Everything begins in the heart and mind. Every great achievement
began in the mind of one person. They dared to dream, to believe that it
was possible. Take some time to allow yourself to ask “What if?” Think
big.
Don’t let negative thinking discourage you.
You want to be a “dreamer.” Dream of the possibilities for yourself,
your family and for others. If you had a dream that you let grow cold,
re-ignite the dream! Fan the flames. Life is too short to let it go.
Yes,
your dream needs to be big.
It needs to be something that is seemingly beyond your capabilities.
But it also must be believable. You must be able to say that if certain
things take place, if others help, if you work hard enough, though it is
a big dream, it can still be done. Good example: A person with no
college education can dream that he will build a $50 million-a-year
company. That is big, but believable. Bad example: That a 90-year-old
woman with arthritis will someday run a marathon in under three hours.
It is big all right, but also impossible. She should instead focus on
building a $50 million-a-year business! And she better get a move on!
The great achievers have a habit. They “see” things. They picture
themselves walking around their CEO office in their new $25 million
corporate headquarters, even while they are sitting on a folding chair
in their garage “headquarters.” Great free-throw shooters in the NBA
picture the ball going through the basket. PGA golfers picture the ball
going straight down the fairway. World-class speakers picture themselves
speaking with energy and emotion. All of this grooms the mind to
control the body to carry out the dream.
One reason many dreams never go anywhere is because the dreamer keeps
it all to himself. It is a quiet dream that only lives inside of his
mind. The one who wants to
achieve their dream
must tell that dream to many people. One reason: As we continually say
it, we begin to believe it more and more. If we are talking about it
then it must be possible. Another reason: It holds us accountable. When
we have told others, it spurs us on to actually doing it so we don’t
look foolish.
Every dream must take the form of a plan. The old saying that you
“get what you plan for” is so true. Your dream won’t just happen. You
need to sit down, on a regular basis, and plan out your strategy for
achieving the dream. Think through all of the details.
Break the whole plan down into small, workable parts. Then set a time frame for accomplishing each task on your “dream plan.”
Boy, wouldn’t life be grand if we could quit before this one!
Unfortunately the successful are usually the hardest workers. While the
rest of the world is sitting on their sofas watching reruns of
Gilligan's Island,
achievers are working on their goal—achieving their dream. I have an
equation that I work with: Your short-term tasks, multiplied by time,
equal your long-term accomplishments. If you work on it each day,
eventually you will achieve your dream.
War and Peace was written, in longhand, page by page.
When you have reached your goal and you are living your dream, be
sure to enjoy it. In fact, enjoy the trip, too. Give yourself some
rewards along the way. Give yourself a huge reward when you get there.
Help others enjoy it.
Be gracious and generous. Use your dream to better others. Then go back to No. 1. And dream a little bigger this time!
Very be a message, I will take it as benchmark to arrive from my destination.
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