The 48 Laws Of Power

(Utkarsh JhaWsTmab) #1

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

LAW 23 I 75
Free download pdf