Most Won���t Be Successful ��� Here���s Why
A great piece over at CNBC gets right to the heart of the matter concerning why most of us, despite our best intentions, will simply be unable to turn the corner in the effort to attain genuine success.
There���s a lot to the article, but some of the best, and briefest, declarations about why so many will fail to make it have to do with the impediments associated with making poor lifestyle decisions.
Article author Benjamin Hardy asks, ���If your daily behaviors are consistently low quality, what do you expect your life's output to be?���
���Your choices must become higher quality. Your relationships must become higher quality.���
And he means ALL of your choices.
Even down to what you choose to eat.
���You can't continue eating crappy food, regardless of your spouse's or colleague's food choices,��� writes Hardy.
What does what you eat have to do with success?
It���s a reflection of who you are. If you are someone who���s truly driven to success, then you will make sure that everything you���re doing, both large and small, is the best that it can be.
To that end, Hardy says directly that ���your days must consistently be spent on high-quality activities.��� That means all of your activities���including what you eat.
And your associations? That���s a crystal clear reflection of where you���re headed.
���To be successful, you can't continue being with low-frequency people for long periods of time,��� Hardy notes.
In other words, success doesn���t come merely by working hard at the singular effort at which you want to realize great achievement. It comes, as well, from the symbiosis that results when everything you���re doing, when every effort in which you engage each day���is characterized by being of the highest standard possible.
But that���s just not where most of us are.
Which is why most of us will merely read about the successes of others.
Will that be you?
By Robert G. Yetman, Jr. Editor At Large