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Motivational/Inspirational Ideas |
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Profound Thought:
"No matter what he
does, every person on Earth plays a central role
in the history of the world. And normally he
doesn't know it." -- Paulo Coehlo, Brazilian
novelist
When we ordinary
people think
about the great inventors, scientists, business
moguls, writers, explorers and leaders from
history it would be easy to conclude that our
own lives are small and insignificant. We are
not in the same league as Leonardo da Vinci,
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Thomas Edison, Thomas
Jefferson, Bill Gates or the other great
achievers we have heard about. A diligent
researcher could list 20,000 humans whose
achievements have been dramatic and remarkable.
But 20,000 is a small number when compared to
the 10 billion humans who have lived to
adulthood in the saga of humankind.
This line of
thinking suggest that the most notable movers
and shakers among us number only 2 people out of
each million. How significant are the rest of
us? Well, let's take a look. Each of the 20,000
anointed ones had parents, grandparents, great
grandparents and so forth. Without parents there
never would have been a Marie Curie or Howard
Hughes or John Paul Getty. Nor do great people
operate in a vacuum. How large was the
supporting cast that made it possible—one idea
piled on another...plus all the teachers,
suppliers and other necessary community
members—for Guglielmo Marconi to be credited
with inventing radio or Orville and Wilbur
Wright to be credited with inventing the
airplane?
Written history
doesn't extend back to the time when the wheel
or agriculture or animal husbandry were invented
or when metals were first refined and shaped
into cutting implements. The path that led
humanity to where we are today is interwoven
with more complexity than anyone can possibly
imagine. Who would have worked on developing
computers or software if there were not a market
for these devices. Yes, the public plays a role.
We are consumers. We are the fabric of society.
We matter.
The telescope would
have been invented with or without Galileo.
Dynamite would have been developed with or
without Alfred Nobel. Alfred Einstein made a
giant intellectual leap in 1905 when he
published his first paper on special relativity.
But this concept would have been figured out by
someone else if Einstein had not beaten the
others to the punch.
As Paulo Coehlo
says, we all play a role. Whether a man dies on
a battlefield or lives in poverty in Africa or
teaches chemistry at a university in America, in
each case he is a part of the whole.
No one man or woman
is 100% essential. The Apollo 13 movie could
have been made with or without Tom Hanks. We are
not all stars, but at least we are stagehands
or
extras in
the drama of life. In some way—even if it's
obscure and unnoticed, we all matter.
Moreover, we
sometimes find ourselves in a position where
change is possible. An interesting hand is dealt
to us. When those circumstances come along, we
can change our position, our role and our
prosperity.
Motivation is a
tool we use to influence the way we play the
cards that are dealt to us.
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"Where do we
find these men?"
We are all so different.
Some of us are "up" all the
time and are easily motivated by almost any task, even
by doing the laundry. It's the task itself that inspires
us. A patriotic song or a glimpse of this photo from Iwo
Jima brings tears of inspiration to our
eyes. We remember a line from a good movie. We think a
happy thought.
Here's an absolutely
perfect rendition of Stars and Stripes Forever
one of the most
famous John Phillips Sousa military marches:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h9nbSgzMfcM&feature=related
Other people are hard to
motivate...they seem to be immune to inspiration.
To be a happy person in
general, a friend or spouse who's a pleasure to be with,
a good parent or a successful Vollara distributor, we
have to allow
ourselves to be uplifted in some way. Outside
agents— like a conference call program, an inspirational
church service, a great movie, a news story, an exciting
sports event or even a beautiful sunset—can sometimes
reach into our senses and change us, at least
temporarily.
If we want to be constantly
up, we have to work at it...we have to give fate a hand.
Is it too much to expect anyone to be "constantly" up?
Perhaps it is. Life can hit the best person pretty hard
sometimes. But even during times of tragedy and
disappointment, it's still better to be "up" than
"down."
Each of us, in our own way,
has to find our own hot button and push it often. This
page contains some ideas.
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short, powerful, spectacular - also
available on DVD from book stores, your library or Amazon
"Think and Grow Rich" by Napoleon
Hill - This link has quotes from the book
"Most great people have attained
their greatest success
just one step beyond their greatest
failure."
"No man
is every whipped until he quits in his own mind."
"Strength and growth come only
through
continuous effort and struggle."
"Obstacles are those frightful things
you see
when you take your eyes off your
goal."
"There is no man living who cannot do
more than he thinks he can."
"Thinking is the hardest work there
is, which is
probably the reason so few engage in
it."
"Wealth, like happiness, is never
attained when sought after directly.
It comes as a by-product of providing
a useful service."
"What's right about America is that
although we have a mess of
problems, we have great capacity - intellect and resources - to do something about them."
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"Anyone who stops learning is old,
whether at twenty of eighty. Anyone
who keeps learning stays young. The greatest thing in life is to keep your mind young."
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Amazing - The most amazing 2-minute
stage show you will ever see.
Impossible Quick Change Artistry -
video
Training - W. Clement Stone - 8:59 -
Make a Positive Statement followed by an Affirmative Question
The story of Sir Ernest Shakleton
and the Endurance - stranded in Antarctia
Stranded for 500 days - most
amazing survival story ever recorded
Jim Rohn - "The Day That Turns Your
Life Around" - starts with "disgust"
From Chippynews.com, Five
Promises Presentation
"Once you make a decision, the
universe conspires
to make it happen." - Ralph Waldo
Emerson
"Events are already conspiring to
bring Vollara to
its envisioned place. We hereby
invite you to
be a part of this inevitability." -
Bob "Vollara" Giddens
Businessman - 2005 Commencement
Address - Steve Jobs - co-founder of Apple and Pixar
Children's books - "The Little Engine
That Could" by Mary Jacobs
In this
tale, a little railroad engine was used at a train yard
for moving a few cars at a time from train to train. One morning
it was waiting for its next assignment when a long and heavy
train asked a large engine in the roundhouse to take it over the
hill. "I can't; that is too much a pull for me," said the great
engine built for hard work. Then the train asked another engine,
and another, only to hear excuses and be refused. In
desperation, the train asked the little switch engine to pull it
up the grade and down on the other side. "I think I can," puffed
the little locomotive, as he put himself in front of the
great train. As it went on the little engine kept bravely
puffing faster and faster, "I think I can, I think I can, I
think I can," he said. As it neared the top of the grade, which
had so discouraged the larger engines, it went more slowly. But
the train kept bravely saying, "I--think--I--can,
I--think--I--can." It reached the top and then went on down the
grade, congratulating itself by saying, "I thought I could, I
thought I could."
Handicap
Story - Jason McElwain basketball miracle -
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1fw1CcxCUgg
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Anonymous Poem -
Hoe to the End of the Row! |
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Bill Brown made a
million,
Bill Brown, think of that.
That boy you remember,
As poor as a rat.
He hoed for the
neighbors,
Did jobs by the day.
And Bill made a million,
Or near it they say.
He worked for my father,
You’ll maybe recall.
He wasn’t a wonder,
Not that, not at all.
He couldn’t out-hoe me,
Or cover more ground,
Or hoe any faster,
Or beat me around.
In fact, I was better
In one way that I know.
One toot from the kitchen
And home I would go.
But Bill Brown always
hoed
To the end of the row.
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We used to get hungry
Out there in the corn.
You talk about music,
What equals a horn?
A horn yellin’ dinner,
And tomatoes and beans,
And pork and potatoes,
And gravy and greens.
I ain’t blamin’ no one
For quittin’ on time.
To quit with the whistle,
That ain’t any crime.
But as for the million,
Well, this much I know.
Bill Brown always hoed
To the end of the row.
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Patriotism - As the movie
adaptation of James Michener’s book, The Bridges at Toko Ri,
is ending, a Navy Admiral is reflecting on the sacrifice of
airmen who had been given the mission to destroy a heavily
defended bridge during the Korean War. The men were
successful, but at the cost of their lives, leading the
Admiral to famously ask: “Where do we get these men?”
In looking for the source of this
line, I found a poem that written by an "unknown" 12-year
old girl in 1966. That's the attribution the web site
offers. I can only suppose that this girl's father had
fought in World War II or possibly Korea. The movie
mentioned above came out in 1954. Maybe this young girl was
inspired by that movie.
"WHO ARE THESE MEN ?"
Who are these men who march so proud,
Who quietly weep, eyes closed, head bowed?
These are the men who once were boys,
Who missed out on youth and all it's joys.
Who are these men with aged faces,
Who silently count the empty spaces?
These are the men who gave their all,
Who fought for their country for freedom for all.
Who are these men with sorrowful look
Who can still remember the lives that were took?
These are the men who saw young men die,
The price of peace is always high.
Who are these men who in the midst of pain,
Whispered comfort to those they would not see again?
These are the men whose hands held tomorrow,
Who brought back our future with blood tears and sorrow.
Who are these men who promise to keep
Alive in their hearts the ones God holds asleep?
These are the men to whom I promise again:
'Veterans',my friends-I will remember them !.
Giddens
Email
Sixty-seven
people qualified for a GMI bonus in that
program's first month, which was March 2011.
Folks, we are at rock bottom as a
company--an incredible, once in a lifetime
opportunity.
Spring 2011 is
earlier in the Vollara game than when I
joined Alpine (which was
amazing and wonderful) and way
earlier than when I joined Shaklee.
I'll bet 50,000
people have said or thought, "I wish I had
been in Alpine when Bob Giddens got
started." I'll bet 2 million have said or
thought, "I wish I'd known about Amway or
Shaklee or XXXX when those companies were
just getting started."
I want to
repeat two of the above paragraphs: We're at
rock bottom as a company--an incredible,
once in a lifetime opportunity. Right now is
earlier in the Vollara game than when I
joined Alpine (which was
amazing and wonderful). And way
earlier than when I joined Shaklee.
I'll bet 50,000 people have said or thought,
"I wish I had been in Alpine when Bob
Giddens got started." I'll bet 2 million
have said or thought, "I wish I'd known
about Amway or Shaklee or XXXX when those
companies were just getting started."
Those 2 million
represent a pool of prospects we have to go
after! They need to hear our story, our
vision. Some are already in our groups but
they are too focused on the problems (their
own economic plight or company issues) and
not focused enough on the amazing
opportunity. What can we do to shock these
people into a realization of what is lying
on their doorstep???
A super ambitious
type person who has dreamed of being at or
near the top of an MLM company has that
opportunity today...to a degree I've never
seen before
Here's my list of
qualifications:
(a)
get your belief, vision and
attitude in order
(d) have some
promotional instincts
(e) have a little
luck and
(f) don't have a
big dose of bad luck
(g)
Commit to the products and
buy a Fast Start Pack
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