Thursday, October 15, 2015
Tuesday, October 6, 2015
Believing
in You
By Steve Goodier
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Did you know
that Albert Einstein could not speak until he was four years old and did not
read until he was seven? His parents and teachers worried about his mental
ability.
Beethoven's
music teacher said about him, "As a composer he is hopeless." What if
young Ludwig believed it?
When Thomas
Edison was a young boy, his teachers said he was so stupid he could never learn
anything. He once said, "I remember I used to never be able to get along
at school. I was always at the foot of my class...my father thought I was
stupid, and I almost decided that I was a dunce." What if young Thomas
believed what they said about him?
When F. W.
Woolworth was 21, he got a job in a store, but was not allowed to wait on
customers because he "didn't have enough sense."
When the
sculptor Auguste Rodin was young he had difficulty learning to read and write.
Today, we may say he had a learning disability, but his father said of him,
"I have an idiot for a son."
His uncle
agreed. "He's uneducable," he said. What if Rodin had doubted his
ability
?
A newspaper
editor once fired Walt Disney because he was thought to have no "good
ideas." Caruso was told by one music teacher, "You can't sing. You
have no voice at all." And an editor told Louisa May Alcott that she was
incapable of writing anything that would have popular appeal.
What if
these people had listened and become discouraged? Where would our world be
without the music of Beethoven, the art of Rodin or the ideas of Albert
Einstein and Thomas Edison? As Oscar Levant has accurately said, "It's not
what you are; it's what you don't become that hurts."
You have
great potential. When you believe in all you can be, rather than all you cannot
become, you will find your place on earth
Source: http://www.allthingsfrugal.com/g_believe.htm
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