Saturday, May 24, 2008

3 Men in Suits: Life Lessons from the Diner

The three men didn't say a word. And yet their very presence in the diner spoke volumes.

THE STORY

It was the end of a long morning.

Despite my aching jaw, I managed to get the kids up, dressed and fed, as well as help my wheelchair bound mother get ready for the day.

We packed everyone and everything into the car and headed to the last follow up appointment after my wisdom teeth surgery.

The appointment went well, but I was tired and hungry--and slightly irritated that after several weeks I still could not chew food.

"I could probably manage an omelet," I said to myself, so it being nearly lunchtime, we pulled into a diner around the corner from the doctor's office.

The kids were unbuckled from their car seats and kept out of lunch hour traffic, the wheelchair was removed from the back of the car, opened up, and pieced together, and we carefully maneuvered up the ramp and through the doors, all the while gratefully acknowledging the strangers who recognized our need and helped by opening doors and clearing the way.

I stood in the lobby with my two kids, the wheelchair, my mother, and my aching jaw, probably looking as frazzled as I felt.

While we were waiting for our table, three men in suits walked into the restaurant, requested a table, and patiently waited with us in the lobby.

Whether they noticed us, I couldn't say, but I certainly noticed them.

There was nothing outwardly remarkable about them. All three were different ages--two of them perhaps in their 40s or 50s, one of them perhaps in his 60s. They wore different kinds of suits--one of them light blue, one of them black, and one of them a rather ugly brown. They were different heights--one was quite short, one was quite tall, and one was somewhere in the middle. Their hair was different--in length, amount, and color. None of them was particularly handsome. By outward accounts they were quite normal.

And yet, they caught my attention.

In fact, they ended up sitting a few tables away from us, and all through lunch I glanced over at their table, watched them secretly, and strained to hear what they were talking about. Often I thought that if I had not had my family with me, I would have gone up to them and introduced myself.

So what was it about these men that drew me to them--that made me so intrigued with who they were, what they were doing, and what they were talking about?

It was because they had an aura of success.

You do not have to be psychic or particularly intuitive--nor even do you need to believe in such things--to recognize when someone has that special quality, that "it" factor, that je ne sais quoi.

You do not have to know someone intimately, or even spend any length of time with them at all, to know whether someone is successful.

No, anyone from anywhere can look at a total stranger and know it instantly--as I did with the three men in suits.

Why?

Because successful people carry with them certain magnetic qualities--things like vision, certainty, focus, and purpose. Qualities that your subconscious picks up on, even if you don't consciously realize it.

THE LESSON

You really can have what you want, but to have it, you, too, must carry with you your own aura of success.

Unfortunately, most people think this is something you're born with--"you either have it or you don't," as the saying goes. They talk themselves into staying small and content with little, because, they believe, they just don't have what what it takes.

But here's the truth. You can be, do, and have anything you want. You really can. But you must be willing to do what it takes to develop the qualities of successful people.

One of my favorite mentors is Dani Johnson, who in just two years worked her way up from being homeless to being a millionaire when she was only 23 years old. Dani says, "Until it becomes a part of you, sometimes you just have to put it on like a pair of pants."

One of the things she did when rising to the top was watch videotapes of successful people. She says, "I would spend an hour a day and watch them with the sound turned off just so I could see how these people carried themselves--what their mannerisms were like, how they dressed, how they did their hair and makeup." Then she would watch it again and listen not only to what they were saying, but how they were saying it--what words they used and the inflection in their voice.

Using these techniques, Dani developed a successful aura of her own, and today people often don't believe her when she tells them she grew up abused and on welfare, and was once homeless, living on a beach, and doing drugs to escape the horrors of her life.

TAKE ACTION

Are you frustrated with the results you are getting in some area of your life? Take action!

Today's action step: Think of someone you know who is successful at something you would like to be successful at (or even better--have lunch with them!). Pay attention to something they do that indicates they are successful. Maybe it's the way they sit or stand. Maybe it's the way they look people in the eye when they're talking to them. Maybe it's the way they smile or encourage others through their conversation.

Find one thing and start emulating just that one thing.

Then see how many people notice you at the diner!

© 2008, Margie Remmers, http://www.YouCanHaveWhatYouWant.com/



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Monday, May 19, 2008

Lesson 11: Affirmations

I love my Beyond Freedom!!!!

I just love how it makes me feel inside. So good. So happy. So peaceful.

Today's lesson is on affirmations. When I read it just now, it seemed to me that it was very similar to the visualization exercise, which was very similar to the "ideal me" exercise. But that's what's so great about this program! It's all the same stuff (adjusting your mindset), but from different angles--making sure no stone goes unturned!

So I went back and read my visualization from the other day, and it just felt so good! Oh man, I want to be that person so badly. That is the real me. I need to read it morning, noon and night. In fact, I think I'm going to print it out as soon as I'm done here and put it all over the place!

That's part of the exercise, too--putting your affirmations all over so you can see them.

But the affirmations described in this lesson are different that the visualization or "ideal me," in that they they need to be short. I am to have one every day, so I will start adding this to my Daily Gratitude (and Weekly Promise!). It is supposed to be something that is applicable to today's events.

Ah...I know exactly.

Last night before I went to bed, I spent some time planning my day. I knew it was going to be very busy, so I wanted to make sure I had everything written down.

Well, there was so much to do that I knew that my instinct would be to push away the possibility of talking to a prospective client--which is exactly what I didn't want to do!

So I wrote in big letters at the top of my schedule:

MAKE ROOM IN YOUR HEART AND YOUR DAY FOR A PROSPECT

It's not worded like a true affirmation should be, but I'll know better for tomorrow. :o)

Daily Gratitude & This Week's Promise

"And he who receiveth all things with thankfulness shall be made glorious; and the things of this earth shall be added unto him, even an hundred fold, yea, more." (Doctrine and Covenants 78:19)

Thank you for this beautiful, gorgeous, sunny Spring day! Thank you for the fresh air, the sunshine and the cool breeze. Thank you for my car wash--it always makes me feel so good to have a clean car! Thank you for the opportunity to rewrite this a THIRD time because it keeps getting accidentally deleted. (More time that I get to spend feeling and expressing my gratitude!) Thank you for the wisdom to move my cursor so it doesn't happen again. :o) Thank you for this wonderful, amazing experience here on earth. Thank you for every moment that has brought me to this point. Thank you for Esther and Abraham and the knowledge that I create my own reality and write my future. My future is so bright! Thank you for the clearing--it feels SO good! Thank you for Amy and for Sheba. Thank you that the morning has gone so smoothly! Thank you for this wonderful, perfect day. Thank you for my family, my children. Thank you for sheet protectors! Thank you for eveything I get experience, everything I get to create. Thank you for the opportunity to allow.

Thank you thank you thank you!!! :o)

This Week's Promise

It was April 29--nearly three weeks ago--that I said I would start putting my weekly promises in here (from Beyond Freedom lesson 7). Not only have I not done it, but I have not even completed the promise I made that day! That is why the lesson recommends making the promise something very easy to accomplish.

I have learned a lot over the last couple weeks--about values and priorities and why certain things have unfolded in my life the way they have. I am anxious to begin anew (press the "reset" button as Tony would say!), and watch what I am able to accomplish in the weeks ahead.

In the words of a character from one of my favorite musicals, Ragtime, "Life is suddenly full of delicious possibilities!" :o)

Any here is a powerful, but simple promise I make to myself this week: Monday through Friday, no naps! If you feel tired, drink some Sustain and go for a walk.

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