While
most people spend most of their lives struggling to earn a living, a much
smaller number seem to have everything going their way. Instead of just earning
a living, the smaller group is busily working at building and enjoying a
fortune. Everything just seems to work out for them. And here sits the much
larger group, wondering how life can be so unfair, so complicated and unjust.
What's the major difference between the little group with so much and the larger
group with so little?
Despite
all of the factors that affect our lives - like the kind of parents we have, the
schools we attended, the part of the country we grew up in - none has as much
potential power for affecting our futures as our ability to dream.
Dreams
are a projection of the kind of life you want to lead. Dreams can drive you.
Dreams can make you skip over obstacles. When you allow your dreams to pull you,
they unleash a creative force that can overpower any obstacle in your path. To
unleash this power, though, your dreams must be well defined. A fuzzy future has
little pulling power. Well-defined dreams are not fuzzy. Wishes are fuzzy. To
really achieve your dreams, to really have your future plans pull you forward,
your dreams must be vivid.
If
you've ever hiked a fourteen thousand-foot peak in the Rocky Mountains, one
thought has surely come to mind "How did the settlers of this country do
it?" How did they get from the East Coast to the West Coast? Carrying one
day's supply of food and water is hard enough. Can you imagine hauling all of
your worldly goods with you . . . mile after mile, day after day, month after
month? These people had big dreams. They had ambition. They didn't focus on the
hardship of getting up the mountain.
In
their minds, they were already on the other side - their bodies just hadn't
gotten them there yet! Despite all of their pains and struggles, all of the
births and deaths along the way, those who made it to the other side had a
single vision: to reach the land of continuous sunshine and extraordinary
wealth. To start over where anything and everything was possible. Their dreams
were stronger than the obstacles in their way.
You've
got to be a dreamer. You've got to envision the future. You've got to see
California while you're climbing fourteen thousand-foot peaks. You've got to see
the finish line while you're running the race. You've got to hear the cheers
when you're in the middle of a monster project. And you've got to be willing to
put yourself through the paces of doing the uncomfortable until it becomes
comfortable. Because that's how you realize your dreams.
To
Your Success,
Jim Rohn