Are You Prepared for Success?
By Brian Tracy
Earl
Nightingale once said that if a person does not prepare for his
success, when his opportunity comes, it will only make him look
foolish.
You've
probably heard it said repeatedly that luck is what happens
when preparedness meets opportunity.
Only when
you've paid the price to be ready for your success are you in a
position to take advantage of your opportunities when they
arise.
And the most remarkable thing is
this:
The very act of preparation attracts to you, like
iron filings to a magnet, opportunities to use that preparation
to advance in your life. You'll seldom learn anything of value
without soon having a chance to use your new knowledge and your
new skills to move ahead more rapidly.
There is a series of things that you can do to become
ready for success. All of these activities require
self-discipline and a good deal of faith. They require
self-discipline because the most normal and natural thing for
people to do is to try to get by without preparation. Instead
of taking the time and making the effort to be ready for their
chance when it comes, they fool around, listen to the radio,
watch television, and then they try to wing it and dupe others
into thinking that they are more prepared than they really are.
And since just about everyone can see through just about
everyone else, the unprepared person simply looks incompetent
and foolish.
The Golden Hour
We live in a knowledge-based society, and knowledge
in every field is doubling approximately every seven years.
This means that you must double your knowledge in your field
every seven years just to stay even. You're already "maxed out"
at your current level of knowledge and skill. You've reached
the ceiling in your career with your current talents and
abilities. If you want to go faster and further, you must get
back to work and begin to prepare yourself for greater heights.
You must put aside the newspaper, turn off the television,
politely excuse yourself from aimless socializing, and work on
yourself.
Get into the habit of awaking earlier in the morning
and spending the first 30 to 60 minutes reading something
uplifting, informational, educational.
Henry Ward Beecher once said, "The first hour is the
rudder of the day." This is often called the "golden
hour."
It's the hour during which you program your mind and
set your emotional tone for the rest of the day. If you get up
in the morning at least two hours before you have to be at
work, or before your first appointment, and spend the first
hour investing in your mind, taking in "mental protein" rather
than "mental candy," reading good books rather than the
newspaper or magazines, your whole day will flow more smoothly.
You'll be more positive and optimistic. You'll be calmer, more
confident and relaxed. You'll gain a greater sense of control
and well-being by the very act of reading healthy material for
the first hour of each and everyday.
Plan Your Day
Another thing that highly successful people do is
plan and prepare for the entire day. They review all of the
tasks and responsibilities that they have for the coming hours.
They carefully make a list of all their activities, and they
set clear priorities on the activities. They decide which
things are most important to do, which are secondary in
importance, and which things should not be done at all unless
all the other things are finished. They then discipline
themselves to start working on their most important tasks and
stay with them during the day until they're
complete.
The natural tendency of the low performer is to do
what is fun and easy before he or she does what is hard and
necessary. Underachievers always like to do the little things
first. They are drawn to the tasks that contribute little to
their careers or future possibilities. But high achievers
discipline themselves to start at the top of their list and to
work on the activities in order of importance, without
diversion or distraction.
In everything you do, preparation is the key. If you
want to be ready for success, you have to plant the seeds well
in advance of the harvest that you expect. Do what the winners
do: Think on paper.
Memorize the winner's creed:
"Everything counts."
Everything you do is either moving you toward your
goals or away from them. Everything is either helping you or
hurting you. Nothing is neutral. Everything counts. A young man
once asked a successful businessman how he could be more
successful faster. The businessman told him that the key to his
own success had been to "get good" at his
job.
The young man said, "I'm already good at what I
do."
The businessman then said, "Well, get better!"
The young man, somewhat self-satisfied, said, "Well, I'm
already better than most people."
To that, the businessman replied, "Then be the
best."
Those are three of the best pieces of advice I've
ever heard: Get good. Get better. Be the
best!
A
quotation by Abraham Lincoln had a great influence on my life
when I was 15. It was a statement he made when he was a young
lawyer in Springfield, Illinois.
He said, "I will study and prepare
myself, and someday my chance will
come."
If you study and prepare yourself, your chance will
come as well. There is nothing that you cannot accomplish if
you'll invest the effort to get yourself ready for the success
that you desire. And there is nothing that can stop you but
your own lack of preparation.
Think about the message in this beautiful poem by
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow:
"Those heights by great men won and kept
Were not achieved by sudden flight;
But they, while their companions slept,
Were toiling upward in the
night."
Remember that preparation requires self-discipline,
because your natural tendency is to do more and more of the
things that come most easily to you and avoid those areas that
you don't enjoy because you're not particularly good at them
yet. It requires character for you to admit your weaknesses in
a particular area and then resolve to go to work to develop
yourself so those weaknesses don't hold you back. In other
words: Prepare yourself for success ... or when opportunity
knocks, it will make you look a fool.
Brian Tracy
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