S T R E T C H I N G YOUR Outer Limit

Oct 24
21:00

2002

Ed Hirsch

Ed Hirsch

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You can't prove anything to anybody who doesn't want ... you ... just like you can't attempt to help ... improve their ... if they won't let you ... in that ...

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You can't prove anything to anybody who doesn't want to
believe you ... just like you can't attempt to help somebody
to improve their circumstances if they won't let you coach
them in that direction.

Why would you want to help someone to do this anyway?

The main reason that I do this is because as I help others,
I improve myself in the process ... a self-perpetuation if
you like.

The word *success* comes from a Latin word meaning "to
follow." It's a future-oriented concept. If you don't
consider what's ahead when pursuing your goals,S T R E T C H I N G YOUR Outer Limit Articles you may
reach the place where you thought you would find success
only to discover that it's not there.

Take for example a quarterback throwing a pass. He has to
lead his receiver; to throw the ball not where the
pass-catcher is now but where he expects him to be at some
future moment. He must be able to improvise: if his primary
receiver is taken out of the play he has to target on
another before he's thrown for a loss. And he has to move
the ball downfield: three completions don't mean a lot if
they don't result in a first down.

When you were born, you were blessed with only Good.
Being of free will (unless born into slavery), you were
given the choice (as you came of age) to create whatever
kind of life you wanted for yourself. Unfortunately, there
is a great chance that you *fell into* a world where you
observed others who were self-centered, self-delusional and
basically demonstrated laziness and lack of ambition. This
is prevalent in society.

Your Choice to get on a Success Journey engaged you into a
process of expanding your potential for achievement. But in
a wider focus, you're also creating for yourself what
Maxwell Maltz called a *success-type personality* --one that
will empower you to set and achieve goals throughout your
life. "When we say that a person has a *good personality*,
Maltz wrote, what we really mean is that he has freed...the
creative potential within him and is able to express his
real self.... A good personality is one which enables you to
deal effectively and appropriately with environment and
reality, and to gain satisfaction from reaching goals ... "

The catch is that *environment and reality* today are
changing at a faster rate than Maltz could have envisioned
back in 1960. To develop a success-type personality means
*leading* your self-image, anticipating what skills and
qualities will be needed for success in the years ahead.

He used the letters in the word SUCCESS to help to see an
easy-to-remember picture of the successful personality ...
(S)ense of direction, (U)nderstanding, (C)ourage, (C)harity,
(E)steem, (S)elf-confidence and (S)elf-acceptance.

It is necessary to keep your mind filled with forward
thinking thoughts ... a process usually satisfied with
reading material, planning, note-taking, etc. Don't leave
ANY room at ALL for negative thought to creep in ... because
it will and destroy your hope for success.

Get your hands on a reading list from someone who has
achieved what you want to achieve and keep reading it and
more. Learn and apply everything that falls in line with
how you see your life 5, 10 even 20 years from today.

Get started today.

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