WHY ACHIEVERS'
SELF-DISCIPLINE IS SO PERSISTENT IN ACTION?“Single mindedness, determination, dedication, self-belief
and the inability to ever give in are what distinguish
people who do great things with their lives from those whose
dreams die with them. When you have great perseverance you
take into account what others say but you don't let it rule
you. You remain true to your vision”.
- Thomas Henry Huxley
That’s the difference between achievers and non-achievers!
Achievers’ persistence is their ability to maintain action
regardless of their feelings. They press on even when they
feel like quitting. When they work on any big goal, their
motivation will wax and wane like waves hitting the shore.
Sometimes they will feel motivated; sometimes they won’t.
But it’s not their motivation that will produce results —
it’s their action. Persistence allows them to keep taking
action even when they don’t feel motivated to do so, and
therefore they keep accumulating results.
Persistence will ultimately provide its own motivation.
Achievers just know that by simply keep taking action, they
will eventually get results, and results can be very
motivating. For example, they may become a lot more
enthusiastic about dieting and exercising once they have
lost those first 10 pounds and feel their clothes fitting
more loosely.
Will power is the ability to control unnecessary and harmful
impulses. It is the ability to overcome laziness and
procrastination. It is the ability to arrive to a decision
and follow it with perseverance until its successful
accomplishment. It is the inner power that achievers
overcome the desire to indulge in unnecessary and useless
habits, and the inner strength that overcomes inner
emotional and mental resistance for taking action. It is one
of the corner-stones of their success, both spiritually and
materialistically.
Self-discipline is the companion of will power. It endows
the stamina to persevere in whatever the achievers do. It
bestows the ability to withstand hardships and difficulties,
whether physical, emotional or mental. It grants the ability
to reject immediate satisfaction for something better.
Achievers or non-achievers are full of inner
unconsciousness, or partly conscious, and sometimes rather
impulsive. Under-achievers sometimes say or do things they
later regret saying or doing. On many occasions they do not
think before they talk or act. By developing these two
powers, under-achievers become conscious of the inner
subconscious impulses, and gain the ability to reject them
when they are not for their own good.
Under-achievers tend to do what’s easiest and avoid hard
work — and that’s precisely why they should do the opposite.
The superficial opportunities of life will be attacked by
hordes of under-achievers seeking what’s easy. The much
tougher challenges will usually see a lot less competition
and a lot more opportunities if under-achievers have more
perseverance to overcome their challenges.
Achievers prepare and anticipate behind closed doors. Lay
the groundwork for success carefully: Effective preparation
and self-discipline are closely allied. They do their
homework. Since most under-achievers are rarely well
prepared, achievers will often succeed by default. When
opportunity presents itself, they burst out of the starting
gate, sprint to the finish line, and take home the prize.
Achievers’ self-discipline is an act of their cultivation.
Self-discipline requires under-achievers to connect today's
actions to tomorrow's results. There's a season for sowing,
a season for reaping. Self-discipline helps them know which
is which. Do what needs to be done. Quality living requires
under-achievers to make difficult choices and sacrifices; it
demands that they do the hard work first. They cannot arrive
at true success without making the trip. Self-discipline is
a habit. It is not situational, but it is applied situation
by situation. However, they can be self-disciplined on
occasion, but to get consistently positive results they
require consistency.
It is the day-in day-out practice of self-discipline that
determines where under-achievers end up. After all, a
lifetime is an accumulation of moments, days, weeks, months,
and years. What you do during each moment counts and
influence the degree to which you judge your life to be a
success. If you aspire to achieve your goals, you must be
prepared to play every play as though the two-minute warning
clock is running. Every move is significant. Every move
counts!
By Sean Toh
www.creditplushealth.com

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