On The Path Of Winners
BY BAYO OGUNMUPE
Unlock Your Potential For Greatness
YOUR potential is like
a huge ocean that is unexplored, you only need to channel it toward a great
goal. Success is setting and achieving goals. All great men are intensely goal
oriented. They are focused single-mindedly on achieving whatever they want.
Thus, your ability to set and achieve goals is the master skill of success.
Goals unlock your unconscious, releasing your creative power to achieve your
objective.
Whatever you have accomplished up till now is
only a fraction of your potential. A rule of success says, it doesn’t matter
where you are coming from, all that matters is where you are going. And you
alone determine where you are going. Clear goals increase your confidence. They
develop your competence and boost your motives for achievement. Goals fuel the
furnace of achievement.
The greatest discovery in human, history is
the power of your mind to create anything you desire. That mind power enabled
man to create planes, it enabled us to conquer the moon, discover electricity
and create the internet. Every gadget around you such as the computer, the cell
phone began as a thought in the mind of a single man. Your wife, house and
children first existed in your mind before they were translated into reality.
Your thoughts are creative, they shape your world and everything that happens
to you. Always bear in mind that your resolve to succeed is more important than
any other thing in t he whole world.
Mystics and philosophers agree that success
is attained by you becoming what you think about the most. That means you
become what you think. Your outer world ultimately becomes a reflection of your
inner world. And this your inner world mirrors back to you what you think about
the most. Thousands of great men have been asked what they think about most of
the time. Their common answer is that they think about what they want and how
to get it most of the time. But failures always think and talk about their
problems and what they don’t want most of the time.
But you have an automatic goal seeking soul.
Imagine this: take a homing pigeon out of its roost, put it in a cage with a
blanket over the cage, put the cage in a box and put the box in a closed
vehicle. You then drive a thousand miles in any direction. If you then open the
car, take out the pigeon from the cage, the homing pigeon will still fly up
into the air, circle three times and then fly unerringly back to its home roost
a thousand miles away. No other creature on earth has this incredible
cybernetic-goal seeking function except man. You have this same goal achieving
ability as the homing pigeon, and with one marvelous addition, when you have a
clear goal, by just deciding what you want, you will begin to move unerringly
towards your goal; and your goal will start moving towards you. At the right
time and place you and the goal will meet.
This goal-getting incredible cybernetic
mechanism is inside of you, in your unconscious. You only need to tap into it
in order to get it. Like a computer, this your intuitive power is
nonjudgmental. It works automatically, continuing to bring you whatever you
want, regardless of what you programme into it. This cybernetic force in you
will enable you achieve whatever you desire regardless of your poor education,
poverty or inelegant physique. Nature doesn’t care about the bigness of your
goals. Thus, size, scope and the details of your chosen goals are up to you.
There are four reasons why people don’t set
goals. One, they think goals aren’t important. Because people are fatalistic
and superstitious about life. Two, people don’t know how to set goals. Sometime
people equate wishes or dreams with goals. A goal is clear, can be written,
specific and can be measured. You know when you have achieved it, like founding
a university, winning the Nobel prize.
Three, people don’t set goals because they
have a fear of failure. And finally, people who fear rejection fail to set
goals. They believe failing to attain a goal may end up in their being rejected
and ridiculed by the public. This is one reason you should keep your goals
confidential. Don’t tell anyone in advance. Just let them see what you have
accomplished. Failures that others don’t know can’t ridicule you.
Mark McCormack in his book: What They Don’t
Teach You At Harvard Business School, reveals of an Harvard study conducted in
the 1980s. in 1979, graduates of MBA at Harvard were asked, ‘‘Have you set
clear, written goals for your future and made plans to accomplish them?” It
turned out only three per cent of the graduates had written goals and plans.
Thirteen per cent had goals, but they didn’t write them down. Fully 84 per cent
had no specific goals.
Ten years later in 1989, the researchers
interviewed the Harvard MBA class of 1979. They found that the 13 per cent who
had goals that were not in writing were earning twice as much as the 84 per
cent who had no goals. Surprisingly, however, they found that the three per
cent of graduates who had clear, written goals when they left Harvard, were
earning ten times as much as the other 97 per cent of all of the graduates. The
clarity of their goals had made all the difference.
Our champion this week is Douglass Cecil
North, American economist, the recipient with Robert Fogel, of the 1993 Nobel
Memorial Prize for Economics. The two were recognized for their pioneering work
in the new economic history. It is the application of economic theory and
statistical methods to the study of history.
Born in November 1920 in Cambridge,
Massachussetts, North studied economics at the University of California,
Berkely (BA 1942, PhD 1952) and from 1950 taught economics at the University of
Washington. Thereafter, he became the director of the National Bureau of
Economic Research. Also he was economic consultant to the governments of
Russia, Argentina, Peru and the Czech Republic. North’s work dwelt primarily on
theoretical economics. He argued that innovations alone are insufficient to
propel economic development. In order for a market economy to flourish certain
legal and social institutions, such as property rights, must be in place. His
ideas were expressed in many books. He is still alive and kicking at 93 years.
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