You don’t need to change the world; you need to change yourself.
Challenges are gifts, opportunities to learn.
Those who improve with age embrace the power of personal growth and personal achievement and begin to replace youth with wisdom, innocence with understanding, and lack of purpose with self-actualization.
The smartest people are constantly revising their understanding, reconsidering a problem they thought they’d already solved. They’re open to new points of view, new information, new ideas, contradictions, and challenges to their own way of thinking.
Ambition is the path to success. Persistence is the vehicle you arrive in.
It’s okay to make mistakes. Mistakes are our teachers – they help us to learn.
Don’t waste your life believing you can’t.
Your habits will determine your future.
Change is inevitable in life. You can either resist it and potentially get run over by it, or you can choose to cooperate with it, adapt to it, and learn how to benefit from it. When you embrace change you will begin to see it as an opportunity for growth.
For every reason it’s not possible, there are hundreds of people who have faced the same circumstances and succeeded.
If we are not a little bit uncomfortable every day, we’re not growing. All the good stuff is outside our comfort zone.
If you believe in yourself enough and know what you want, you’re gonna make it happen.
We are either progressing or retrograding all the while; there is no such thing as remaining stationary in this life.
It takes time, it’s a grind. There are no shortcuts. You’ve got to grind and grind.
Do not feel bad about your mistakes or those of others. Love them! Remember that one: they are to be expected; two: they’re the first and most essential part of the learning process; and three: feeling bad about them will prevent you from getting better.
If we set our minds to it, we can achieve anything.
You would never know if you could ever be, If you never try, you would never see.
The growth and development of people is the highest calling of leadership.
If you’re afraid to fail, you’ll never succeed.
Treat a child as though he already is the person he’s capable of becoming.