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Do The Small Things FirstBig things often begin small. People often ask me how to become a writer, or how to become a speaker, or how to become an actor. My answer is always the same: write, speak, act. When I give these answers, they often just stare at me with eyes that betray their disappointment. They were really desiring some mystical short-cut that would land them on the best-seller's list, or propel them to stages where thousands of eager people would hang on every word, or launch them on to the big screen. Well, I'm sorry to say I have no mystical short cuts, not for those careers or any other. It takes smart and hard work to be successful in any endeavor. The problem with so many people is that they despise starting out small. They want the big "payoff" and they want it right now. It just doesn't work that way. To be successful in a chosen enterprise requires knowledge and experience. We all attempt new things with a real learning curve. Over time, as we learn more and do more, we'll grow into success. To do big things, be willing to do small things. Find out what it is you want to do and then learn as much as you can about it. Read books, magazines and professional journals. Network with people who are already doing what it is that you want to be doing. Ask them questions. Tap into their knowledge and experience. Write out a list of tasks that you can begin right now that will place you on the road to where you want to be. Each task, when successfully completed, will lead to new ones. In this often-tedious process, you will gain the necessary knowledge and experience that will carry you to each new level. Here are some important things I would have you to remember:
Some years ago when James Garfield, who went on to become President of the United States, was principal of Hiram College in Ohio, a father asked him if a particular course his son was taking could be simplified so that he could complete it in a shorter time. "Certainly," Garfield replied, "But it all depends on what you want to make of your boy. When God wants to make an oak tree, He takes a hundred years. When He wants to make a squash he requires only two months." When you dream about doing big things, start by doing small things. Don't get discouraged, you'll get where you want to go. John D. Rockefeller, Jr. said it well, "The secret of success is to do the common things uncommonly well." |
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Copyright © 2003, Lou Stoops, LLC Designer: Aaron Longdon Date Last Revised: 1/19/2003 |
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