Sunday, December 19, 2010

FOR A BETTER WAY TO LIVE (RULE THREE)


For a Better Way to Live

Whenever you make a mistake or get knocked down by life, don't look back at it too long. Mistakes are life's way of teaching you. Your capacity for occasional blunders is inseparable from your capacity to reach your goals. No one wins them all, and your failures, when they happen, are just part of your growth. Shake off your blunders. How will you know your limits without an occasional failure? Never quit. Your turn will come.

You learn much more from failures than success. Success sometimes would tend to let you be complacent in life.

When Manny Pacquiao has his training he trains like crazy although it is said by his coach that they have the great advantage over his opponent. Why is he doing this? Manny is not giving-in to the temptation of being complacent. Perhaps, he's thinking “not a chance for my opponent - bring it on!”

Failures will sink in every now and then to check how are you doing with life, and if you're not yet then more failures will come until you learn and finally succeed.

Just try to imagine if a child practicing baby steps and after she fell several times would just say “well, perhaps I am not destined to walk all my life. So I'll just stay here and be like this.”

But she's not!

You see, a baby after several failures of trying to walk is now happily scampering the a playground area in school or in your house.

Now, are you a baby? Certainly not! If a baby can do it, so why can't you?

Surely there are lots of stories to prove you that failure is a key to success – but it won't unless you believe in it and allow it.

It is said that calm seas never make a skillful sailor, turbulent does. One of the great sailor moguls in the world are the Vikings. They almost have sees connected to their own system that it made them who they are as conquerors and sailors. It is said that the “north wind (a turbulent hurricane-like winds) made the Vikings.”

You'll never be successful unless you'll learn to deal with failures.


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