The 48 Laws Of Power

(Utkarsh JhaWsTmab) #1

deceit
(see


Law
21,
SeemDumberThanYour

Mark).

Andeven
genuine

naivetéisnotfreeofthesnaresof
power.


Children
may

benaivein
many

ways,


but
they

often
act
from
an
elementalneed
to
gain

controloverthose

aroundthem.
Children
suffer


greatly

from

feelingpowerless

in
theadult

world,


and

they

use
any

meansavailableto
get

their

way.Genuinely

inno-

cent


peoplemay

stillbe

playing

for
power,

andareoften
horribly

effective

atthe
game,


since

they

arenothindered

by

reflection.Once

again,

those

whomake
ashowor


display

ofinnocencearetheleastinnocentofall.

Youcan

recognize

these

supposednonplayersby

the

waythey

flaunt

theirmoral


qualities,

their

piety,

their

exquisite

senseof

justice.

Butsince

allofus


hunger

for
power,

andalmostallofouractionsareaimedat

gain-

ing
it,
the


nonplayers

are

merelythrowing

dust
inour

eyes,distracting

us

from
their


powerplays

with
theirairofmoral

superiority.

If
you

observe

them


closely,you

willseeinfactthat

they

areoftentheonesmostskillfulat

indirect


manipuiation,

evenifsomeofthem
practice

it

unconsciously.

And

they

greatly

resent

anypublicizing

ofthetactics

they

use

everyday.

Iftheworldislikea

giantscheming

courtandweare

trapped

inside
it,

thereisnousein
trying

to
opt

outofthe
game.

Thatwill
only

render
you

powerless,

and

powerlessness

willmake
you

miserable.
Insteadof
strug-

glingagainst

the
inevitable,
insteadof

arguing

and
whining

and

feeling

guilty,

itisfarbettertoexcelat
power.

In

fact,

thebetter
you

areat

dealing

with
power,

thebetter
friend,lover,
husband,wife,
and
personyou

be

come.

Byfollowing

the
route
of
the

perfect

courtier
(see
Law
24)you

learn

tomakeothersfeelbetterabout

themselves,

becoming

a
sourceof

pleasure

tothem.
They

will
grow

dependent

on
your

abilitiesanddesirousof
your

presence.Bymastering

the 48 lawsinthis
book,
you
spare

othersthe
pain

thatcomesfrom

bungling

with

power—~byplaying

withfirewithoutknow-

ing

its

properties.

If
the
game

of
power

is

inescapable,

bettertobeanartist

than2.denierora

bungler.

Learning

the
game

of

powerrequires

acertain
way

of

looking

atthe
world,

a

shifting

of

perspective.

It
takeseffort
and
years

of

practice,

formuch
of

the
game
may

notcome

naturally.

Certainbasicskillsare

required,

and

once
you

mastertheseskills
you

willbeableto

apply

thelawsof
power

more
easily.

Themost
important

ofthese

skills,

and

power’s

crucial
foundation,

is

the

ability

tomaster
your

emotions.
An
emotional
response

toa.situationis

the

singlegreatest

barrierto
power,

amistakethatwillcost
you

alotmore

than
any
temporary

satisfaction
you

mightgainby

expressingyour

feel-

ings.


Emotionscloud
reason,
andif
you

cannotseethesituation

clearly,

you

cannot
prepare

forand

respond

toitwith
any

degree

ofcontrol.

Anger

isthe
mostdestructiveofemotional
responses,

forit
clouds

your

visionthemost.Italsohasa

ripple

effectthat

invariably

makessitua-

tionslesscontrollableand

heightensyour

enemy’s

resolve.If
you

are
try»

ing

to

destroy

an
enemy

whohashurt
you,

farbetterto

keep

him
off—guard

byfeigning

friendlinessthan

showingyouranger.

l

The
old)“
means
in
gum

mmismain‘with
people

are
fr7l‘1."£’
um]
czmni/lg.

Lowa/xv,
/heysay;
but

[/10]is/0wail
for

sunshine.
and
life

needs

every‘
moment.

JUHANN
vow
(‘nomm-..

l749»—
1
832

Thearrowrim!
by
tile

zzrdrc-rrn1l_,v


or
may

not

kill(I
.i~/'n;:le
fI(‘I'\’(m.

Hm

.¢rr(zI¢r;,Wn.s'


rleviwri
by

(I

Wm’mancanlullwe-n

hr]/)f’S
in
I/1:‘womb.

KAt
:
rn.rA.

lNI.|lI\N
l’ll|Lf)SUl’lllK.

‘Illlltl)(’l,'\"ll?llY
li.(‘.

Pl-REFACE rile
Free download pdf