"Your time is limited, so don't waste it living someone else's life. Don't be trapped by dogma - which is living with the results of other people's thinking. Don't let the noise of other's opinions drown out your own inner voice. And most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary."
Learn How to Live your Own Live by Napoleon Hill,
"You will never find peace of mind by allowing other people to live your life for you.
The most profound fact concerning humanity is this: The Creator gave us the complete,
unchallengeable right of prerogative over one thing, and only one thing—our own
mind. It must have been the creator’s purpose to encourage us to live our
own lives, to thinks our own thoughts, without interference from others.
Otherwise we would not have been provided with such a clear dominion over our
minds.
Simply by exercising this profound prerogative over your own
mind and life, you may lift yourself to great heights of achievement in any
field of endeavor you choose. Exercising this prerogative is the only real
approach to genius. A genius is simply one who has taken full possession of his
own choosing, without permitting outside influences to discourage or mislead
him.
We all know stories about famous people who turned adversity
into advantage, who overcame great obstacles to become rich and famous. They
are the successful people who converted stumbling blocks into steppingstones.
They become the geniuses of industry, the Henry Fords, the Thomas Edisons, the
Andrew Carnegies and the Wilbur and Orville Wrights.
But there is a far greater number of lesser-known mortals
who refuse to accept defeat. They simply refuse to become one of the vast
majority who do little more than eke out a living and experience mostly misery,
disappointment and failure.
Many years ago, a young army veteran came to see me about a
job. He told me he was disillusioned and discouraged; all he wanted out of life
was a meal ticket, a place to sleep, and enough to eat.
He had a look in his eyes –a sort of glassy stare—that told
me he thought hope was dead. Here was a perfectly capable young man who was willing
to settle for practically nothing when I knew very well that if he changed his
attitude he could earn a fortune.
There was something about him, an almost hidden spark that
prompted me to ask, “How would you like to become a multimillionaire? Why
settle for a meager existence when you can just as easily settle for millions?”
“Don’t joke with me,” he replied. “I am hungry and I need a
job.”
“I am not making fun,” I replied. “I am dead serious. You
can earn millions if you only are willing to use the assets you now have”.
“What do you mean, assets?” he exclaimed. “I have nothing
but the clothes on my back!”
Gradually, over the course of our conversation, I learned
that this young man had been a Fuller Brush salesman before he went into the
army. While in the service he had done considerable K.P. duty, and had learned
to cook rather well. In other words, besides the natural attributes of a
healthy body and a potentially positive mind, his total assets consisted of the
fact that he could cook food and he could sell.
Generally, of course, neither selling nor cooking will
propel a person into the ranks multimillionaires, but this veteran took himself
out of the ordinary walks of life. He was introduced to his own mind and the
possibilities that excited when he took control of it.
In the two hours I spent with this young man, I watched him
change from a person lost in a sea of despair in a possibility thinker. He did
it all with the strength of one idea. “Why don’t you use your selling ability
to persuade housewives to invite their neighbors over for a home-cooked dinner,
then sell them all cookware?”
I advanced him enough money to buy some clothes, and the utensils,
then turned him loose. During his first week, he cleared nearly $100 selling
aluminum cookware. Then next week he doubled that amount. Then he began to
train other salespeople who worked for him selling the same cookware.
At the end of four years, he was earning more than a million
dollars a year and had set in motion a new selling plan that has since evolved
into an industry in its own right. When the ties that bind a human mind are
broken and a man is introduced to himself—the real self that has no
limitations—I fancy that the gates of shake with and the bells of heaven ring
with joy!"
*Original article by Napoleon Hill in “Napoleon Hill’s A Year of Growing Rich”
More to follow. . .
*Original article by Napoleon Hill in “Napoleon Hill’s A Year of Growing Rich”
More to follow. . .
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