The harder you work on your art, the luckier you get.
By working on our art, we create energy to propel and attract us to people and circumstances to make our efforts come to fruition in big ways.
Therefore, we’ve got to do all that we can and not settle for anything less.
In a seminar lead by Jim Rohn , he discusses that humans are the only species that don’t live to their fullest potential. He argues that a tree grows as high as it possibly can, and that a tree would never grow only halfway. But we as humans are given a choice:
- Live to your fullest potential
Or...
- Don’t live to your fullest potential
It may look and sound easier to settle for less than…To endure the mediocre… To embrace the status quo… To suffer the chains of happy hour, TV watching, and social networking. But in the long-run it’ll come to bite you in the ass, in the form of disease or debt or depression.
It's my belief that if we strive to live up to our fullest potential in every area of our life, we can extend our lives.
It's my belief that if we strive to live up to our fullest potential in every area of our life, we can extend our lives.
Have you ever noticed how good you feel, when you finally complete an artistic endeavor?!
Your energy increases exponentially... Every success brings more positive energy, and momentum ensues. And it’s this positive energy that increases our immunity, which in turn extends our lives.
A friend of mine told me that when she gets back pain, it always seems to pop up when she's not expressing her creativity.
I also had a friend tell me, now that she works a desk job; her energy and drive is much less then when she was pursuing her artistic career path. And although her current job allows her financial stability, her artistic self is suffering. Money is great, but only if you can support your art at the same time.
Your energy increases exponentially... Every success brings more positive energy, and momentum ensues. And it’s this positive energy that increases our immunity, which in turn extends our lives.
A friend of mine told me that when she gets back pain, it always seems to pop up when she's not expressing her creativity.
I also had a friend tell me, now that she works a desk job; her energy and drive is much less then when she was pursuing her artistic career path. And although her current job allows her financial stability, her artistic self is suffering. Money is great, but only if you can support your art at the same time.
I often times feel depressed or frustrated or lazy, when I'm not working on my art on a regular basis. My mind gets cloudy, and I feel stuck... and then I pull/drag/tear myself away from my Ego, and into my creative plane. My mind clears and I begin to see light at the end of the tunnel.
The challenge that arises:
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