Start Living in Prime Time by Denis Waitley

Wow a great article from Denis Waitley, yet it is something at everyone can really do.

Start Living in Prime Time by Denis Waitley

Prime time is that period between 6 and 10 p.m. during which most of the general public watches television. Commercials in prime time are the most expensive, approaching a million dollars per minute. Your real success in life will take a quantum leap when you stop watching other people making money in their professions performing in prime time, and start living your own dreams and goals in prime time. Time is the ultimate equal opportunity employer. Time never stops to rest, never hesitates, never looks forward or backward. Life’s raw material spends itself in the now, this moment, which is why how you spend your time is far more important than all the material possessions you may own or positions you may obtain. Positions change; possessions come and go; you can earn more money. You can renew your supply of many things, but like good health, that other most precious resource, time spent is gone forever.

Each yesterday, and all of them together, are beyond your control. Literally all the money in the world can’t undo or redo a single act you performed. You cannot erase a single word you said. You can’t add an “I love you,” “I’m sorry,” or “I forgive you,” not even a “thank you” you forgot to say. Each human being in every hemisphere and time zone has precisely 168 hours a week to spend. And some of the most precious hours occur in prime time.

Consider this: Most of your daytime hours are spent helping other people solve their problems. The little time you have in the evenings and on weekends is all you have to spend on yourself, on your own dreams and goals, and personal development. Some thoughts to ponder:

• Have supper with your loved ones at least two to three times per week. It’s the best time for casual conversation to listen to what those close to you feel is important in their lives. Mealtime is a time to dialogue.

• A television set is an appliance. It should be used, at most, for two hours at a time. It should be off, unless specific programs of interest are selected. It should not be used as a one-eyed babysitter. For the most part, TV exposes us to negative role models.

• Instead of watching television, why not read a good fiction or nonfiction book, write a letter, engage in a hobby or craft, call a friend or someone in need of encouragement on the phone, network on your computer, go out to an ethnic restaurant, a home show, an entrepreneurial show, a musical recital, a play, a fitness class, or cultural event. Take an art or photography class. Use prime time to live the kind of life others put on layaway.

Action Idea: If you and your family/friends watch TV, try not turning it on for one week. When you do watch TV, reduce by 50% the amount of time you spend watching it. Concentrate your evenings and free time engaged in hands on, real-life experiences you can touch, feel, smell and engage all your senses in. Instead of virtual reality, insist on the real thing.

When it comes to peak performance, Denis Waitley has for many years trained high performers, teaching them the secrets to optimal health, greater self-esteem and stronger self-discipline. And here’s the great news for YOU. With The Platinum Collection—his 18-CD “portable coaching system”—the secrets of these elite performers are now within your grasp! Click here for more details or to order.

Life Is a Participation Sport

Life Is a Participation Sport

Life is a participation sport, not a spectator sport. We have become a society of overfed, undernourished couch potatoes. Maybe it’s because I’m reaching the autumn of my life that I’m much more conscious of being active and healthy instead of sedentary and overweight. Do you think the next generation will be called “baby blubbers” instead of baby boomers?

A cartoon I saw recently showed a pudgy neighbor kid knocking on his friend’s front door, asking his friend’s mom: “Can Johnnie come out and eat?” And not so many years ago it was can he come out and play.

This week, pass up the fast food and junk food, and put some high-octane, nutritious food in your tank.

Denis Waitley

If you are so smart, then start getting paid what you are worth!

If you are so smart, then start getting paid what you are worth!
Great headline, eh?
If you don't capture your prospect's imagination and attention with a great first sentence or headline ... you don't have a prospect.
Always think hard about what your first sentence will be. Your career depends on it.
And now for some examples:
* "See your dentist for half-price."
* "Lose your rear-end and make money!"
* "I got divorced at half-price and still drive my BMW."
* "Drive to the bank instead of your job."
Remember, first sentences are used by your competition. Everyone is vying for your prospect's money.
Want to create your own custom first sentences and headlines?
Go to:
http://www.fortunenow.com/products/item25.cfm

Vitamins for the Mind – Concentration

Vitamins for the Mind
by Jim Rohn

Concentration

The best advice I ever came across on the subject of concentration is: Wherever you are, be there.

When you work, work. When you play, play. Don't mix the two.

Give whatever you are doing and whoever you are with the gift of attention.

On the way to work, concentrate on the way—not the work.

Pay attention. Don't just stagger through the day.

"Vitamins for the Mind" is a weekly sampling of original quotes on a specific topic taken from The Treasury of Quotes by Jim Rohn. The burgundy hardbound book with gold-foil lettering is a collection of more than 365 quotes on 60 topics gathered from Jim's personal journals, seminars and books and spanning more than 40 years. Click here to order The Treasury of Quotes.

What is your mentality, do you have the job or business mentality.

What is your mentality, do you have the job or business mentality. Do you have what it takes to be an entrepreneur.

Harry Hartley of Calgary, Canada got me thinking. He asked me:
"Do people really want a business of their own? Businesses have headaches. Don't they really just want an income?"
So I got to thinking on my trip back from Canada.
Job holders think business is easy. Just sit back and collect the money. I probably shouldn't change what I say to them.
But if I'm talking to a business owner ... well, maybe I should just say extra income. The business owner certainly doesn't want one more business.

Thanks for this lesson Tom Big Al

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