Showing posts with label faith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label faith. Show all posts

Saturday, December 3, 2016

Your Hidden Potential For Success, Unleash

We all have hidden potential within us to achieve success in life in anything we set our minds to. But in order to do that we have to figure out what we want and then  take action to make it happen.  As you take action, make a decision to condition yourself for success. Success comes to those who become success conscious.
This means that your mind becomes thoroughly saturated with the desire for success that you can see yourself already in possession of success.  It’s been said that if you do something a couple of dozen times, it becomes a part of you. It stops being hard work and turns into a habit. We as human beings are creatures that move towards what will give us pleasure. So make sure what you want is something that you enjoy.
Everything we need to succeed in life is already within us. Today am going to help you remember some tools that you already have within you to unleash you hidden potential for success in any area of your life. But you have to take responsibility by making yourself accountable for your actions and decisions.

8 Steps to Unleashing your hidden Potential for Success.

1.  Raise your Standard. What is your standard? Are you one of those people who like to say I should do this or I should do that but never actually get around to doing anything? The standard you hold yourself to, is the amount of success you will have in life. If you’re not doing something because you don’t know how. Then find the information that teaches you how to do it.
It has been said that knowledge is power. But the truth is knowledge is potential power. You have to put that knowledge to use. And the only way to do that is taking action. Your actions towards your goals have to be consistent. And the only way you can be consistent in anything is if you hold yourself to a certain standard. A high standard, by making it a must do, not I should do. Holding yourself to a high standard makes you do more in anything you do, thus leading you to success.


2.   Change your Limiting beliefs. To achieve this you have to sit down and carefully analyze yourself. What are your beliefs? Sometimes we have beliefs that we are not even aware of. But if you pay attention you will figure out what they are, then proceed to change them.
You can do this through affirmations, which are accompanied by faith and emotion. If you say something a thousand times but lack faith or emotion to your words nothing will happen. Just like the beliefs you now have were ingrained into you. So can positive beliefs that move you towards success, if you add a little faith and emotion to your words.


3.     Become a person of Influence through passion, enthusiasm and appreciation.  Become a positive influence. Influence people with integrity. You have to move other people to believe in you just as you believe in their potential to get things accomplished. Human beings crave for appreciation, so show appreciation to those around, genuine appreciation.By doing so, you will be amazed by how much you get others to do what you want them to do.
Start with the little things because it’s the little things that turn into mountains if not handled properly. When you see the change you’re influencing other people to create. It rubs off on you, and you in return gain more confidence in your ability to unleash your hidden potential for success. The change that you want to see in other begins with you.

4.    You have to make a decision that there’s more in life for you. And believe in your potential to achieve your goals and purpose in life. It all starts with a decision. Decide that whatever you do, it’s going to be excellent. Because your rewards are in direct proportion to the quantity and quality of service that you render.
Be committed to excellence. Once you give your objective your all, then you will achieve excellence and become outstanding. This is how you unleash your hidden potential and achieve success in everything you do. By simply making a decision that you will go the extra mile even when you don’t feel like it.

5.    Control your State of Mind. How you feel, how you perceive things, your commitment in what you do, is all a state of mind. Train yourself to feel good just like you would train your muscles to be strong. Have you ever noticed that when you’re inactive, your mind is just racing in all places?
So be active, move more, exercise more, the more you move the more emotion you have.Don’t sit around saying when I have success I will finally be happy, or when I hit my goal then I will feel complete.
Feel what you want right now by controlling your state of mind. And then take the necessary actions towards the attainment of your goal. By controlling your state of mind, you will have succeeded in controlling the power of your mind, thus unleashing your hidden potential for success. “Whatever the mind can conceive and believe the mind can achieve”. — Napoleon Hill.

Unleashing Your Hidden Potential for Success.

Everything you need to succeed in life is within you. All you have to do is believe in yourself and take massive action towards the attainment of your goal. Our biggest enemy is ourselves. We can cripple ourselves with fear, or we can have faith and with courage unleash the power within you to achieve success in any area of your life.

PS: How you like to learn how to have success in life especially your finances? How would you like to take that vacation you’ve been dreaming about? How would you like to surround yourself with successful people? People who have overcome obstacles in their lives and unleashed their hidden potential for success. If this interests you. If you like to acquire knowledge and take immediate action. Click here to partner directly with me. For only  you will have access to a wealth of knowledge that will help you grow successfully in this global business you’re involved with.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

You Can Be...

AMAZING STRENGTH OF CHOICE.....
Australians who live on slumdog millionaires' row - and love it

Matt Wade In New Delhi
February 28, 2009

MARK and Cathy Delaney don't need to see the hit movie Slumdog Millionaire. The Brisbane couple experience slum life in India every day.

For 13 years they have lived in the shanty towns of the Indian capital, New Delhi, raising their children and sharing their lives with the locals. Their two sons, Tom, 12, and Oscar, 7, were born in India and have lived most of their lives in slums.

The family home, in a neighbourhood called Janta Mazdoor Colony, is about the size of a typical Australian bedroom. They have no running water, no TV, no fridge and no washing machine. Two mattresses, used to sleep on at night, double as a "lounge" during the day. Meals are eaten sitting on the floor and they share with neighbours a squat toilet in a small bathroom.

But the Delaneys are not complaining. For them, living in a slum has been deeply enriching.

"It baffles us that more people in Australia who say they are sick of their lives don't do something like we have," says Cathy Delaney, who holds a masters' degree in pure mathematics.

"The longer we have stayed here the more we can see the positive effect it has had on us as people. I feel much freer of money and possessions - these things don't define my life."

Mark Delaney, a 42-year old lawyer, says more than a decade in Delhi's squatter settlements has been a "radical detox" from consumer society.

"For the first couple of years I thought, 'We'll do this for a while and then we'll go back to Australia, get a deposit and build a house', and so on, but I've let go of all that now," he said.

Mark works part-time for a Delhi-based medical organisation but the family's main focus is on their slum. They are strongly motivated by their Christian faith, believing that life is more about caring for others than comfort and success.

"Our main purpose is simply to experience what life is like here, to live with and learn from the poor and contribute something positive to people's lives," says Mark.

The Delaneys moved into their current neighbourhood on the eastern outskirts of Delhi in 2003. About 60,000 people are packed into the illegal settlement which is less than half a square kilometre. It is one of an estimated 1500 squatter settlements scattered across Delhi that house at least 3 million people.

The settlement started 30 years ago as a cluster of makeshift humpies in an open field but as time went by, people gradually upgraded. Flimsy walls were replaced with bricks, slab roofs were added in place of black plastic. Even so, open drains still run along the slum's maze of narrow alley ways and empty into a putrid canal not far from the Delaneys' front door.

Properties are bought and sold in the slum and there are even informal titles exchanged to prove ownership. Although these documents would not hold up in court they give those purchasing a slum hut a sense of security.

A three-level slum house in the area recently changed hands for 190,000 rupees (about $6000).
The Delaneys pay 1800 rupees ($56) a month in rent, although many small rooms in the slum are half that. Each day the family witnesses some of the vulnerability and powerlessness of the characters portrayed in the film.

Witnessing this has nurtured a strong sense of social justice in the boys.
"I have realised that the most important thing is to help other people," says Tom.
"But I have also realised that I have limits."

There is hot debate in the household about how simply they should live.
"Cathy is a bit harder line than me," says Mark
"Sometimes she says 'let's move down a bit' but I'm usually a bit resistant. Most people think we are pretty stupid already."

Once Tom asked how much income his neighbours had to live on and insisted their family do the same. So for the experience, they cut their monthly budget from 10,000 rupees ($310) to 5000 rupees.

"First we ran out of cornflakes and then we ran out of jam. Our diet got much simpler," says Cathy. "It was a hard experience but a really good one. It gave us so much more respect for the people who live here."

Mark has been pleasantly surprised by how much their boys have benefited from the experience of living in a poor neighbourhood. Oscar is in year 2 at a local school and Tom has recently switched to home schooling.

When the boys were asked if they wanted to move back to Australia later this year or stay in the slum, they chose to stay.
"I used to think that, with the kids, we would just endure living here for a while and then go," said Mark.
"But now I'm thinking this is a good thing for them and I want to stay not for my sake, but for the sake of my kids."

Things that most families take for granted bring the Delaneys great satisfaction.
Such as electricity. The power goes off in the neighbourhood several hours each day.
To help the family cope, Cathy got a small solar panel worth about $100 for her 40th birthday that powers a lamp during the blackouts.

A striking feature of the Delaneys' lifestyle is their small environmental footprint. They use very little electricity, create only a small amount of waste and rely exclusively on public transport.

You Can Be ..........with the Way, the Truth, the Life !