Posted on September 20, 2007
21 comments (latest 2 years ago)
Un jour avec un hérisson
Posted on August 14, 2007
34 comments (latest 2 years ago)
Sorry for the outage / Désolé pour l'interruption de service
Posted on July 1st, 2007
24 comments (latest 2 years ago)
Cours marketing/communication part II
Posted on June 13, 2007
15 comments (latest 2 years ago)

More information

This post is public
All rights reserved
  1. 6 people added it to their favorites
  2. Read 2 619 times

Of Stones, Pebbles and Sand. What are the Stones in your Life?

Saturday October 13, 2007 at 04:07PM

One day, an old professor of the School of Public Management in France, was invited to lecture on the topic of “Efficient Time Management” in front of a group of 15 executive managers representing the largest, most successful companies in America. The lecture was one in a series of 5 lectures conducted in one day, and the old professor was given 1 hr to lecture.

Standing in front of this group of elite managers, who were willing to write down every word that would come out of the famous professor’s mouth, the professor slowly met eyes with each manager, one by one, and finally said, “we are going to conduct an experiment”.

From under the table that stood between the professor and the listeners, the professor pulled out a big glass jar and gently placed it in front of him. Next, he pulled out from under the table a bag of stones, each the size of a tennis ball, and placed the stones one by one in the jar. He did so until there was no room to add another stone in the jar. Lifting his gaze to the managers, the professor asked, “Is the jar full?” The managers replied, “Yes”.

The professor paused for a moment, and replied, “Really?”

Once again, he reached under the table and pulled out a bag full of pebbles. Carefully, the professor poured the pebbles in and slightly rattled the jar, allowing the pebbles to slip through the larger stones, until they settled at the bottom. Again, the professor lifted his gaze to his audience and asked, “Is the jar full?”

At this point, the managers began to understand his intentions. One replied, “apparently not!”

“Correct”, replied the old professor, now pulling out a bag of sand from under the table. Cautiously, the professor poured the sand into the jar. The sand filled up the spaces between the stones and the pebbles.

Yet again, the professor asked, “Is the jar full?”
Without hesitation, the entire group of students replied in unison, “NO!”

“Correct”, replied the professor. And as was expected by the students, the professor reached for the pitcher of water that was on the table, and poured water in the jar until it was absolutely full. The professor now lifted his gaze once again and asked, “What great truth can we surmise from this experiment?”

With his thoughts on the lecture topic, one manager quickly replied, “We learn that as full as our schedules may appear, if we only increase our effort, it is always possible to add more meetings and tasks.”

“No”, replied the professor. The great truth that we can conclude from this experiment is:

If we don’t put all the larger stones in the jar first, we will never be able to fit all of them later.

The auditorium fell silent, as every manager processed the significance of the professor’s words in their entirety.

The old professor continued, “What are the large stones in your life? Health? Family? Friends? Your goals? Doing what you love? Fighting for a Cause? Taking time for yourself?”

What we must remember is that it is most important to include the lager stones in our lives, because if we don’t do so, we are likely to miss out on life altogether. If we give priority to the smaller things in life (pebbles & sand), our lives will be filled up with less important things, leaving little or no time for the things in our lives that are most important to us. Because of this, never forget to ask yourself,

What are the Large Stones in your Life?
And once you identify them, be sure to put them first in your “Jar of Life”.

With a warm wave of his hand, the professor bid farewell to the managers, and slowly walked out of the room.

 

Take care of the large stones first - the things that REALLY matter. Set your priorities. The rest are just pebbles and sand. If you put the sand or the pebbles into the jar first, there will be no room left for the stones.

The same goes for your life. If you spend all your energy and time on the small stuff, you will never have room for things that are truly most important.

Pay attention to the things that are critical in your life. Take time to play with your children. Take your partner out for dinner. Take time to have a chat with your loved ones. There will always be time to go to work, clean the house and give a dinner party.

Sometimes the less important things in life can distract us, filling up our time and keeping us away from what really matters. I encourage you to take a moment and ask yourself, is your jar of life full of sand & pebbles or is it filled with large stones?

copy/pasted from http://justinlim.wordpress.com/2006/11/28/


[FR] une restranscription en français est disponible ici.

 

16 Comments / add your comment?

Bigoode [Degel] says:
Then Bigoode came, took a can of beer and ended to fill up the jar, smiled, and said, after all these tasks and problems, there is still a place for a good beer !


Shine on !!!


FR

ensuite Bigoode s'est levé, à pris une cannette de Kro, l'ouvrit et la vida dans le pot en disant
"apres toutes ces taches et ces tracas, il reste toujours un peu de place pour une bonne bière"

hi hi hi !!

Surtout une bière de St OMER !!!!
Posted 2 years ago. ( permalink / translate )
Christophe Ruellepro replies:
LOL. D'ailleurs c'était pas des pierres dans le pot mais des bouteilles et des canettes ;)
Posted 2 years ago. ( permalink / translate )
Christophe Ruelle edited this comment 2 years ago.
Bigoode [Degel] replies:
Et des mignonettes aussi !!

mais à St Omer on sait tout ca bien sur ....

--
Seen in my account recent activity (?)
Posted 2 years ago. ( permalink / translate )
Evelyne Colepro says:
It is a ver very good piece of information about management you recount here, Christophe. Thank you for putting this in. I hope everybody will read it or at least skim it. It is not new but well re-introduced. As you asked a question, I'll answer it. My biggest stone is health but you will not know if you see me. At the end, I always bottle in everything, even if it is not in the order wanted (as you said little pebbles are not as important) and in quite due time. Late better than never.
Posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
Michael B.pro says:
Great story, full of wisdom. Thanks for sharing!
Posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
Roberto Ballerini - travelingpro says:
Posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
Wiki Tangopro says:
A great metaphor! Very wise.

--
Coming from a blog (?)
Posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
Jochen says:
I knew the story already, but you should remember it from time to time, and read it ..
Posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
Danypro says:
:) good to remember, thanks for that
--
Seen in a user home page (?)
Posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
Robin Marty says:
interressant
Posted 2 years ago. ( permalink / translate )
SublimeImage says:
poignant, thoughtful and full of wisdom, thank you for sharing this, it is very meaningful.
Posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
melissa says:
we should remember this from time to time.
thanks for sharing:-)
Posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
Scab... Ange & Démon... ♀pro says:
connaissait, celle-là !! c'est une bonne théorie, faut il encore la mettre en pratique !!
Posted 2 years ago. ( permalink / translate )
scratchypro says:
it's so easy to make mountains out of mole hills. I've been doing too much of it.Why are the rolling stones still together and the beatles,...
Posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
Дон Андре says:
But it also means that sometimes we've got to shake our lifes, our priorities and our goals such that the small things can flow through. Otherwise they'll just stay on top. Is this true?
Posted 21 months ago. ( permalink )
Christophe Ruellepro replies:
Héhé this is very true Don Andre. Let's shake! Let's crush ;)
Posted 21 months ago. ( permalink )

Add your comment

Reply to this comment

Edit your comment

Please sign in to post a comment Sign in now?


rss Latest comments – Subscribe to the feed of comments related to this post.

 

Català | Čeština | 中文 | Deutsch | English | Español | Esperanto | Ελληνικά | Français | Galego | Italiano | Nederlands | Português | Svenska ny | More...