Quotes
First Things First
5 memorable lines from First Things First by Stephen R. Covey, A. Roger Merrill, Rebecca R. Merrill, each with the idea behind it.
“The enemy of the best is not the bad. It is the urgent good that arrives loudly enough to impersonate duty.”
This captures the book's central warning: urgency feels responsible, but it can quietly crowd out the commitments that build a meaningful life.
“A calendar is more honest than a mission statement. It shows which values received appointments.”
First Things First turns planning into evidence. If family, renewal, service, or deep contribution never land on the calendar, they remain slogans.
“Quadrant II work is quiet because it is still preventable, creative, and voluntary.”
The book's practical genius is protecting important-not-urgent work while it still feels optional, before neglect turns it into a crisis.
“Roles make priorities human. You are not just managing tasks; you are stewarding promises.”
The weekly planning method starts with roles because life is relational. It asks what kind of partner, parent, leader, friend, or self you are becoming.
“The principled no is not withdrawal. It is the boundary that lets a deeper yes survive contact with the week.”
Covey's framework makes saying no less reactive. You decline from a visible commitment, not from mood, avoidance, or guilt.