Posts Tagged ‘articles’

My Bumpy Twisty Road to Enlightenment – Introduction

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

So I’m kind of playing around with some ideas for an introduction, and this just flowed out. Wasn’t exactly what I had in mind, but it might be a good seed for an otherwise blank page that will be the introduction :)

I’d love to hear some comments. Even if they’re awful, cause I’d hate to get too far into this and find out no one likes it :)

And so it begins—-

Blackness gripped me, I could hear the waves, feel the salt spray on my face. Looking out, into nothing but inky darkness. One hand out in front of me, the other hand gripping the hand rail, tightly, afraid, I inched my way along the slippery, pitching deck. Several minutes passed. I still can’t see anything, its as if I’ve stepped off into the abyss. Finally I feel the hatch levers. Flipping the last dog open, I pull the hatch toward me, and stepping over the knee knocker, I see the dim red glow. Safe at last! Now just 2 levels up and I’m at my destination, the outgoing Mail Box, where I can mail the 100 news letters I’m mailing to my Any Servicemember pen pals. The helicopter will be taking the mail out at first light, a few hours from now. But I’ll be asleep in a few minutes. And this time I’ll be taking a slightly easier route, and not take my chances on the weather deck!

Cold, Shivering, Alone. I’m at high altitude in Colorado, in the back of my van, sleeping bag pulled tight around me, an old hair dryer blasting away at the icy fingers of the night, until finally the battery runs down, and with a last BEEP, I’m left with silence, cold, and darkness. Alone. Still, I’m happy to have what I have. I put the spare tire on a few hours ago, happy in the fact I have a spare tire, and a van to put it on. I’ve seen a lot in the last few weeks, and even looking at my self now, after almost 40 days on the road and xx states, I feel like a king. I chose this road, and no matter what happens, I know how lucky I am. I have experiences, resources, and friends. I am truly wealthy.

Traffic… Stupid red lights… car feels heavy, it should, its loaded to the roof. Where is all this stuff going to go anyway… Oh good, light is green, hit the gas… sputter, BANG, clunk, grind to a stop. no… no… NOOOOO. start, please start. HONK. Sigh. Light is red now. Great! Look over, wow, a parking spot, just right there. Open the door, put car in neutral, and lean into it, good its rolling. Push a bit more and I’m in the spot. Wow, lucky break! And I’m only a few blocks from home. Think, brain think. I might still have time. One last look at the car. Oh well, it lasted a year longer than I expected. Grabbing my keys and wallet, I start quickly walking home to pull together my new plan, a slight detour toward being homeless in Seattle.

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Resilience and Tenacity

Monday, August 16th, 2010

“… Add to those Resilience, and you have the makings of a good story!

To me, the difference between Resilience and Tenacity, because before I started writing this, I would have probably used these interchangably!

Resilience is a flexability, like a palm tree in a hurricane. Bend, bend, bend until you touch the ground, but when the storm passes, you just pop right back up again!

Tenacity is the roots of the palm tree, the anchor that keeps you from blowing away in the storm. Its digging your toe nails in so you can stand your ground.

Tenacity is “Rocky” when he looks at “Appollo” and says “I’m not going down again”, after Appollo had already knocked him down several times. ”

(something that just flowed just now, while I was writing for an unnamed, up coming book. You’ll have to just stand there and wait for the rest of it!

Thought you’d like it… Carlin)

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Cemetery Watchman

Saturday, June 12th, 2010

(This was sent to me by a good buddy of mine who I served with in the Navy. Thought it was worth sharing.)

This has been around before but it’s worth sending again,,,

“I just wanted to get the day over with and go down to Smokey’s. Sneaking a look at my watch, I saw the time, 1655. Five minutes to go before the cemetery gates are closed for the day. Full dress was hot in the August sun. Oklahoma summertime was as bad as ever–the heat and humidity at the same level–both too high.

I saw the car pull into the drive, ‘69 or ‘70 model Cadillac Deville, looked factory-new. It pulled into the parking lot at a snail’s pace.. An old woman got out so slow I thought she was paralyzed; she had a cane and a sheaf of flowers–about four or five bunches as best I could tell.

I couldn’t help myself. The thought came unwanted, and left a slightly bitter taste: ‘She’s going to spend an hour, and for this old soldier, my hip hurts like crazy and I’m ready to get out of here right now!’ But for this day, my duty was to assist anyone coming in.

Kevin would lock the ‘In’ gate and if I could hurry the old biddy along, we might make it to Smokey’s in time.

I broke post attention. My hip made gritty noises when I took the first step and the pain went up a notch. I must have made a real military sight: middle-aged man with a small pot gut and half a limp, in marine full-dress uniform, which had lost its razor crease about thirty minutes after I began the watch at the cemetery.

I stopped in front of her, halfway up the walk. She looked up at me with an old woman’s squint.

‘Ma’am, may I assist you in any way?’

She took long enough to answer.

‘Yes, son. Can you carry these flowers? I seem to be moving a tad slow these days.’

‘My pleasure, ma’am.’ Well, it wasn’t too much of a lie.

She looked again. ‘Marine, where were you stationed?’

‘ Vietnam , ma’am.. Ground-pounder. ‘69 to ‘71.’

She looked at me closer. ‘Wounded in action, I see. Well done, Marine. I’ll be as quick as I can.’

I lied a little bigger: ‘No hurry, ma’am.’

She smiled and winked at me. ‘Son, I’m 85-years-old and I can tell a lie from a long way off.. Let’s get this done. Might be the last time I can do this. My name’s Joanne Wieserman, and I’ve a few Marines I’d like to see one more time.’

‘Yes, ma ‘am. At your service.’

She headed for the World War I section, stopping at a stone. She picked one of the flowers out of my arm and laid it on top of the stone. She murmured something I couldn’t quite make out.. The name on the marble was Donald S. Davidson, USMC: France 1918.

She turned away and made a straight line for the World War II section, stopping at one stone. I saw a tear slowly tracking its way down her cheek. She put a bunch on a stone; the name was Stephen X. Davidson, USMC,
1943.

She went up the row a ways and laid another bunch on a stone, Stanley J. Wieserman, USMC, 1944..

She paused for a second. ‘Two more, son, and we’ll be done’

I almost didn’t say anything, but, ‘Yes, ma’am. Take your time.’

She looked confused.. ‘Where’s the Vietnam section, son? I seem to have lost my way.’

I pointed with my chin. ‘That way, ma’am.’

‘Oh!’ she chuckled quietly. ‘Son, me and old age ain’t too friendly.’

She headed down the walk I’d pointed at. She stopped at a couple of stones before she found the ones she wanted. She placed a bunch on Larry Wieserman, USMC, 1968, and the last on Darrel Wieserman, USMC, 1970. She stood there and murmured a few words I still couldn’t make out.

‘OK, son, I’m finished. Get me back to my car and you can go home.’

Yes, ma’am. If I may ask, were those your kinfolk?’

She paused. ‘Yes, Donald Davidson was my father, Stephen was my uncle, Stanley was my husband, Larry and Darrel were our sons. All killed in action, all Marines.’

She stopped. Whether she had finished, or couldn’t finish, I don’t know. She made her way to her car, slowly and painfully. I waited for a polite distance to come between us and then double-timed it over to Kevin, waiting by the car. ‘Get to the ‘Out’ gate quick.. I have something I’ve got to do.’

Kevin started to say something, but saw the look I gave him. He broke the rules to get us there down the service road. We beat her. She hadn’t made it around the rotunda yet.

‘Kevin, stand at attention next to the gatepost. Follow my lead.’ I humped it across the drive to the other post.

When the Cadillac came puttering around from the hedges and began the short straight traverse to the gate, I called in my best gunny’s voice: ‘TehenHut! Present Haaaarms!’

I have to hand it to Kevin; he never blinked an eye–full dress attention and a salute that would make his DI proud. She drove through that gate with two old worn-out soldiers giving her a send-off she deserved, for service rendered to her country, and for knowing duty, honor and sacrifice.

I am not sure, but I think I saw a salute returned from that Cadillac.

Instead of ‘The End,’ just think of ‘Taps.’

As a final thought on my part, let me share a favorite prayer: ‘Lord, keep our servicemen and women safe, whether they serve at home or overseas. Hold them in your loving hands and protect them as they protect us.’

Let’s all keep those currently serving and those who have gone before in our thoughts. They are the reason for the many freedoms we enjoy.

‘In God We Trust.’ Sorry about your monitor; it made mine blurry too!

“If we ever forget that we’re one nation under GOD, then we will be a nation gone under.” -Ronald Reagan

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Earning Your Desk

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

(This post came from Michael Angier’s email. I recommend you go check him out, his info is at the end of this post)

Back in September 2005, Martha Cothren, a social studies school teacher at Robinson High School in Little Rock AK, did something memorable.

On the first day of school, with the permission of the school superintendent, the principal and the building supervisor, she removed all of the desks from her classroom.

When the first period kids entered the room, they discovered that there were no desks. “Ms. Cothren, where are our desks?”

She replied, “You can’t have a desk until you tell me how you earn the right to sit at a desk.”

They thought, “Well, maybe it’s our grades.”

“No,” she said.

“Maybe it’s our behavior.”

She told them, “No, it’s not even your behavior.”

And so, they came and went: the first period, second period, third period. Still no desks in the classroom.

By early afternoon, television news crews had started gathering in Ms.Cothren’s classroom to report about this crazy teacher who had taken all the desks out of her room.

The final period of the day came, and as the puzzled students found seats on the floor of the deskless classroom, Martha Cothren said, “Throughout the day, no one has been able to tell me just what he/she has done to earn the right to sit at the desks that are ordinarily found in this classroom. Now I am going to tell you.”

At this point, Martha Cothren went over to the door of her classroom and opened it.

Twenty-seven U.S. Veterans, all in uniforms, walked into that classroom, each one carrying a school desk.

The Vets be gan placing the school desks in rows, and then they would walk over and stand along the wall. By the time the last soldier had set the final desk in place, those kids started to understand, perhaps for the first time in their lives, just how the right to sit at those desks had been earned.

Martha said, “You didn’t earn the right to sit at these desks. These heroes did it for you. They placed the desks here for you. Now, it’s up to you to sit in them. It is your responsibility to learn, to be good students, to be good citizens. They paid the price so that you could have the freedom to get an education. Don’t ever forget it.”

Please consider passing this along so others won’t forget that the freedoms we have in this great country were earned by our Veterans.

Make it a great day,
——————-
Michael Angier
——————-
http://SuccessNet.org/cms/
Helping People and Companies
Grow and Prosper Since 1995!

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Introducing 2 new blogs!

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

So I was looking at my C-Panel on my website, and saw all the blogs I have started, then abandoned over the last year or so… it was sad, really! I’ve been trying to find a topic that I know pretty well, that I’d be interested in writing about sort of regularly, and that people were interested in. And if I happened to get enough traffic that Google Ads started pumping fat wads of cash my way, I’d be ok with that too!

There was a Seattle blog, which was supposed to be for my Seattle photo business. I did put some stuff in there now and then. Then I moved to Tacoma, so I just made a new Tacoma blog, cheated a bit and copied some of those same posts over! Then I thought I’d maybe move to Phoenix, because I knew people there, and was getting tired of rain… so I started a Phoenix blog, and waited for jobs to flow in, nope, not even one!

Well today, I was looking at the list, and decided I’d change tactics a bit.

Currently there are blogs for

my Personal Blog (this one!)
the Desert Storm Diaries book that published in April 2009
the Mars book that I haven’t worked on for a while, but am still planning to publish by end of 2009
Hurricane Katrina Documentary – Survivors Stories DVD project

and the 2 new blogs
UnSexyGeek
and
The Wedding Blog

What I decided to do was delete a few blogs, and the consolidate some of the posts from them into the other blogs I was keeping.

UnSexyGeek will be where I put all kinds of techy geeky goodness. I decided not to overly specialize it, because so many technical things are starting to converge. So I could talk about cell phone stuff one day, then teach you why writing a DOS batch file is still a useful thing to do. I’ll very likely tell you some of the How and Why stuff. Because if you understand why something should be done, and how it is done, then you can make better decisions. Like, we all know we should back up our computer files. But how many of us actually do it? And which files should we back up? And what to? And how often? Give you a hint, there is no one answer that fits everyone! But I’ll do my best to explain things so you can figure it out.

The Wedding Blog… Most of my readers probably know that I spent the last 10 years shooting weddings. Shot a few hundred of them, sometimes as a photographer, sometimes as the video guy, I quit counting but there’s gotta be a few hundred of them by now. Well, I have decided I’m not going to shoot weddings anymore. I mean, if someone asked me to, I might consider it, but to tell the truth, it got old after a while, every job I’d do I was completely starting over right? New customer, new location, new families with names to learn. Sometimes I’d get a referral for the next job, which is great, but the running wedding joke is No Repeat Business… oh and most people who are planning a wedding are amateurs too! What I did realize though, is hey, I’m an expert at weddings! Not so much the planning, but I did pick up some stuff there too. Where I really got the experience was the actual wedding day. I know things that most guys don’t want to know! So… I’m going to share what I can remember, maybe it will help you out!

What I’d recommend you go, is go check them both out. Since you’re reading this, you must either like me, or have way too much time on your hands! Anyway, if you like the new blogs, first, enter your email address in the FeedBurner form so you can be notified when new posts are written. I’d hate to spend hours sweating over my keyboard and then find out you forgot to come back and read my drivel right? Oh and second, go tell all your friends too!

Oh, and D’uh, be sure to subscribe to the FeedBurner reminder on this blog, too! and of course tell EVERYONE about it :)

Ok, guess that’s about it! If you have any questions, please leave them in the comments! Thanks!

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The Entrepreneurial Spirit

Monday, July 20th, 2009

The Entrepreneurial Spirit by Tom Peters

Fred Karl, designer of the Viking Range and owner of the company said, “I was a weird kid. I began designing towns when I was 12.” We all know that “weird” can be good, if we don’t judge others through our lens. Being weird increases creativity if we allow it to flourish. Fred Karl let his weirdness flourish abundantly.

Karl’s headquarters for Viking is located in his home town of Greenwood, Mississippi. Karl has restored old buildings to house his operations, so not only does his product, the Viking Range, generate income for the small Mississippi town, Karl is revitalizing the town through his restoration work. He remembered a bustling place in the ’60s that had “gone way downhill” by the time he returned there after a tour of duty in Vietnam. The little town of Greenwood, previously sustained by the cotton industry, wasn’t ever going to be the same. But Fred Karl saw the possibilities and brought all his talents to bear to create a new Greenwood.

Fred Karl designed the first Viking Range for his wife and hoped that he would sell 1,000 a year; now he sells that many in a week. Just like most startups today, he had little money. Fred Karl bartered his building design skills to obtain office space to work in. The local people called the new range Fred was designing his “Stove Project.” What kept his spirit going was the encouragement from the town—support he knew he wouldn’t get if he moved to a big city. That little “Stove Project” eventually became the big business of Viking Range.

Feeling a little weird lately? Take time to see where your passion and entrepreneurial spirit is calling you. Even in corporate America, the entrepreneurial spirit must remain alive. That spirit can solve the toughest of corporate problems, if only we let it.

– Tom Peters

Reproduced with permission from Your Achievement Ezine. To subscribe, go to www.YourSuccessStore.com All contents Copyright © YourSuccessStore.com except where indicated otherwise. All rights reserved worldwide.

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Ed Freeman – Medal of Honor Veteran – RIP

Friday, July 10th, 2009

Ed Freeman

You’re a 19-year-old kid. You’re critically wounded and dying in the jungle in the Ia Drang Valley , 11-14-1965, LZ X-ray, Vietnam . Your infantry unit is outnumbered 8-1 and the enemy fire is so intense, from 100 or 200 yards away, that your own Infantry Commander has ordered the MediVac helicopters to stop coming in.

You’re lying there, listening to the enemy machine guns, and you know you’re not getting out. Your family is half way around the world, 12,000 miles away and you’ll never see them again. As the world starts to fade in and out, you know this is the day.

Then, over the machine gun noise, you faintly hear that sound of a helicopter and you look up to see an unarmed Huey, but it doesn’t seem real because no Medi-Vac markings are on it.

Ed Freeman is coming for you. He’s not Medi-Vac, so it’s not his job, but he’s flying his Huey down into the machine gun fire, after the Medi-Vacs were ordered not to come.

He’s coming anyway.

And he drops it in and sits there in the machine gun fire as they load 2 or 3 of you on board.

Then he flies you up and out, through the gunfire to the doctors and nurses.

And he kept coming back, 13 more times, and took about 30 of you and your buddies out, who would never have gotten out.

Medal of Honor Recipient Ed Freeman died on Wednesday, June 25th, 2009, at the age of 80, in Boise , ID. May God rest his soul.

Ed Freeman, Medal of Honor Winner

Medal of Honor Winner
Ed Freeman!
Since the media didn’t give him the coverage he deserves, send this to every red-blooded American you know.

THANKS AGAIN, ED, FOR WHAT YOU DID FOR OUR COUNTRY.
RIP

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It’s Good to Know: Hot Recession Sellers

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

So… Louis Vuitton handbags haven’t been flying off the shelves lately. Vacations are being cancelled. And many people are opting to get their cars fixed instead of buying new ones.

What IS selling? It’s not all Spam and dollar-store deals. Consumer-spending watchers say the trend is toward “smaller-scale” luxuries. People still want to indulge… but on a budget. Here are some of the products that have gotten a boost in recent months:

  • Chocolate
  • Wine (more recent vintages)
  • Running shoes
  • Cosmetics
  • Fishing equipment
  • Gardening seeds
  • Tanning products
  • Condoms
  • Memberships to dating websites

(Source: USA Today)

This article appears courtesy of Early To Rise, a free newsletter dedicated to making money, improving health and secrets to success. For a complimentary subscription, visit http://www.earlytorise.com.

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The Four Steps to a Super Attitude by Brian Tracy

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

The Four Steps to a Super Attitude by Brian Tracy

Decide How to React
It is not what happens to you that counts. It is how you react to what happens to you, especially when you have unexpected problems of any kind.

Here are four things you can do to assure that your attitude is the very best it can be, under all circumstances.

Focus on the Future
First, whatever challenges you face, focus on the future rather than on the past. Instead of worrying about who did what and who is to blame, focus on where you want to be and what you want to do. Get a clear mental image of your ideal successful future, and then take whatever action you can to begin moving in that direction. Get your mind, your thoughts, and your mental images on the future.

Think About the Future
Second, whenever you´re faced with a difficulty, focus on the solution rather than on the problem. Think and talk about the ideal solution to the obstacle or setback, rather than wasting time rehashing and reflecting on the problem.

Solutions are inherently positive, whereas problems are inherently negative. The instant that you begin thinking in terms of solutions, you become a positive and constructive human being.

Look for the Good
Third, assume that something good is hidden within each difficulty or challenge. Dr. Norman Vincent Peale, a major proponent of positive thinking, once said, “Whenever God wants to give us a gift, he wraps it up in a problem.’ The bigger the gift you have coming, the bigger the problem you will receive. But the wonderful thing is that if you look for the gift, you will always find it.

Seek the Valuable Lesson
Fourth, assume that whatever situation you are facing at the moment is exactly the right situation you need to ultimately be successful. This situation has been sent to you to help you learn something, to help you become better, to help you expand and grow.

Decide to Be Positive
A Positive Mental Attitude is indispensable to your success. You can be as positive as you want to be if you will simply think about the future, focus on the solution and look for the good. If you do what other successful people do, if you use your mind to exert mental control over the situation, you will be positive and cheerful most of the time. And you will reap the benefits enjoyed by all successful people.

Action Exercises
Here are three steps you can take immediately to put these ideas into action:

First, become solution-oriented with every difficulty you face. Make a habit of looking for the answers to your questions, the solutions to your problems.

Second, seek for the valuable lesson in every adversity. Make a list of every idea or insight you can gain from every setback or difficulty.

Third, think on paper. Take some time to write out every detail of the problem, and then take the most logical next step to solve it.

– Brian Tracy

Get a Bonus DVD of Brian Tracy’s Secrets of Self-Made Millionaires when you take advantage of our best deal on 3 tremendous programs on Real Estate Investing, Building a Fortune in Business and Career Success. For complete details, go to http://www.yoursuccessstore.com/trump


Reproduced with permission from Your Achievement Ezine. To subscribe, go to www.YourSuccessStore.com All contents Copyright © YourSuccessStore.com except where indicated otherwise. All rights reserved worldwide.

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Dare to Dream Again by Chris Widener

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

Dare to Dream Again by Chris Widener
“Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though checkered by failure, than to take rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy nor suffer much, because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat.”  Teddy Roosevelt

Do you remember when you were a child and no dream seemed too big? Some of us thought we would walk on the moon; some dreamed of riding with Roy Rogers; others imagined stepping to the plate in a big-league game. Every one of us, when we were young, had a common trait: we were dreamers. The world hadn’t gotten to us yet to show us that we couldn’t possibly achieve what our hearts longed for. And we were yet still years from realizing that in some cases we weren’t built for achieving our dream (I realized about my junior year of high school that I was too short and to slow to play professional basketball. The dreamer is always the last to know).

Eventually we started to let our dreams die. People began to tell us that we couldn’t do the things we wanted. It was impossible. Responsible people don’t pursue their dreams. Settle down, get a job, be dependable. Take care of business, live the mundane, be content.

Do you know what I say to that? Hooey!

It is time to dream again!

Why? Here are just a few reasons:

* Avoid regret. The facts are in, and someday we will all lie on our deathbed looking back through the history of our lives. We will undoubtedly think about what we wished we had done or accomplished. I for one don’t want to regret what could have been, what should have been. So I am deciding today to pursue my dreams.

* The world needs people like you to dream of something great and then to pursue it with all of your heart. Maybe you belong to a business, school or organization that started out with good intentions but has settled into the same ol’ same ol’. Shake them up and remind them of how they could really help people if only they would dream!

* Personal and family fulfillment. One of the things that happens when we stop pursuing our dreams is that a little piece of us dies and we become disheartened, if only in that area of our lives. Stepping up and pursuing your dream rekindles that passion and zeal that everyone has the capacity for and lets us experience fulfillment. Having a purpose puts the zip in our step and the zing in our emotions!

* Making the world a better place. All of the great accomplishments that have ever happened began with a person who had a dream. Somebody rebuffed the naysayers and said to himself or herself, “This can be done, and I am the one who will do it.” And in many instances they changed the world for the better. It isn’t just the Martin Luther King’s and the J.F.K’s either. Think of all the people we have never heard of who have started things large and small that help people worldwide every day.

* Leaving a legacy. How will your children remember you? As one who sought all that life had to offer, using your gifts and talents to their fullest extent, leading the family with a zest for life, or as an overweight couch potato who could have been? Our children need to see that we dream; that we search for something better. They in turn will do the same!

So where do we start? Here are some ideas:

* Reconnect with your dream. Set aside some time to let yourself dream. What have you placed on the backburner in order to live the status quo? Settle on one or two dreams that you can and will pursue. Don’t come up with too many. That will only deter you further.

* Decide that you will do it. This may seem elementary but many people never decide and commit fully to their dream. They simply keep “thinking” about it. Tell others that you are going to do it. This puts you on the record as to what you are dreaming about. It makes you accountable. It will help you do it if for no other reason than to avoid embarrassment!

* Develop a step-by-step plan. This is absolutely essential. You must sit down and write out a few things:

* A timeline. How long will it take to the end?

* Action steps. Point-by-point what you will do and when you will do them.

* Resources you will need to draw from. What will it take? Who will need to be involved for help or advice?

* An evaluation tool. You need to evaluate from time to time whether you are progressing or not.

* A celebration. Yep, when you are done you should already have planned what you will do to celebrate. Make it big!

I have found that there is no better time than now. So, set aside some time today to get started on your dream. Follow the action plan and set your sights for the top of the mountain! You will be glad you did!

– Chris Widener
Take advantage of FREE shipping* on our special offer celebrating the 500th issue of Jim Rohn’s Weekly E-zine. For details, go to http://www.jimrohn.com/500thIssueSpecial

Reproduced with permission from Jim Rohn’s Weekly E-zine. To subscribe, go to www.JimRohn.com All contents Copyright © JimRohn.com except where indicated otherwise. All rights reserved worldwide.


Thanks for Reading!
Carlin
Please follow me on Twitter - https://twitter.com/carlincomm

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