To get whatever you want follow the six-step plan. Decide what you want, what you will do for it, your timeframe, your plan, summarize all in a short statement and repeat every morning and evening.
The first step on the path to success is to know the path to
success. As the old saying says, if you don’t know where you are going you will
never get there, or as Yogi Berra put it, “If you don't know where you are
going, you might wind up someplace else.” Napoleon Hill considered desire to be
the first step on the path to success. You have to want success as badly as
Socrates’ submerged student sought air. Hill interviewed many people who had
achieved great things in life, and all knew what they wanted. They desired
their goal above all else.
When HernĂ¡n Cortes set out to conquer the Aztec empire, it
is said that he burned his ships to prevent retreat. This has gone down in lore
as the ultimate act of ensuring that there will be no going back. By removing
the path of retreat you heighten your men’s desire to succeed in battle.
You can follow a similar course on the path to success. If
you give up your job with no chance of return before you set up your dream
business, you have given yourself a very strong motive to succeed. If you have
the option of return, this “packed parachute” will probably lessen the chances
of success of your business.
The path to success may not be the easiest path. After the
great fire in Chicago, most of the city-center traders took the easier option:
they left to establish stores on greenfield sites in western cities that were
expanding. One exception was Marshall Field, who rebuilt his store where it had
been. The store is still the most famous in that city.
Hill identified a straightforward method of achieving
success. He verified the validity of this method by asking very successful men
of his time, Andrew Carnegie and Thomas Edison, what they thought. They agreed
that it was the best course to any success in life – not just money.
- Decide exactly what you want. If it is money, pick an exact amount rather than just “lots.”
- Determine what you will do in return. Remember there is no such thing as a free lunch.
- Set a definite date by which you intend to get the money.
- Establish a clear plan and begin immediately.
- Write a concise statement of the first four points, saying what you want, what you will do in return, by when you will get it and how you will get it.
- Read this statement aloud twice daily – when you go to bed at night and when you get up in the morning.
In addition, when you are reading the statement, picture
your success. Believe that you have already achieved your goal. If it is money,
picture a bank statement with that amount on it. If it is a new car, picture
yourself driving it. Enjoy the picture. Include in your picture yourself doing
whatever you need to do to earn your dream. Stick to this plan and you will
succeed.
I used this exact formula for writing this book and others.
I made the following statement, which I read aloud as part of my daily prayer
morning and evening. “I will sell a million books within five years by writing
books people want to read. My first book will be published in 2013. I will
write something every day.”
You can see all four elements in this statement. To sell a
million books is a definite measure of success. I will do it by writing books
people want to read. This is important. I am not writing this because it is
what I want to write, although I do enjoy it. I am writing it because it is
what you want to read and are willing to pay for. I have set a timeframe – 5
years to achieve one million sales. I have set a plan. My first book will be
published in 2013. I will write something every day.
As stated earlier, Graham Greene wrote brilliant novels by
writing 500 words a day. I can manage that many words. I read over material to
inspire me before going to bed at night. I wake up an hour earlier and write
before starting to get myself ready for work and the kids ready for school. The
method works. It is not difficult, but some effort is required.
Hill practiced what he preached. He wrote “Our only
limitations are those we set up in our own mind,” and this philosophy was put
to the test when his son, Blair, was born without ears. He decided that he
would instill in his son a burning desire to hear and speak. He discovered that
his son could detect loud sounds at the base of his skull when he listened to
records by biting the record player. Blair could hear when Hill shouted with
his lips at the base of his skull.
Gradually Blair heard enough sounds that he could speak. His
parents insisted he go to regular school even though he could hear little. He
got by. He had great drive and ambition to succeed. They refused to allow him
learn sign language – a bit like ship burning.
Eventually, when in college in his early 20s, Blair tried a
new hearing aid that allowed him to hear perfectly. He was thrilled, and
dedicated his life to helping people learn to hear. Doctors who examined him
could find no trace of natural hearing equipment, but hear he did. Hill put it
beautifully when he wrote “Truly, my son taught me that handicaps can be
converted into stepping stones on which one may climb toward some worthy goal,
unless they are accepted as obstacles, and used as alibis.”
When you desire something badly enough, you will succeed. As
I always say, if you want to do something you will find a way; if you don’t,
you will find an excuse. There is no reason why you will fail if you use this
approach. Follow the simple six-step process and go for it.
This is an extract
from ‘Improve your life’ by George Nicholas. It is based on ideas of Napoleon
Hill from ‘Think and Grow Rich’.
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