Top 10 Inspirational Biographies
Inconsistency is one of the worst enemies to success. If you have a goal, don't start and stop all of the time. Doing small consistent things will allow you to accomplish much more than if you did large inconsistent things. Consistency will create momentum in your efforts and before long you will see that it's much easier to accomplish your goals.
You may not like being accountable to someone but it will do wonders in you reaching your goals. It can be easy at times to slack off and not put in your full effort if you know that you are not accountable to anyone. However, if you are accountable to someone, you will be much more likely to go above and beyond what is needed of you to succeed. You can probably remember those days when you were in school and the teacher handed you your test. The big red letter was circled at the top, to make sure that you didn't miss it, to let you know how well, or how poorly, you had done. All throughout the test were red marks telling you where you had made a mistake.
It's no wonder that most of us spend a great deal of our time thinking about the mistakes we make in life. The time that we spent in school, and probably most of the time growing up, and how our parents treated us, taught us to focus on what we had done wrong. And not only did we focus on the mistakes we had made, we were repeatedly told to stop making them.
Throughout our lives we have come to hate being wrong. We don't enjoy the embarrassment and negative attention that we get from blowing it, so we try to avoid it at all costs. We have been well schooled, and we're very good at, fearing failure. The problem is that it is the fear of failure that causes us to fail in the first place, because we either don't act on our dreams or we quit before we reach them.
You may not like being accountable to someone but it will do wonders in you reaching your goals. It can be easy at times to slack off and not put in your full effort if you know that you are not accountable to anyone. However, if you are accountable to someone, you will be much more likely to go above and beyond what is needed of you to succeed. You can probably remember those days when you were in school and the teacher handed you your test. The big red letter was circled at the top, to make sure that you didn't miss it, to let you know how well, or how poorly, you had done. All throughout the test were red marks telling you where you had made a mistake.
It's no wonder that most of us spend a great deal of our time thinking about the mistakes we make in life. The time that we spent in school, and probably most of the time growing up, and how our parents treated us, taught us to focus on what we had done wrong. And not only did we focus on the mistakes we had made, we were repeatedly told to stop making them.
Throughout our lives we have come to hate being wrong. We don't enjoy the embarrassment and negative attention that we get from blowing it, so we try to avoid it at all costs. We have been well schooled, and we're very good at, fearing failure. The problem is that it is the fear of failure that causes us to fail in the first place, because we either don't act on our dreams or we quit before we reach them.
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