itwasthesecretofhissuccessonthebattlefield.Buthis
willpower
andhis
mindwere
equally
modeledonthisnotion.
Single-mindedness
of
purpose,
totalconcentrationonthe
goal,
andtheuseofthese
qualifiesagainstpeo
ple
less
focused,
people
ina
stateofdistraction—suchanarrowwillfindits
mark
every
timeandoverwhelmthe
enemy.
Casanovaattributedhissuccessinlifetohis
ability
toconcentrateona
single
goal
and
push
atituntilit
yielded.
Itwashis
ability
to
give
himself
over
completely
tothewomenhe
desired
thatmadehim
so
intensely
se-
ducfive.
Fortheweeksormonthsthat
oneofthesewomen
livedin
his
orbit,
he
thought
ofnooneelse.Whenhewas
imprisoned
inthetreacher-
ous“leads”ofthe
doge’spalace
in
Venice,
a
prison
fromwhichnoonehad
ever
escaped,
heconcentratedhismindonthe
singlegoal
of
escape,day
after
day.
A
change
of
cells,
whichmeantthatmonthsof
digging
hadall
beenfor
naught,
didnot
discourage
him;
he
persisted
and
eventually
es-
caped.
“I
have
always
believed,”
helater
wrote,
“thatwhen
a
man
gets
it
intohisheadtodo
something,
andwhenhe
exclusivelyoccupies
himselfin
that
design,
hemust
succeed,
whateverthediliiculties.Thatmanwillbe-
comeGrandVizieror
Pope.”
ConcentrateC 1 a
singlegoal,
a
single
task,
andbeatitintosubmission.
Intheworldof
poweryou
will
constantly
need
help
fromother
people,
usually
thosemore
powerful
than
you.
Thefoolflitsfromone
person
toan-
other,
believing
thathewillsurvive
byspreading
himselfout.Itisacorol-
lary
ofthelawof
concentration,however,
that
much
energy
is
saved,
and
more
power
is
attained,
byaffixingyourself
toa
single,appropriate
source
of
power.
ThescientistNikolaTesla.minedhimself
bybelieving
thathe
somehowmaintainedhis
independenceby
not
having
toservea
single
master.Heeventurneddown P.
Morgan,
whoofferedhimarichcon-
tract.Inthe
end,
Tesla’s
“independence”
meantthathecould
depend
on
no
singlepatron,
butwas
alwayshaving
to
toadyup
to
a
dozenofthem.
Laterinhislifeherealizedhismistake.
Allthe
great
Renaissance
painters
andwriterswrestledwiththis
prob-
lem,
none more so than the
sixteenth-century
writer Pietro Aretino.
Throughout
hislifeAretinosufferedthe
indignities
of
having
to
please
this
prince
andthat.At
last,
he
hadhad
enough,
and
decidedtowooCharles
V,
promising
the
emperor
theservicesofhis
powerful
pen.
He
finally
dis-
coveredthefreedomthatcamefrom attachmenttoa
single
source of
power.Michelangelo
foundthisfreedomwith
PopeJulius
II,
Galileowith
theMedicis.Inthe
end,
the
singiepatronappreciatesyourloyalty
andbe-
comes
dependent
on
your
services;
inthe
long
runthemasterservesthe
slave.
Finally,power
itself
always
existsinconcentratedforms.In
anyorga-
nizationitisinevitableforasmall
youp
toholdthe
strings.
Andoftenitis
notthosewiththetitles.Inthe
game
of
power,only
thefoolllailsabout
without
fixing
his
target.
You
mustfind
out
who
controls
the
operations,
who
isthe
realdirector
behindthe
scenes.
As
Richelieudiscovered
at
the
beginning
ofhisrisetothe
top
oftheFrench
political
scene
during
the
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