No One Drifts To Success

No One Drifts to Success

You can predict someone’s future by asking them one question: “What is your one definite purpose in life – and what plans have you to attain it?”

If the response is something like “I’d really like to be happy and successful”, you can be sure that this person will not be the next big success.

Why? Because there is no specific goal, no definite purpose. Remember we’ve talked repeatedly aboutt he fact that you need to ASK for what you want, not just wish for something vague. You have to be SPECIFIC in your ASKING.

You must decide exactly what your goal is and lay out the steps by which you intend to achieve it.

If you act with a purpose and a plan, you’ll attract opportunities! The universe can’t give you what you want if you don’t know what you want (and therefore can’t ask for it. Remember how we’ve also talked about you “placing your order” with the Universe like you do from a catalog).

Only with a definiteness of purpose will you be able to overcome the defeats and advestities that will stand in your way.

You also have to build your success by helping others achieve their success whenever you can.

Stop drifting. Decide on a definite goal. Write it down. Commit it to memory. Decide exactly how you plan to achieve it. Then begin by putting the plan into action immediately.

Your future is what you make it. Decide on what it will be!

Reference: Napoleon Hill’s “A Year of Growing Rich. 52 Steps to Achieving Life’s Rewards.”

Are you writing down your definite purpose right now? You should be. Consider posting it here for all to see.

Terrie

Learn How To Live Your Own Life

LEARN HOW TO LIVE YOUR OWN LIFE
BY NAPOLEON HILL

Remember, the most profound truth in all the facts concerning mankind consists of the fact that the Creator of man gave him complete, unchallengeable right of prerogative over but one thing, his own mind. It must have been the Creator’s purpose to encourage man to live his own life, to think his own thoughts, without interference from others.

Otherwise man would not have been provided with such a definite system of protection over his mind.

By the simple process of exercising this profound prerogative over your own mind you may lift yourself to great heights of achievement in any field of endeavor you choose.

Exercise of this prerogative is the only approach to the status known as genius. After all, a genius is simply one who has taken full possession of his own mind and directed it to objectives of his own choosing, without permitting outside influences to discourage or mislead him.

Henry Ford became a great industrialist and made himself wealthier than Croesus, not because of his superior ability or brains, but simply because he took possession of his own mind, fashioned in it a career of his own making, and kept all negative influences away from his mind until he attained his objective.

Orville and Wilbur Wright learned to live their own lives. Their exercise of this profound prerogative gave the world its first successful flying machine, the forerunner of a method of transportation which is shortening the distance between all parts of the world and all people and making all mankind more closely akin.

Thomas A. Edison learned to live his own life, think his own thoughts. And his exercise of this privilege uncovered and revealed to mankind more useful inventions than had been revealed during the entire period of civilization up to his time. This despite the fact that Edison was thrown out of school after only three months of schooling with a pronouncement from his teacher that he had an “addled” mind and could not take schooling.

What a great pity the world has not many more such “addled” minds! Through his adversity Edison discovered something he might never have learned from formal schooling. He learned that he had a mind which he could control and direct to any desired end. He learned that he could use the technical training of other men and successfully direct scientific research in connection with the most difficult problems without personally being schooled in any of the sciences. He learned that education does not necessarily come from schooling.

These and many more great truths he learned because he refused to accept the edict of the teacher who said he had an addled mind. He took full and complete possession of that “addled” mind, and through it revealed more of nature’s secrets than had any other person.

Madame Schumann-Heink was sent as a young girl to a music teacher for a test of her voice. After he had listened to her a few minutes he said, “That is enough. Go back to your sewing machine. You may become a first class seamstress. A singer, no!” Remember, that was the voice of authority speaking.

The teacher knew good voices from bad ones. But he did not know that a poor voice may be trained by the person who is determined to do so. That was an appropriate place for Madame Schumann-Heink to have relinquished her right to take possession of her own mind. Instead, she became more determined than ever to sing well. At this point her exercise of the profound prerogative to take possession of her mind distinguished her from millions of others who have aspired to become singers but who became discouraged and quit because they allowed the “opinions” of others to transcend their own.

She was one of the few who learn that one can do anything within reason if he or she wishes to do it badly enough. There is something very interesting about these people who take possession of their own minds and refuse to let others live their lives for them.

They bounce back from a knockout blow as if they were rubber balls. Yes, and they use adversity as a shot in the arm instead of accepting it as a “kick in the pants.” They convert defeats into stepping stones instead of accepting them as stumbling blocks. The person who throws himself on the side of the “I can do it” impulse is the one who wins. He is the genius of industry, the Henry Ford, the Thomas A. Edison, the Andrew Carnegie, the Wilbur or Orville Wright.

The person who throws himself on the side of the “I cannot do it” impulse is the individual who makes up the vast majority of mankind—the type that gets a mere living but nothing more and experiences only misery, disappointment and failure throughout life.

At the end of World War I, a young soldier came to see me about securing a job. At the very outset he announced, “All I seek is a meal-ticket, a place to sleep and enough to eat.” The look in his eyes—a sort of glassy stare—told me that hope was dead. Here was a man willing to settle with life for a meal-ticket when I well knew that if he could be made to undergo a change of mental attitude he would set as his goal a king’s ransom and perhaps obtain it.

Something inside me prompted me to ask, “How would you like to become a multi-millionaire? Why settle for a meal-ticket when you can easily settle for millions?”

“Please do not try to be funny with me,” he exclaimed. “I am hungry and need a mealticket.”

“No,” I replied, “I am not trying to be funny. I am serious. You can make millions if you are willing to use the assets you now have.”

“What do you mean, ASSETS?” he queried.

“Why, a positive mind,” I answered. “Now let us take inventory and find out what concrete assets you possess in the way of ability, experience, etc. We will move from there.”

By questioning, I discovered that this young soldier had been a Fuller Brush salesman before he went into the army—also, that during the war he had done considerable “K.P.” duty and had learned to cook rather well.

In other words, his total assets consisted of the fact that he could cook food and he could sell. In the ordinary walks of life neither cooking nor selling would carry a man into the multi-millionaire class, but this soldier was taken out of the “ordinary” walks of life by the process of introducing him to his own mind and causing him to take possession of that mind.

Remember, this young man was not only already afloat on the ocean of despair, but he was going down for the third time. He needed not only a lifebelt, but he needed also a stimulant to enable him to recover from the shock of misery and want he had just experienced. Salvaging a man who is willing to settle with life for a meal-ticket is not an easy job.

During the two hours I had been talking with this young man my own mind had been at work. My mind was positive. It was not weakened by hunger and hopelessness.

It was a success-conscious mind.

Taking the two assets which the young soldier possessed— the ability to sell and the ability to cook—I tried to help him assemble a plan by which he might convert them into his fortune.

“How about using your selling ability to induce housewives to invite their neighbors in for a home-cooked dinner?” I asked. “Prepare that dinner with special cookware, and after the dinner is served take orders for complete sets of the cookware. You should be able to induce half of the ladies present to purchase.”

“Very well,” my young soldier friend replied, “but where am I to sleep, and what am I to eat while I am doing the work, not to mention the question of where I am to get the money to purchase the necessary cookware?”

Isn’t it strange how the mind jumps to all the negatives and sums up all the obstacles in one’s way when the mind is negative?

“Let me worry about all that,” I replied. “Your job is to get yourself in the frame of mind of wanting to become a multi-millionaire by selling cookware.”

While the young man was getting started in his new venture, I gave him the use of our guest room and his meals. He also had the use of my charge account to buy some new clothes. I went on his security for the purchase of his first outfit of cooking utensils.

That was all he needed. He was in business. During his first week he cleared nearly $100 on the sale of aluminum cookware. The second week he doubled that amount. Then he began to train other men and women whom he managed in the sale of cookware under the same plan.

At the end of the first four years he had made a little over $4,000,000.

Moreover, he had set into motion a new selling plan which is now netting many millions of dollars annually to men and women who sell by the same plan that he established.

When the ties that bind a human mind are broken and a man is introduced to himself—the real self that has no limitations—I fancy that the gates of hell shake with fear and the bells of heaven ring with joy!

Source: Success Unlimited, June 1956, pp. 9-13.

How To Avoid Failure

HOW TO TO AVOID FAILURE
BY NAPOLEON HILL

Anyone who aspires to success in life must recognize the causes of failure. Else how can he avoid pitfalls?

In my researches into human relations, I have found at least 30 major causes of failure. But the grand-daddy of them all is the lack of ability to get along harmoniously with others.

A great businessman—one of the wealthiest men of his day— once told me that he had a fivepoint measuring stick he used in choosing men for the advancement to high executive jobs.

1. A faculty for getting along with others.

2. Loyalty to those to whom loyalty is due.

3. Dependability under all circumstances.

4. Patience in all situations.

5. Ability to do a given job well.

It is notable that “ability for the job” came last. That’s because the more ability a man has for a task, the more objectional he may be if he lacks the other four traits.

Charles M. Schwab was promoted by Andrew Carnegie from day laborer to a $75,000 a year job. In addition, Carnegie gave Schwab a bonus that sometimes reached $1,000,000 a year.

Carnegie said the salary was for the actual service Schwab rendered. But the bonus was for what he inspired other workers to do.

Your ability to inspire others is a blank check on the Bank of Life that you can fill in for whatever you desire. If you lack this ability, you can take steps now to acquire it.

How? By adopting and following these rules:

1. Go out of your way, at least once daily, to speak a kind word or render some useful service where it is not expected.

2. Modify your voice to convey a feeling of warmth and friendship to those you address.

3. Direct your conversation to subjects of the greatest interest to your listeners. Talk “with” them rather than “to” them. Consider the persons with whom you’re conversing as the most interesting in the world, at least at the moment.

4. Soften your expression with a smile as you speak.

5. Never, under any circumstances, use profanity.

6. Keep your religious and political views to yourself.

7. Never ask a favor of anyone you haven’t yourself helped.

8. Be a good listener. Inspire others to speak freely on subjects that interest them.

9. Never speak disparagingly of other people. Don’t “Talk poor mouth.” Remember that an ounce of optimism is worth a ton of pessimism.

10. Close each day with this prayer: “I ask not for more blessings, but more wisdom with which to make better use of the blessings I now possess. And give me, please, more understanding that I may occupy more space in the hearts of my fellow men by rendering more service tomorrow than I have rendered today.”

Source: Success Unlimited, October 1966, pp. 33-34.

Have Confidence in Yourself

HAVE CONFIDENCE IN YOURSELF
BY NAPOLEON HILL

When Thomas A. Edison believed he had discovered the means by which a machine records and reproduces the sound of the human voice, he called in a model maker, gave him a rough pencil drawing of his idea and asked that a working model be built.

The model maker looked at the drawing for a moment, then exclaimed,“Impossible! You’ll never make that thing work.”

“What makes you think it won’t work?” Edison asked.

“Because no one has ever made a machine that could talk” exclaimed the model maker.

Edison could have accepted the verdict and given up his idea of a talking machine. But his mind didn’t work that way.

“Go ahead,” Edison demanded, “and build the model just like this drawing, and let me be the loser if it doesn’t work.”

The man who backs his ideas and plans with selfconfidence always has the advantage of those who give up and quit at the first signs of defeat.

The model was completed and, to the great surprise of the model maker, it worked on the first test.

The first words spoken into the machine were, “Mary had a little lamb, it  followed her to school one day.” When the playback reproduced the words in a high pitched, squeaky sound, Edison grinned broadly and gave the machine another line which rounded out the rhyme—“and this day sound recording is here to stay.”

Success doesn’t crown the person who sells himself short through lack of self-confidence. But it does favor the person who knows what he wants, is determined to get it, and frowns at the word impossible.

It would be a wonderful asset to boys and girls graduating from high school if they were required to do two things before being granted their graduation certificates.

First, they should be required to write out a clear description of their definite chief aim in life and the plan by which they intend to attain it.

Secondly, they should be required to commit to memory their aim and the plan for its attainment and repeat it one hundred times on final examination day, closing with these words—“regardless of the price I have to pay and the obstacles I may need I will carry out my plan and reach my goal because I believe I can.”

Education is not worth much, regardless of how many degrees one may have  attained, unless it has taught one to believe he can do anything he makes up his mind to do.

One of the most successful insurance sales managers in America requires each of his salesmen to spend five minutes before a mirror every morning before starting to work, looking at himself and saying, “You are the greatest living salesman and you are going to prove it today, tomorrow and always.”

And by prearrangement with the sales manager, the wife of each of these salesmen sees him off to work at the door each morning with this message, “You are the greatest salesman living and you will prove it today.”

It is significant that these salesmen are leading all others in their field, which is insurance—said to be something which has to be sold, but never is voluntarily bought.

The subconscious section of the human mind is an imponderable miracle with
unlimited powers that each individual may contact and direct to any desired end. Yet the method by which one may direct it is so simple that many people discount its workability.

Briefly stated, the subconscious can be directed by simply talking to it and giving it orders as if it were an invisible person standing ready with the power and the willingness to do whatever is requested of it.

The subconscious has one very peculiar trait, it believes everything one tells it, and acts accordingly. It not only believes and acts upon one’s spoken words, but more astounding still, it believes in and acts upon one’s thoughts; especially those thoughts which are highly emotionalized with either faith or fear.

The subconscious is also very amenable to the repetition of thoughts and spoken words. This trait is fortunate because it is the simple means by which one can put the subconscious to work in his behalf for any desired purpose. It also explains why the person who allows his mind to dwell upon poverty and failure and ill health, and all of the things he does not want, is plagued by getting just these.

Every successful person has a system for conditioning his mind to feed the subconscious with aims and purposes of his own choice, and to do it is so intensely that it has no opportunity to attract to him anything he does not desire. The technique of the system is unimportant as long as it conveys to the
subconscious, by repetition of one’s desires, a clear description of what is wanted.

Source: Success Unlimited,September 1967, pp. 33-34.

Humility

HUMILITY
Napoleon Hill

MANY PEOPLE think of humility, one of the principal ingredients of a pleasing personality, as a negative virtue. But it isn’t. It’s a powerfully positive one.

Humility actually is a force that man can put into operation for his own good. All of his greatest advances— spiritual, cultural, or material—have been based on it.      

It is the prime requisite of true Christianity. With humility, Ghandi set India free. And with its help, Dr. Albert Schweitzer is creating a better world for thousands of Africans.      

Humility is an absolute essential to the type of personality you need to achieve personal success, no matter what your goal. And you will find it even more essential after you have reached the top. Without humility you will never gain wisdom; for one of the most important traits of a wise man is the ability to say “I was wrong.”      

Without humility you will never be able to find what I call the “seed of equivalent benefit” in adversity and defeat. Every adversity or defeat, I have found, carries with it something to help you overcome it—and even rise above it. For example: R. G. LeTourneau started in business as a garage operator, failed at that, and went into the contracting business. He was a sub-contractor on the Hoover Dam project when he ran into an unexpected strata of hard stone.

He lost everything. Le Tourneau didn’t try to blame others or the forces of nature for his losses. He took responsibility himself. After each setback, he found comfort in prayer. It was while praying for guidance that he found the “seed of equivalent benefit” from his last defeat. He’d go into the business of manufacturing machines which could move any kind of earth or rock.      

As result, Le Tourneau earth-moving machinery is now in use throughout the world. LeTourneau has four plants and his personal fortune runs into millions.

To express gratitude for the help he received in turning defeat to victory, Le Tourneau now gives most of his income to churches and devotes much of his time to lay preaching.

Sometimes, humility turns defeat into spiritual blessing.      

In 1955, I visited Lee Braxton, Whiteville, N.C., on the very day he discovered he had suffered a heavy financial loss due to the negligence of an associate.     “Your loss has been a great blessing if it leaves you gifted with humility of the heart and gratitude for those riches you still possess. With it, you can be more successful than ever,” I told him.      

Braxton’s face lighted up with a broad smile. “That’s right,” he said. “I hadn’t thought of it that way.”      

Later, I received a letter from Braxton and he said his income has climbed to an all-time high, more than making up the loss he suffered. Humility is a positive force that knows no limitations.      

Source: Success Unlimited, March 1961, p. 31.

If you got something useful out of this, let us know by commenting below or emailing me.

Terrie