MLM Success Secret Exposed On Creating Leaders Using Mentoring For Free Today

MLM Success Secret Exposed On Creating Leaders Using Mentoring For Free Today:
This is a story of the mlm success secret exposed on creating leaders using Mentoring For Free today featuring Margi Starr. She starts out by giving a word picture on what happened in her church with a Potter being a special guest at her church and then she compares it to creating leaders using the Mentoring For Free System.
Several weeks ago we had a Potter come to our church as a special guest.
As people were gathering in the sanctuary, he began to set up his special equipment on one side of the platform. Every movement he made was captured by our audio visual team and put up on the big screens. It was interesting watching him position all of us equipment with great care.
As the music began to play, he tied on a simple tool belt and stooped down to open a large bag of clay. A tub of water was carefully positioned nearby.
The worship music continued and provided a backdrop of praise.
The Potter took both hands, reached into a plastic bag and broke off clumps of clay. He would feel the clay in his hands and if it wasn’t enough, he’d thrust his hand into the bag for more. He threw the clay onto the pottery wheel almost in rhythm with the beat of the music. He sat down on the stool next to the wheel, adjusted it carefully, and quietly went to work.
The praise team continued to sing and the potter’s wheel began to spin.
Within mere moments the Potter took his skillful hands and began fashioning the lump of clay. He would dip his hands into the water to make the clay more pliable. At other times he would slip a tool from his tool belt and begin pressing it firmly into the clay.
From a dull lump of clay, a bowl was created.
The music stopped and our pastor began sharing God’s Word. The gentle hum of the Potter’s wheel continued. Another lump of clay was thrown onto the wheel. The Potter began his magical work once again.
This time the Potter’s Imagination saw something different within the cold lifeless clay. Using different tools and literally pulling the clay higher as it spun around on the wheel, a pitcher came into being.

I watched the big screens mesmerized by every movement of the Potter’s skillful hands.
With no warning, the wheel slowed and then stopped. The Potter took what appeared to be a perfectly formed vessel and began squeezing it and pressing it until it looked like a worthless lump of clay.
Once the clay surrendered to his hand, he placed it again onto the wheel. The wheel began to spin.
This time the Potter seemed pleased with his creation. With skill and precision he had created the very thing he had seen in his Imagination.
The pitcher was the work of a gifted craftsman. With a sense of pride it was placed alongside the bowl.
By the conclusion of the worship service there were five beautiful pottery creations lined across the platform. Each was uniquely crafted and designed specifically for its intended purpose.
We begin our journey in Mentoring For Free as lumps of clay. We yield to the Recipe for Success…or we resist. Some of us are quickly fashioned into a beautiful vessel that begins mentoring and serving others immediately. Others, like me, must return again and again to the Potter’s wheel to be molded and shaped a little bit more.
But with continued surrender, we each are becoming the person the Potter already sees.
The rest is up to you folks. Ask yourself this question: What would be easier for me to do, to continue what I have always done and getting what I have always gotten or using the mlm success secret exposed on creating leaders using Mentoring For Free today?
Lawrence Bergfeld
Learn How TO Build Your Empire Once And Big
Lawrence Bergfeld
917-399-6207
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From Lawrence Bergfled's blog, a great post by Margie Starr.
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Life is to be enjoyed, not endured.

Life is to be enjoyed, not endured.:

Life is to be enjoyed, not endured.

Related Posts Life is happiness and unhappiness. Life is day and night, life is life and death. You have to be aware of both. I accept life unconditionally. Most people ask for happiness on condition. Happiness can only be felt if you don’t set any condition. Life is a challenge, meet it! Life is a…read more.
From Positively Postive
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ARE YOU READY?

ARE YOU READY?: Are you ready?  Time - it is a constant and whether we are ready or not - it continues with or without us.  There are so many things we have to get ready for - - work, school, events etc.  Sometimes we get very lost in our days and we forget those things that are important.  Are you ready?  God tells us to be ready even though we do not know the time or day of his coming, but we should be ready.
From Insperation Awaits you
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Pick Up Your Oar And Start Rowing

Here is your Friday story,

Pick Up Your Oar And Start Rowing

My boss, two co-workers and I stood behind the hard plastic seats. We were in the front section, on the first-base line at Shea Stadium, home of the New York Mets. We were so close to the infield, there was a protective net over our heads. I was new to the New York City area and had never been to Shea Stadium. These were dream seats. My heart pounded with excitement.

We stood with our umbrellas held high. The rain beat down on everything around us. It bounced off the seats and quickly formed deep puddles on the cover protecting the field.

"Steve," I asked my boss, "How did you get such great seats?"

"They came from Ed at the office. His dad is a blind sports writer and has a long- standing relationship with the Mets and Yankees."

The game was called due to rain. We left the stadium disappointed. On the long subway ride back to Jersey City, I wondered about the man behind the seats. How could a man be blind and be a sports writer?

Years have passed since that rainy night. Old friends back in Canada often ask me, "Mike, have you gone to a baseball game in New York yet?"

I say to them, "I've been to a few, but let me tell you about the best seats I ever had but couldn't use."

Whenever this happens, the memory of that night comes flashing back. I wonder about the blind sports writer. What was his story?

It had to be special.

I sat at my computer one night. An email popped into my in-box. I didn't recognize the return address. The subject line said, "Inspirational SI article about my dad, Ed Lucas." I was curious.

I opened the email. It was from a gentleman sending me a clip of a story written by Steve Rushin for Sports Illustrated. It was a wonderful read about a special man. Through the article and the man who sent it to me, I learned the full story. The following is a synopsis:

Twelve-year-old Ed Lucas ran home from his school in Jersey City. It was October 3, 1951. He arrived in time to see Bobby Thomson win the pennant for his favorite team, the New York Giants.

After the game, Ed ran out to play ball with his friends. During the game, Ed was hit between the eyes by a line drive. The force of the blow detached both retinas, leaving Ed permanently blind.

Ed became depressed. His mother, Rosanna, took matters into her own hands and took Ed to a Newark, New Jersey men's store.

There, she introduced him to Phil Rizzuto, a part-time employee of the store and a Yankee star. Phil befriended Ed.

Rosanna wasn't done yet. She wrote the Giants Manager, Leo Durocher, about her son. Leo asked her to bring Ed to, what was then called, the Polo Grounds. On June 14, 1952, young Ed sat in the clubhouse with the members of the Giants. It was the beginning of a special relationship.

Ed enrolled in St. Joseph's School for the Blind in Jersey City. The nuns were demanding. Ed learned to make his bed and match his clothes. If he whined about being blind and not being able to do what other kids could, Sister Anthony Marie was quoted saying, "Isn't that a shame? We're all in the same boat here, Ed. Pick up your oar and start rowing."

Ed enrolled in university to study communication arts. He worked hard. He knew no other way. The nuns had made sure of that.

He graduated in 1962 and became a regular in the Shea and Yankee Stadium press boxes, where he interviewed the players. Years later, a young Mets rookie, Ron Swoboda, took Ed by the hand. Together they walked the warning track around the field. Ed traced his fingers along the outfield wall. His fingers, sensitive to reading Braille, seemed to read the history of the park. Every dent, scratch and chip he touched meant something to him.

Later that year, Ed married. He and his wife had two sons - Eddie and Chris. Sadly, at a very young age, their mother left forever. Ed had to raise his two sons alone. With the strength he learned years ago at St. Joseph's, Ed took on the task. He taught his sons to be strong.

It was not uncommon for the two young boys to see Billy Martin in their home. "Huge stars like Mickey Mantle would tell me my dad was their hero," Chris was quoted as saying.

Years later, a friend came to Ed and told him about a nurse, Allison Pfeifle, whose detached retina left her legally blind and unable to continue her profession. He asked Ed to speak to her.

Ed and Allison talked on the phone for many years before meeting in person. They were baseball fanatics and spent their first date at Shea Stadium.

On March 10, 2006, at Yankee Stadium, Allison walked from the dugout to home plate and became Ed's new bride.

With his two sons at his side, Ed started a new life, at the place he holds so dear, and with the woman who captured his heart.

Ed, now 68, was quoted saying, "Baseball took my sight, but it also gave me my life."

***********************
I sat in shock. Could it be? I mailed Chris back and told him about the seats we couldn't use that rainy night.

He confirmed, his father was the man who provided those unused seats. Chris told me later, "They are the first couple in the 80 year history of the stadium to have the honor of marrying there."
I finally knew the story. It was sure worth waiting for.

Michael T Smith

Michael lives in Caldwell, Idaho with his wonderful wife Ginny. He writes in his spare time and is completing a collection of his stories to be called, “From My Heart to Yours.” Michael writes inspirational stories in his spare time. To read more of Michael's stories or to contact him, go to http://ourecho.com/biography-353-Michael-Timothy-Smith.shtml#stories

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Wow what a powerful story, such a great insperational story.

Sent to you as a courtesy of:
Josh Hinds
Inspirational Speaker, Author, and Coach
http://www.JoshHinds.com
   
From Insight of the Day emails
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