Instead of trying to be brilliant and make everything perfect, ask yourself how do I fail at x and how do I avoid doing that. The inverse moves to becoming brilliant and being perceived as perfect. It’s simple and it proves that consistency and persistency matter more so.
@DrewCerullo Agreed you can't manufacture desire, you can only find the ones who already want it and make yourself the clearest and most obvious path to getting it. To set up the sale so it's made before you even enter the room. Effortless.
‘But he was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities; the punishment that brought us peace was on him, and by his wounds we are healed.’ — Isaiah 53:5
Today we remember Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross. Have a blessed Good Friday.
When a plane begins its ascent during takeoff and then suddenly decides to stop, it crashes. Why? Because it hasn’t yet built enough momentum or reached enough altitude to stabilise. Now compare that to a plane that takes the time and energy to rise above the clouds. Once it’s up there, it’s not coming down so easily. It would take a massive, consistent lack of thrust to bring it crashing back to earth.
This is exactly how I view momentum.
We all have days where we fall off - where we miss a workout, skip our routine, or break a promise to ourselves. That’s normal. However the moment you get back on track, you can’t just return to cruising altitude, you need to climb higher than before.
Picture this: you were at 1000m, then dropped to 500m. Now, instead of just getting back to 1000m, you push to 5000m. Why? Because the higher you climb, the less likely you are to crash again. Maybe next time you dip slightly to 4000m, or even 3500m - but you're still way above where you used to be.
The plane is a metaphor, but it perfectly reflects how we operate. Once you grasp this concept, you reach a stage where it becomes non-negotiable. You’re always “on” never "off" always ascending, and that's where the real separation happens. That’s where you start outperforming everyone in your field and people will call you lucky, or more talented, but it's not that. It's simply because you’ve stayed in motion longer.
In conclusion: The more time you put in, the faster you learn. The faster you learn, the more efficient you become. And people will start calling you “gifted” when in reality, you just kept climbing.
Join -> https://t.co/iWoL2EijJr
@Keir_Starmer Nobody gives a single toss about this nonesense.
British streets are flooded with illegals and the cities are crime-ridden war zones. People are being forced to leave what was once one of the greatest empires the world has ever seen.
@brutedeforce@DearS_o_n James 1:19-20: “My dear brothers and sisters, take note of this: Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry, because human anger does not produce the righteousness that God desires.”