Dare To Dream
by gcot
Filed under Success Tips
To succeed, you need to have dreams and aspirations. Be honest with yourself as to what you want out of life and what you want to give of your life. Allow your mind to dream and think big.
Don’t Look Back
by gcot
Filed under Success Tips
Everyone has failures or mistakes from the past. To have success, you need to learn from your past and value those difficult lessons but do not ever dwell on the past. Simply move forward and make better, more educated decisions from the lessons learned.
Realize Your Potential
by gcot
Filed under Success Tips
In order to succeed at anything, you need to see that you have the potential to reach your goals. For example, if you want to be a recording artist but have no singing ability, having success in this field is not likely. However, if you love working on cars and have a real talent for fixing engines and transmissions, and to you, success would mean working for NASCAR, you have potential to learn and achieve that success.
The Blessing in Adversity
by gcot
Filed under Food For Thought
Guess Article By Michael Angier
“The pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; the optimist, the opportunity in every difficulty.”
When I was about five years old, I lived with my family in Enterprise, Alabama for a few months while my father attended an advanced aviation course at nearby Fort Rucker.
What makes Enterprise, Alabama especially memorable is a strange monument they have in the middle of town. You can’t miss it. In fact, you have to drive around it because it sits right in the middle of the road. The monument is a statue to the boll weevil.
It’s probably the only monument in the world erected in honor of an insect. It certainly wasn’t done because of its aesthetic value– the boll weevil is a particularly ugly-looking creature. Surprisingly, it was erected because of the devastation the boll weevil caused to the cotton crops of the surrounding area.
Why did they honor this pest? Well, had it not been for the boll weevil, the local economy would have continued its unhealthy dependence on its one-crop, one-product economy.
Until then, everything depended entirely on cotton. When the boll weevil came, the farmers and all the other businesses that were reliant on the cotton farmers were forced to recognize the need to diversify.
In the long run, they saw that the boll weevil had, in fact, done them a favor by destroying their crops. No longer were their eggs all in one “cotton basket.” They started raising hogs, peanuts and other cash crops, and the entire area was better off for it.
I think it is to those southern farmers’ great credit that they were able to see this “adversity” for what it really was–a great blessing. Too often, we see difficult times as something to avoid–something only to endure. We usually don’t see the benefit until much later–if at all.
If we look back at the things in our lives that were the most trying, the most painful and frustrating, we have to admit that there was value in it. If you can’t see this, you’re either too close to the situation or are too upset to see clearly.
Our lives are far more enjoyable–certainly more instructional–if we view each thing that happens to us as just that–a happening.
Remember, it’s not what happens to us, but our response to what happens to us that makes the difference in the quality of our lives. I believe that everything that happens can be a lesson; every adversity can be a blessing. The following story illustrates this well.
Anthony Burgess discovered he had a brain tumor and only six months to live when he was 40 years old. He was distressed that he had nothing to leave his wife who was soon to become a widow. He decided to write– something he’d always wanted to do. The potential royalty from a book was the only thing he could think of doing to leave any kind of financial security for his family.
By the end of the first year and with no certainty that he would ever be published, he finished five novels. But he did not die.
His cancer went into remission and then disappeared altogether.
In his long and full life, Anthony Burgess went on to write more than 70 books. With out the death sentence from cancer, he might not have written anything.
Next time things don’t seem to be going the way you want, ask yourself what the positive aspect is. What’s the benefit in the adversity?
You’ll have greater enjoyment and learn more in the process.
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Michael Angier is founder and CIO
(Chief Inspiration Officer) of SuccessNet –a support network helping people and businesses grow and prosper. Get their free Resource Book ($27 value) of products, services and tools for running your business more effectively. And most of the over 150 resources are FREE to access and use. Click Here for Details.
Be Happy Do Something
by gcot
Filed under Food For Thought, Inspirational
In case you haven’t seen it, here’s an uplifting 3-minute video I think you’ll like.
A great hump day motivator, I hope you enjoy it.
















