To Be All That You Can Be

Developing your full potential means that you must continually develop new winning habits. The single most important habit you can develop is self-discipline.  Self discipline has been described as the “ability to make yourself do what you should do when you should do it, whether you feel like it or not.”

It is generally believed that the average person uses only about 10% of their potential. That is to say that the average person could be ten times more productive and successful than they currently are. Studies done at Stanford University Brain Institute are even less flattering. They claim that the average person only uses about 2% of their full potential. No matter which figure you agree with, it is clear that we perform far below what we are capable of. According to Abraham Maslow we are consistently “selling ourselves short.” We concoct all kinds of reasons to rationalize and justify our poor performance and lack of success, ignoring the fact that we all have the ability to develop far beyond anything we have achieved so far. Brian Tracy noted that “The potential of an average person is like a huge ocean unsailed, a new continent unexplored, a world of possibilities waiting to be released and channeled toward some great good.”

Clarify Your Vision

Start developing a long term vision of yourself. Jump forward five or ten years into the future and see yourself fully developed in every important area of your life. What would it look like? To what level would you have developed your skills and abilities in your chosen field? What kind of success and recognition would you be enjoying because of the excellent work you do? How would you feel about yourself once you are one of the most recognized people within your area of expertise?

Set Goals

Once you have crafted your vision, start shaping it into specific actionable goals. Write down at least ten goals you would like to achieve personally and professionally in the area of personal development. From that list, determine the one goal that would make the biggest impact on your life and start working out a schedule, with firm timelines and benchmarks for achieving it. Don’t delay. Start working on your plan immediately and ensure that you have tangible ways to measure your progress towards your goal of self improvement. Perhaps the measurement is in terms of the number of books you read per month or even the number of appointments or sales you’ve made because of your increasing skill set.

Develop Winning Habits

Without question, the habits that you have adopted in the past are largely responsible for your skill set, level of performance and ultimately the success that you enjoy today. To be all that you can be, you must develop new winning habits. Perhaps the single most important habit you can develop is self-discipline, which has been described as the “ability to make yourself do what you should do when you should do it, whether you feel like it or not.”

Shun the tendency to think that others are more capable than you. Remember that what others have done, within reason, you can do too. Conversely, resist the temptation to not play full out because you are afraid to show up others. Author and lecturer Marianne Williamson reminds us that “Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that most frightens us. We ask ourselves, who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous? Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child of God. Your playing small does not serve the world. There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won't feel insecure around you. We are all meant to shine.”

Keep On Pushing!

Next Related Article:
Invest In Success By Committing Yourself
When we first come up with an idea, our heads are filled with scattered thoughts and a vague plan of action. The problem is that good ideas don’t go anywhere on their own........

"When you rise in the morning, form a resolution to make the day happy for one fellow creature." 
*-- Sydney Smith

"Motivation is what gets you started.  Habit is what keeps you going."  *-- Jim Ryuh

"Why should I deem myself to be a chisel, when I could be the artist?"  *-- J.C. von Schiller

"Those who cannot give friendship will  rarely receive it, and never hold it."  *-- Dagobert D. Runes

"True happiness comes from squandering ourselves for a purpose."   *-- John Mason Brown

Get a Free Daily Inspirational  Quotations By Email

Home Page : Self Motivation Tips  ==> Self Help Information

 | Procrastination |
| Self Help Authors | Self Help Article | Free Self Help | Online Self Help
 | Self Help Information | Self Help Guides | To Improve Self | Self Help Motivation | Be Motivated Online |
| Self Help Advice | Self-Help Tips | Motivate Myself |
| Self Help Resources | Self Help Web Site | Words to Motivate You | Self Development | Positive Thinking |
| Site Map 1 | Site Map 2 |

All the site contents are Copyright © www.gotothings.com and the content authors. All rights reserved. 
Every effort is made to ensure the content integrity.  Information used on this site is at your own risk.
All product names are trademarks of their respective companies.
The site www.gotothings.com is in no way affiliated with or endorsed by any company listed at this site.
Any unauthorised copying or mirroring is prohibited.