Showing posts with label personal change. Show all posts
Showing posts with label personal change. Show all posts

Friday, November 24, 2017

Motivational Quotes on Living A Determined Life

Motivational Quotations To Spark Inspiration and a Fulfilled Life 

Words and thoughts are often the great seeds that lead to personal change. They are the building blocks that touch, provoke, arouse, and stir the individual passions and desires that stimulate personal inspiration and motivation. 

That’s what we hope to accomplish in our Project You 365 Motivational Quotes series of books — spark inspiration in our readers that motivate positive personal change efforts and results in more people Living A Determined Life.

More specifically, the quotations in 365 Motivational Quotes on Living A Determined Life, have been collated to provide you with a wealth of beliefs and ideas to spark your own personal inspiration for Living A Determined Life, a life framed through self-awareness, mindfulness, being present, peace and peacefulness, love, attaining personal goals, and being connected with your spiritual self.  


Here are some of our favorite quotes from 365 Motivational Quotes on Living A Determined Life

I don't want to get to the end of my life and find that I just lived the length of it. I want to live the width of it as well.
Diane Ackerman

The tragedy of life is not that it ends so soon, but that we wait so long to begin it.

W. M. Lewis 

You only live once, but if you do it right, once is enough.
Mae West

We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give. 
Winston Churchill

Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn’t do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.
Mark Twain 

The unexamined life is not worth living.
Plato

He who knows others is learned; He who knows himself is wise.
Lao-Tzu

He who lives in harmony with himself lives in harmony with the universe.
Marcus Aurelius

Project You: 365 Motivational Quotes on Living a Determined Life is available on Amazon in both paperback ($4.88) and Kindle ($2.99) formats. 



Wednesday, November 22, 2017

Project You 365 Motivational Quotes Series of Books

New Book Series Aims to Inspire and Motivate Personal Growth 

Quotations have long had the power to inspire. 

In fact, there is no innate, overwhelming feeling you can get like the one which arises from reading the words and thoughts of others and instinctively knowing how meaningful and applicable they are to your own situation and life. 

Thus, we are pleased to announce the launch today of our Project You 365 Motivational Quotes series of books. 

The first five books in this series are available now on Amazon in both paperback and Kindle editions. Additional books in the series will become available in the forthcoming months.

 


Being released today are:

Project You: 365 Motivational Quotes for Self Motivation 

Project You: 365 Motivational Quotes for Success 

Project You: 365 Motivational Quotes for Health & Wellness 

Project You: 365 Motivational Quotes for Emotional & Mental Happiness 

Project You: 365 Motivational Quotes for Living A Determined Life 

The purpose of these motivational quote books is to spark inspiration in our readers that motivate positive personal change efforts.

For, as Buddha wrote, “Words have the power to both destroy and heal. When words are both true and kind they change our world.” 

We hope that the motivational quoteations in these books breathe new meaning, courage, action, happiness, peacefulness, and enhanced inner strength into your life, resulting in both continued and personal success. 

Tuesday, January 3, 2017

Make 2017 A Success

Achieving Personal Goals and Staying Motivated 

For many, today is the first "official" day of 2017. The college bowl games are over. Kids are back in school. Most of us are back at our desks and workplaces. 

As such, our attention turns to our personal and professional goals and objectives for 2017.

Here are some tools and tips to help you achieve your personal goals and stay motivated throughout the course of the year, no matter what hurdles or bumps you encounter along the way. 

First, today is the final free day in the Amazon Kindle store for our book Project You: Words of Wisdom. It is the #2 ranked motivational book and the #3 ranked self-help book and you can download a free copy now at: Project You: Words of Wisdom

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00KXHP9TW
#2 Ranked Motivational Book in Amazon Kindle Store 

Additionally, we have three short articles that will help you overcome the mistakes that many people make when setting New Year's Resolutions and other personal goals: 




And lastly, here's a link to our easy-to-use and very helpful Project You personal change action plan template:


We hope these are all useful in helping to make 2017 your best year yet!

Don't forget: download your personal copy of Project You: Words of Wisdom now! 

Best wishes for continued success in 2017. 

Monday, January 2, 2017

Personal Change Action Plan

30-60-90 Action Plan Template for Achieving Personal Goals 

In business there is a saying: what gets measured gets done. 

The same applies to our personal lives, especially when it comes to setting and achieving our New Year's Resolutions.

The help you track and measure progress on your individual goals, we have created the Project You Personal Change Action Plan. This action plan is easy to use and helps you think through the steps and actions needed to achieve any goal or objective over the course of 30, 60, and 90 days. 

It also incorporates the 7 Factors for Successfully Implementing Personal Change, which we wrote about yesterday. You can even modify this personal change template to suit your particular needs. 

You can read and copy our action plan template at this link:  Project You Personal Change Action Plan.  

In addition, we are pleased to share with you two articles that will help you achieve your New Year's Resolutions or any other personal goals you've set for yourself: 




Lastly, to help keep you motivated throughout the year, our book Project You: Words of Wisdom, is available free in the Amazon Kindle store through January 3rd. The paperback version is only $6.45

Currently the #3 motivational book and the #5 self-help book in the Amazon Kindle Store, Project You: Words of Wisdom is full of motivational quotes, tips, and techniques for helping you achieve your 2017 goals and aspirations. To get your copy, click on this link: Project You Words of Wisdom

We wish you continued success in 2017. 




Sunday, January 1, 2017

7 Factors for Successfully Implementing Personal Change

Seven Key Success Factors for Personal Change 


Every time you tear a leaf off a calendar,
you present a new place for new ideas and progress.
Charles Kettering

Happy New Year. A time for starting your personal growth and change actions anew. 

As we wrote in yesterday’s blog post, there are many reasons why personal change initiatives fail.
According to some scientific research, it takes on average 66 days for a new behavior to become a new habit. That’s a little over two months!

No wonder so many people give up and abandon their personal change initiatives before reaching success. They typically quit too early in the process, often because they underestimate the time required to fully inculcate and instill a new behavior or a new change into their daily routines.

Don’t let this happen to you. Here are 7 Key Success Factors you can use to implement any personal change initiative in any aspect of your life. 

1.   Put time aside daily / weekly to review the actions you are taking, to monitor progress towards your goal, to make adjustments in either actions or stipulated deadline as necessary, and to re-commit yourself to achieving your desired outcome. Spend some time to also read some motivational quotes or anything else that personally inspires you. 

2.   Give priority to your personal change initiative over daily tasks. It is far too easy to get overloaded with the necessities and chores of daily life. But the actions on your “to do” list are not moving you in the direction you desired. Create a “Priority To Do” list of the things you need to do in order to achieve your desired outcome. Give this list priority over the things on your daily list. 

3.   Write your personal change goals in a SMART format:
Specific
Measurable
Achievable
Relevant
Time-Framed

This technique has worked well over the years in the business world. Now apply it to your own Project You Personal Change Initiative.

Here’s an example of a not SMART goal:  to lose weight and get in shape.

What is meant by “get in shape?” How much weight needs to be lost? And in what time period?

Here’s how to translate that to a SMART goal:  lose 8 pounds in 30 days and increase personal fitness level by walking at least four miles three times a week.

What you want to measure is not only the outcome, but also the action steps being taken.

What is achievable here is walking four times a week. If you only lose 6 pounds in 30 days, despite having done your four walks a week, it merely means you need to extend your deadline by a couple of weeks. You’re certainly not a failure just because you cannot hit a self-imposed deadline.

4.   Share your goals with others and allow them to hold you accountable — when you share your personal change goal with someone else, it helps you to be more committed to accomplishing the goal (partly because sharing the goal is a bit like promising the other person that you are committed to it). Allow this other person to hold you accountable by permitting them to help you track progress, push and motivate you, and even cajole you into action when necessary. Yes, they may become a nag; but not necessarily more so than our own conscience! 

5.   Focus on 1-3 change initiatives at a time. This is why New Year’s Resolutions often go astray. People make New Year’s Resolutions lists that quickly tally into double digits. No one can make that many changes in their life all at one time. It is best to pick 1-3 that are of the highest priority for you and focus on these. Once one or two are accomplished (which takes on average 66 days according to one scientific study), then add one more. 

6.   Track progress. If you do not monitor your progress you will not have a good understanding of the realistic nature of the deadline you have set for yourself. Failing to meet a self-determined deadline may or may not be an indicator of failure. Most likely it is merely an indicator of failing to set a realistic deadline. Also, by tracking progress you will know if the actions you are taking are having the intended results. If they are not, you have the opportunity to make adjustments or try new actions. 

7.   Recognize effort and reward success. Too many people do not give themselves credit or self praise for their efforts, despite the fact that such actions are highly self motivating. There is no need to only focus on outcomes. Focus on the actions you are taking. And, when success is yours be sure that the reward is appropriate. Managed to lose those 8 pounds? Celebrating with a couple of slices of pizza is fine. Celebrating by eating a whole pizza only serves to negate your hard efforts and some of the success you have just enjoyed!

It is not enough to commit to change. You also have to commit to action. These 7 Key Success Factors for Implementing Personal Change are designed to help to commit to action, and then to sustain (and modify) the actions you take.

Here’s one more tool for you to use:  the Project You Personal Change Action Plan, which incorporates these 7 Key Success Factors for Implementing Personal Change. 

For some additional help, read our article:  8 Steps for Making (and Keeping) Successful New Year's Resolutions

And, to keep you motivated throughout the year, our book Project You: Words of Wisdom, is available free in the Amazon Kindle store through January 3rd. The paperback version is only $6.45.

Currently the #1 motivational book and the #1 self-help book in the Amazon Kindle Store, Project You: Words of Wisdom is full of motivational quotes, tips, and techniques for helping you achieve your 2017 goals and aspirations. To get your copy, click on this link: Project You Words of Wisdom.


Best wishes for continued success in 2017. 

Friday, December 30, 2016

8 Steps for Making Successful New Year's Resolutions

How To Make and Keep New Year's Resolutions 

It’s that time of year again. Time to wash away the past 12 months and start the New Year afresh with new (or revised) goals, desires, and plans. 

And that means it is time for the annual ritual of New Year’s Resolutions. 

This ritual reportedly began with the ancient Babylonians, who made promises to the gods in order to receive their favor and start the New Year off right. Of course, back then a new year began in March with the first full moon following the vernal equinox. 

While New Year’s Resolutions may be an annual ritual, it is not a very successful practice. Research shows that the large majority of New Year’s Resolutions are abandoned within the first 90 days of the year. 

To help you keep your own personal New Year’s Resolutions going past the end of March, here are 8 steps for making (and keeping) successful resolutions: 

1.  Understand the WHY behind each of your goals and desires. This takes a bit of time and reflection, but it is crucial that you internalize why a goal is significant and important to you. If you don't, it is too easy to toss the resolution aside when you hit obstacles and hurdles. 

2.   Visualize the outcome and your results. What will success look like? How will you feel when your goal is accomplished? Who will you tell? How will they react? Focus on your feelings, for positive feelings are powerful motivators and you can call upon these if you lose momentum or hit some temporary setback.

3.   Create specific details for each goal on your list:
      a) write out the purpose of the goal (i.e. feeling better about yourself may be the purpose for losing weight).
      b) write down how you will make this goal a priority throughout the coming year, or until it is accomplished.
      c) list the Key Action Steps you need to take (with specific deadlines if appropriate).
      d) list all the available resources to help you achieve the goal
      e) create a list of additional resources you may need (this may include people, knowledge, tools, funds, or even time).
      f) make a list of reference links to information, tools, data, and motivational quotes you may need to call upon.
4.  Use our Personal Change Action Plan template to create a 30-60-90 day action plan for each goal. It’s free. It’s easy to use. You can modify it to suit your needs if you want. No more excuses. Go to our Personal Change Action Plan, copy it, and use it.
5.   Prepare yourself mentally and emotionally for the journey to success. Most likely the road will not be smooth and even. There will be bumps, hurdles, and obstacles along the way. How will you overcome these? What are your personal sources of motivation? Need some help in this area? Our book Project You: Words of Wisdom is free in the Amazon Kindle store (Dec 30, 2016 – Jan 3, 2017). In it you will find a wide range of motivational quotations on all aspects of life. Download Project You: Words of Wisdom now. 
6.  Make a commitment to yourself — a PROMISE to yourself —that you will maintain resilience and perseverance until your goal is accomplished.
7.  As you progress toward your goal, focus on accomplishments, not gaps. Hence, if your goal is to lose 15 pounds, and by the end of February you are down five pounds, focus on this accomplishment, not the 10 more pounds left to go.
8.  Celebrate achievements and milestones along the way. Lost that first five pounds? Good, now go celebrate. Reward yourself. Even with a slice or two of pizza if you want (but not the whole pizza!).

Here are two other articles to help you achieve your 2017 New Year’s Resolutions:

We wish you continued success in 2017.


Monday, July 4, 2016

Key Reasons Why Personal Change Initiatives Fail

These are the typical hurdles that prevent successful personal change

Everyone fails, at times, to successfully implement a desired personal change in our respective lives. 

Sometimes we learn from these failures; many times we do not.

Perhaps the most obvious example of failed personal change initiatives takes place during the annual New Year’s Resolution ritual. 

Despite an abundance of motivation and sense of purpose assigned to these, the fact is that the large majority of New Year’s Resolutions are abandoned within the first 90 days of each year. And research shows that over 80% result in failure or are not achieved. 

Why is this so?

There are many reasons for this, but the main ones we believe that contribute the most to any personal change effort failing to achieve the desired outcome are: 

  • People do not make the top of mind, each and every day. 
  • People attempt too many initiatives simultaneously. This is particularly true at the start of the year when the typical New Year's Resolutions list reaches double-digit figures. 
  • There is no prioritization, with each resolution being treating as equally important. 
  • An unwillingness to just "say no" to distractions and other initiatives. 
  • No concrete action plans. Just wishful thinking that change will somehow magically happen. 
  • A failure to turn the desired change into a daily habit. 
  • Not allowing others to hold us accountable. Keeping our change initiatives private to ourselves means we only have to answer to ourselves. And we are all too good at rationalizing our way out of making change. 
  • Not putting our goals into a quantifiable format. 
  • Not racking our progress or keeping journals to know what is working, and what is not.


According to some scientific research, it takes on average 66 days for a new behavior to become a new habit. That’s a little over two months!

No wonder so many people give up and abandon their personal change initiatives before reaching success. They typically quit too early in the process, often because they underestimate the time required to fully inculcate and instill a new behavior or a new change into their daily routines.

Don’t let this happen to you. Use the above list as a guideline to help ensure that you do not let these typical hurdles become hardened obstacles that prevent you from successfully achieving your personal change initiatives.

For advice on how to overcome these hurdles, see our 7 Key Success Factors for Implementing Personal Change

Want to get your personal change goals back on track? The year is half over. Now is a perfect time to review your progress and re-ignite your personal change efforts. For help, see our earlier post on our launch of the Mid-Year Resolutions Initiative. You'll be glad you did. 




Saturday, July 2, 2016

Successfully Implementing Personal Change

Seven Key Factors for Implementing Personal Change 

There are numerous reasons why the majority of personal change initiatives fail.

According to various scientific research, it takes on average 66 days for any new behavior to become integrated as a new personal habit. That’s a little over two months!

Hence, it is little wonder that so many people give up and abandon their personal change initiatives before achieving success.

Sadly, too many people quit too early in the process. This is often because they underestimate the time required to fully inculcate and instill a new behavior or a new change into their daily routines.

Don’t let this happen to you.

We have created a list of the 7 Key Success Factors for Implementing Personal Change, which you can access at our new Living A Determined Life website.

In short, these seven key success factors are:
1.       Put time aside daily / weekly to review your actions.
2.      Give priority to your personal change initiatives over daily tasks.
3.      Write your personal change goals in the SMART format.
4.      Share your goals with others and allow them to hold you accountable.
5.      Focus on 1-3 change initiatives at a time, and no more.
6.      Track progress.
7.      Recognize your efforts and reward your successes.

Of course, it is not enough to simply commit to change.

You also have to commit to action.

These 7 Key Success Factors for Implementing Personal Change are designed to help to commit to action, and then to sustain (and modify) the actions you take.

You will also find one more tool on the Living A Determined Life website for you to use. It’s a Personal Change Action Plan, which incorporates these 7 Key Success Factors for Implementing Personal Change.

We hope you find these 7 Key Success Factors and Personal Change Action Plan helpful in re-energizing and re-igniting your personal development goals. For more ideas, see our previous blog post on Mid-YearResolutions.

We wish you continued success in your personal growth endeavors. 

Friday, July 1, 2016

Help Promote Mid-Year Resolutions

Help Others Kick-Start Their Personal Development Goals 

Did you know that over 80% of all New Year’s Resolutions are not achieved or result in failure?

And that by mid year over 50% of all New Year’s Resolutions made at the start of this year have been abandoned? 

Yet people wait until the next January 1st to re-set their personal goals. Why? Probably because there is no social protocol for doing otherwise.

Please help us change this.

Project You has launched the Mid-Year Resolutions initiative to help people re-establish their personal development goals. Details are at the Living A Determined Life website. 

And to assist people to be successful with their Mid-Year Resolutions, we have two free articles available on the site: 

What can you do to help? (Glad you asked!) 

First, forward this blog post to your friends and family members with a note saying "this is a great idea."  Here's the link for today's post: http://bit.ly/29gU7ev 

Then, like our Project You Life page on Facebook (www.facebook.com/ProjectYouLife) and share our messages this weekend on Mid-Year Resolutions. 

And, if you are on Twitter, then please follow @ProjectYouLife and re-tweet our tweets this weekend that feature the hashtag #MidYearResolutions.  

Thanks so much in advance for your help.

Together we can help others achieve their personal development goals and put them on the path to Living A Determined Life. 


Thursday, June 30, 2016

The Mid-Year Resolutions Initiative

It's Time to Relaunch or Re-Ignite Your Personal Development Goals 

Did you know that the failure rate of New Year’s Resolutions is over 80%?

Even though, at least according to one study, over half of New Year’s Resolution setters were confident about achieving their goals when setting them. (Which, of course, makes you wonder about the other half!)

Research also shows that over 50% of all New Year’s Resolutions have been dropped by mid year (i.e. right around now).

Unfortunately, almost everyone waits until the beginning of the next new year to set new personal resolutions and goals.

Why?

Simply because there is no other social protocol suggesting that they do otherwise.

This is about to change.

Today we are launching the Mid-Year Resolutions initiative, along with our new website Living A Determined Life.

Our goal is to create motivation and provide tools for people to relaunch or re-ignite their personal development goals halfway through the calendar year. We want to make this an annual ritual, albeit one more successful than the current New Year’s Resolutions results.

So, to help ensure that your Mid-Year Resolutions are more successfully implemented than the traditional New Year’s Resolutions, our Living A Determined Life website has created an easy-to use 30-60-90 Day Personal Change Action Planning Tool, which can be downloaded for free.

Additionally, we have two free articles on the website to aid you in making Mid-Year Resolutions: 


Combined, these articles and the Personal Change Action Plan tool will help you kick-start your personal growth and self development.


Please share the Mid-YearResolutions initiative with all your family, friends, and colleagues. 

Together we can help others achieve their personal development goals, and they can help you attain yours. 


Monday, February 8, 2016

Self Awareness and Success -- Part 2

Knowing Yourself Creates a More Meaningful and Successful Life

Self observation and continuous attention to your feelings, emotions and thoughts are crucial aspects of your personal self-development journey. 
Through these observations you will identify your core strengths, areas for improvement and techniques for greater self control.
George Gurdjieff, an author and spiritual teacher of the early 20th Century, wrote, "Self-observation brings man to the realization of the necessity of self-change. And in observing himself a man notices that self-observation itself brings about certain changes in his inner processes. He begins to understand that self-observation is an instrument of self-change, a means of awakening."
When you awaken to your true self, you not only change your destiny, you grab control of it with two hands firmly on the steering wheel of your life. Your dreams become your reality. Your choices will be based on meeting your most important needs, leading to what psychologist Abraham Maslow described as "self actualization."
"A man must be obedient to the promptings of his innermost heart," wrote Roberston Davies, one of Canada's most distinguished men of letters. The first step, of course, is to have a clear awareness of what reverberates in your innermost heart.
As Maslow wrote, "A musician must make music, an artist must paint, a poet must write, if he is to be ultimately at peace with himself."
Do what makes you happy and that which sparks the passion within, and then you will be at peace with yourself.
Or, as George Bernard Shaw said, "Life isn't about finding yourself. Life is about creating yourself." That philosophy is at the heart of the Project You Life Journey and Living A Determined Life.
It all starts with self awareness. As Maslow stated, "What is necessary to change a person is to change their awareness of themselves."
As pointed out above, there are four parts to you ── your mind, your body, your heart, and your soul.
It is easy to be aware of your body and your bodily functions. You spend all your conscious hours, and even some hours of sleep, listening to your mind chattering away.
The hardest task, and the most revealing one despite the monumental effort required, is to be fully aware of your emotions and your spirit, for these form that inner self at the core of your personal universe.
By rising to this challenge, a more meaningful life awaits.


This article is excerpted from the Amazon top seller Project You: Living A Determined Life, available in paperback and Kindle formats. 

Saturday, February 6, 2016

The Dark Side of Self Awareness

We all have faults. Overcoming these is gratifying and satisfying. 

The flip side to the coin of self awareness is that none of us is perfect, or even close to being perfect. 
This means that practicing self awareness will reveal to us the numerous blemishes, inconsistencies, incongruities, and harmful tendencies that are an inherent part of the composition of our sentient beings.
Unfortunately, as M. Basil Pennington, the Trappist monk and priest who wrote over 60 books in the latter half of the 20th Century, penned, "In seeing ourselves as we truly are, not all that we see is beautiful and attractive. This is undoubtedly part of the reason we flee silence. We do not want to be confronted with our hypocrisy, our phoniness. We see how false and fragile is the false self we project. We have to go through this painful experience to come to our true self."
Remember, when you see the dark side of yourself, it is like looking at the dark side of The Force as depicted in the Star Wars series. Being aware of your dark side ── your human weaknesses and all other negative aspects of your character ── is the preliminary step in being able to control and overcome these.
Of course, overcoming any personal weakness is a particularly gratifying and satisfying feeling; one of the greatest sources of self esteem you will encounter. Aristotle obviously got it right when he wrote: "I count him braver who overcomes his desires than him who conquers his enemies; for the hardest victory is over self."
Those who do not win the battle with themselves become lost souls, empty of the self knowledge and understanding, and thus the passions, that make life worth living.
Additionally, being aware of your faults, flaws and weaknesses is also the first step in changing or modifying these. It's your choice ── you can either control these, or be controlled by them.
Likewise, you can continue to exhibit your faults and flaws, and suffer the consequences, or you can take action to change.
As Jim Rohn said, "Unless you change how you are, you will always have what you've got."
Rohn also gave this good advice: "You must take personal responsibility. You cannot change the circumstances, the seasons, or the wind, but you can change yourself. That is something you have charge of."


This article is excerpted from the Amazon top-selling book Project You: Living A Determined Life, available in paperback and Kindle formats. 

Sunday, January 17, 2016

Your Attitude Determines Your Altitude

Your Attitude Determines How Well You Succeed 

Some final thoughts as we conclude this series of blog posts on attitude. 

Albert Einstein said, "Out of clutter, find Simplicity. From discord, find Harmony. In the middle of difficulty lies Opportunity." 


You do not need to let events, heartaches, disappointments, and worries control your life. 
John Maxwell uses a sailing analogy to demonstrate this: "The pessimist complains about the wind. The optimist expects it to change. The leader adjusts the sails."
No matter which way the wind is blowing, you can always sail in your desired direction. As Maxwell adds, "Our attitude at the beginning of a task will affect its outcome more than anything else."
Highly successful college football coach Lou Holtz puts it another way, "Ability is what you are capable of doing. Motivation determines what you can do. Attitude determines how well you do it."
You have probably come across the phrase "your attitude determines your altitude." Although the origins of the phrase are in dispute, there is no arguing the merits of the quotation and the thinking behind it.
This is not to suggest that simply having some wide-eyed, highly optimistic attitude will get you what you desire, or is the only tool you need on the path to success. Joe Paterno, the winningest coach in college football, probably said it best: "The will to win is important, but the will to prepare is vital."
There are two key aspects to a winning attitude: 1) not being afraid to fail, and 2) thinking positively. 
Michael Jordan, the greatest basketball player of all time, has spoken about both of these aspects:

I never look at the consequences of missing a big shot. When you think about the consequences, you always think of a negative result.
The bottom line is, while you may not be able to change the world, or the events in the world directly or indirectly impacting upon you, you can always change yourself, and your likelihood of success, by adjusting your attitude and your thinking

This article is partially excerpted from the best-selling book Project You: Living A Determined Life, available at Amazon in paperback and Kindle formats. 

Saturday, January 16, 2016

A Successful Attitude Helps Create A Successful Life

You Can Always Change Yourself By Adjusting Your Attitude 

Your attitude is the summation of your personal philosophy on life. 

As Jim Rohn says, "Your personal philosophy is the greatest determining factor in how your life works out." 

Hence, your attitude, being the summation of your personal philosophy, can be considered the greatest determining factor in how you shape your life and control your destiny (i.e. how you Live A Determined Life).

Look at these personal philosophies and you can tell exactly what kinds of attitudes these highly successful people have:
The world is a great mirror. It reflects back to you what you are. If you are loving, if you are friendly, if you are helpful, the world will prove loving and friendly and helpful to you. The world is what you are. ~Thomas Dreier
My philosophy is that not only are you responsible for your life, but doing the best at this moment puts you in the best place for the next moment.  ~Oprah Winfrey 
Positive self-direction is the action plan that all winners in life use to turn imagination into reality, fantasy into fact, and dreams into actual goals. ~Denis Waitley
People who stay on top, who are winners year after year, have one thing in common – a winning attitude. They know that complacency breeds mediocrity, so they give 100 percent. They always are the best they can be, and they never spend time thinking about what they have done, because it steals from what they’ve yet to do. ~A. J. Foyt
Man is unlike any other animal on the planet in that we can create our own motivations and attitudes. 
This wasn't the common thinking for thousands of years when men thought they were merely at the mercy of pre-ordained destinies. William James, the 19th Century philosopher, was most influential in spreading the understanding that man could control his destiny. He wrote: "The greatest revolution of our generation is the discovery that human beings, by changing their inner attitudes of their minds, can change the outer aspects of their lives."

While that was extremely revolutionary thinking at the end of the 19th century, it is certainly the accepted thinking today, at least in those parts of the world which have advanced beyond the basic poverty level. 
The bottom line is, while you may not be able to change the world, or the events in the world directly or indirectly impacting upon you, you can always change yourself by adjusting your attitude and your thinking. 

This article is excerpted from the best-selling book Project You: Living A Determined Life, available at Amazon in Kindle and paperback formats.