Saturday, October 1, 2011
Starting Over is Not So Bad
“Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try Again. Fail again. Fail better” by Samuel Beckett is a great way to explain why you should start over. Making a change is grueling and doesn’t happen overnight. If you want to make a change in your life you have to first change your thinking. Thoughts become feelings, feelings become words and words become actions. You may have to relocate, change your job, change your friends, change your diet or change every aspect of your life.
Change is scary but that is a part of life and growing. As a baby you totally depended on your parents to carry you around because you couldn’t walk. You began crawling then taking steps to walk. Babies are overcome with fear, once the overcome their fear they began walking, then running, then talking then talking and running all over the place.
Change is good. Over 1.5 million people filed for personal bankruptcy in 2010. Over fifty six thousand businesses filed bankruptcy y in 2010 (56,282). Henry Ford went broke five times before he started Ford Motor Company. R.H Macy failed seven times before opening his Macy’s store in New York City. Colonel Sanders (Harland David Sanders) of Kentucky Fried Chicken recipe was rejected 1,009 times before a restaurant accepted it. Thomas Edison made 1,000 unsuccessful attempts at inventing the light bulb.
Making a change takes time and effort. After failure comes success but may require that you fail multiple times before you become successful. Being successful is hard work. Anything worth achieving is worth working hard for. The difference between being a failure and being a success is your attitude. If you choose to remain a failure you will. If you choose to see the failure as a lesson and don’t repeat the same mistake you will become a success. Failure is the seed of success. Failure helps birth success as evidenced by successful people in the world today. Failure is a great lesson; it shows you what didn’t work and what you need to be do better next time. Failure helps you to develop a plan B, C, D or even E.
Failure happens so expect it but don’t dwell on it. I have been a failure several times in my life, in my career, relationships, and with money. I went to college and got my first credit card at age 17. By the time I graduated college I had 13 credit cards and racked up $19,000 in debt, one was a gas card and I didn’t even have a car or a driver’s license. When I got my first job I was only making $21,000 a year. I failed at using a credit card and continued to fail for 4 years. When I lost my job and realized that I was unable to pay my bills, the light bulb came on and I knew I could not continue to fail at using credit. I made a decision to get myself out of debt and never get into debt again and I did. The only debt I have is my mortgage. Here are 5 ways why starting over is not so bad.
1. Never say never. We don’t know what the future holds so don’t assume that your current state in any aspect of your life will remain that way, plan for the unexpected.
2. Be a winner. Decide you will be a winner and take steps to overcome your situation. Let go of your pride and ego. Humble yourself. Ignore advice from those who are not successful.
3. Future. Be a role model for your children, family and future generations to show them that failure is not a permanent option; it is merely one stop in the path of life.
4. Change is good. Sometimes change helps us to refocus on what is really important so don’t reject change, embrace it.
5. Outlook. Change your outlook on life. Eliminate negative behaviors, thoughts and people from your life. Read inspirational articles or books such as “The Secret” by Rhonda Byrne, “Think and Grow Rich” by Napoleon Hill or The Law of Attraction.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment