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Logan Paul explains why finding your purpose matters more than working hard “Celebrities, influencers, and all these motivational speakers tell you that you can do whatever you put your mind to. We are all equal. I’m gonna be honest, that’s not true. I’ve tried to do things and worked...

170,514 Aufrufe • vor 3 Monaten •via X (Twitter)

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(this part really sounds like - follow your dream, no matter what) 💬 I want to be an idol, but I’m scared of a lot of things. People judge me, and the boys around me tease me a lot. 🐥 I was teased a lot too. Back in elementary school, people would say stuff like, “If you become a singer, then I’ll become something even bigger.” But really - does that matter? If you have a dream you want to pursue, that’s already a good thing. I used to feel embarrassed too. You know how writing “singer” as your dream always feels awkward? Especially during puberty, it’s kind of embarrassing to write “singer” on your school forms. But later, when you look back, you actually feel proud that you had a dream at all. I think even if I hadn’t become a singer, I would’ve still felt that way - because just having that dream takes courage. And if someone teases you, tell them: “Who are you? What’s your dream? Why are you teasing me for writing what I want to do? What’s it got to do with you?” Say that. If someone criticizes you for chasing what you love, that person isn’t a real friend. Now, if someone doesn’t work hard and only talks about their dream, a true friend might give advice - that’s fine. But if you’re right beside them, really doing your best, and that friend still tells you “stop it,” I think that’s too much, especially for people like us who are still walking the path of youth. So yes - do what you want to do. When you follow what you love, new things will appear along the way, and from there, you’ll find even more dreams you want to chase. 💬 Mingi, how can you be so kind in such a cold world? 🐥 Well, it’s not like I can really explain that, right? I scold my friends sometimes too. 🐥 Right - and when someone says, “I’m giving you advice because you have a dream,” or “I’m criticizing you for your own good,” - that’s not advice, that’s just blame.

Irene | AhgaTiny

110,223 Aufrufe • vor 8 Monaten

Don’t Scroll—God Is Calling You to Submit and Move Praise the Lord that He has given us such a commission and such a call and we should be humbled by that and we should want to go out for His kingdom and do that. All of you are usable by God. There is not one of you that is not usable if you're only willing to submit. We all fall short. It's a matter of who is willing. Here I am, Lord, send me. That's what Isaiah said. Here I am. Send me. You are all usable. When a lot of you out there go, well, what can I do for God in my life? There's a lot you can do. If you're only willing to be picked up as an instrument in his Hands and implemented the way you were created to move. Many of you are operating outside the realm of what you were created to be. And in this season, that's going to be reconciled. And many of you are going to change course in this season drastically. Because you're in jobs, you're in areas, you're doing things, you were not created to do. You have gifts for it, but you weren’t created to do it. And there's going to be massive shifts in many of your lives and a sudden turn. And the Lord is going to realign. And this is going to be quick when He does it. Realign you into the position, redirect you and put you on that course because time is short and He needs you operating in what you were created to do. He needs that right now. And many of you are going to enter that process in this season. So praise the Lord because you are. You will enter that process and you will be redirected. And you will do what is written about you in the books of heaven, what you were created to do on this earth. Because many of you know and feel uncomfortable and know you're not in your call. You know you are just trying to try to endure, you're trying to survive. And it's because you're not in your call. Surrender to God, allow Him to redirect you into your call and your purpose that you were beautifully created to do. Because it's needed in this season and we cannot dilly dally anymore and go dabbling in things we are not created to do. It's time for us to go to work and it's time for us to be willing to go there.

Amanda Grace

12,379 Aufrufe • vor 1 Monat

Geno Auriemma shares how he explains success to his players and why showing up isn't enough. "If you go to class and you do average work, you're gonna get a C. That's why it's called average." "If you want a B, you have to do more work. If you want an A, you have to do even more work and you have to give up stuff." You get what you earn in life. "You have to sacrifice. Maybe you can't do all the things that everybody else does." It means if you want more then you have to be willing to do more. "If you're just happy getting Bs all your life, there's nothing wrong with that either. But you're never gonna get the satisfaction of what it feels like to get an A." Then he connected it to basketball: "If you just wanna be average, then you do average work. If you wanna be a little bit above average then you do a little more work." "If you wanna get As in basketball, then you gotta do stuff that other people aren't willing to do - especially if you have the talent like we do. We have talent." It means bring a mindset of excellence to everything that you do. Excellence isn't the goal - it's the standard you set. Then he called out the entitlement problem: "Some of these younger guys coming out of high school, man, they wanna show up and go, 'I'm here. Where's my 3.7?'" "Like my father used to say, 'I got your 3.7 right here.'" Showing up doesn't earn you anything. Doing the work does. You get the grade you earn - in school, in basketball, and in life. It's easy to be average...successful people look to compete in everything they do. (🎥UCTV Sports )

Coach AJ 🎯 Mental Fitness

149,668 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten

"You can either produce excellence or you can avoid criticism. But you cannot do both of those. The reason that you don't have certain excellence that you want is because you are afraid of getting criticized. You are afraid of the judgment that comes with it. You are afraid of standing out. You are afraid of being alone. You are afraid of people looking at you. You are worried about what people think of you. There are 2 categories of things in this world: 1) Things that are up to you 2) Things that are not up to you Which category does your reputation sit in? Your reputation is not up to you. I'm the one who associates your reputation with something, not you. You just do things. What's up to you? How you act. Your decisions. Your actions. That is up to you. Your reputation is not up to you. Here's how I know that: You all have a reputation about me and it's not in my control. I get to say and do whatever I say and do up here. I am in control of saying it. I am in control of doing it. The moment words leave my lips, who has control over what is done with those words? You! You are in control of what you think of me. And there's no way everybody in this room is going to think the exact same thing about me. No way. When it comes to exceptional, what we've got to understand is you can spend your whole life trying to avoid criticism and earn reputation, and it still won't be in your control. We can waste a lot of time missing out on excellence we could have been producing if we were just simply LESS trying to engineer what we wanted other people to think about us."

Brian Kight

308,788 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr

Nick, You told people to not vote for Trump, and then you complain nonstop that you have no influence. You used your group to run billboards against Trump during the 2024 election in swing states and you said we would be better off if Kamala were in office. What stories are you breaking? What are you doing to actually help our country as oppose to bitch and cry all day about how censored you are? I was censored too and I kept working hard. You forget that I was banned on more platforms than you, but you can’t ever admit that because it shatters your claims that Jews are never censored. You lie to make a point while you ignore how I too was debanked and censored. You don’t seem to want to work. I work hard everyday breaking stories that expose immigration abuse, and waste, fraud and abuse in the government. I work over 100 hours every week breaking stories of NATIONAL IMPACT. What are you doing? Why would you have access when all you do is attack President Trump? Listen to your own words. I clipped your own clip for you. Just shut the fuck up. You are your own worst enemy and you should start to internalize that. You are resentful and jealous and nobody can take credit for my own tenacity and drive aside from myself. I have worked incredibly hard while you sit on the sideline making EVERY SINGLE ISSUE IN THE WORLD about a foreign country while you call Trump a “scam artist”. I earned my influence with my own hard work. Try working sometime.

Laura Loomer

1,645,137 Aufrufe • vor 7 Monaten

Jordan Peterson: "If you can't fix your room, you can't fix your life" "Why should you even bother improving yourself? The answer is something like: so you don't suffer anymore stupidly than you have to. And maybe so others don't have to either. It's not some casual self-help doctrine. If you don't organize yourself properly, you'll pay for it. In a big way. And so will the people around you." Peterson continues: "You can say, 'Well, I don't care about that.' But that's actually not true, you do care about it. Because if you're in pain, you will care about it. It's very rare that you can find someone in excruciating pain who would say, 'Well, it would be no better if I was out of this.' Pain brings the idea that it would be better if it didn't exist along with it. It's incontrovertible." On how to start: "Look around for something that bothers you and see if you can fix it. You can do this in a room. Sit in your bedroom and think: 'If I wanted to spend ten minutes making this room better, what would I have to do?' You have to ask yourself that, it's a genuine question. And things will pop out. There's a stack of papers bugging you. Some rubbish behind your computer monitor you haven't attended to for six months. Cables tangled up." He explains why this matters: "If you were coming to see me for psychotherapy, the easiest thing would be to get you to organize your room. You think, is that psychotherapy? It depends on how you conceive the limits of your being. Start where you can start. If something announces itself as in need of repair that you could repair, fix it. Fix a hundred things like that, your life will be a lot different." On fixing what you repeat every day: "People tend to think of their daily routines as trivial. You get up, brush your teeth, have breakfast. Those probably constitute 50% of your life. People think, they're mundane, I don't need to pay attention to them. No, that's exactly wrong. The things you do every day are the most important things you do. Hands down. Just do the arithmetic." On staying within your competence: "Sometimes you don't know how to fix something. Imagine you're walking down the street and there's a guy who's alcoholic and schizophrenic and has been homeless for ten years. That's a problem. It would be good if you could fix it, but you haven't got a clue. You walk around that and go find something you could fix. Just because something announces itself as in need of repair doesn't mean it's you, right then and there, who should repair it. You have to have some humility. You don't walk up to a helicopter that isn't working and just start tinkering away." Peterson shares the key insight: "As soon as you give your mind a genuine aim, it'll reconfigure the world in keeping with that aim. That's actually how you see to begin with. You've all seen the video where you watch basketballs being tossed back and forth, and while you're doing that, a gorilla walks into the middle of the video and you don't see it. If you thought about that experiment for five years, that would be about the right amount of time to spend thinking about it." He explains what it reveals: "What it shows you is that you see what you aim at. If you can get one thing through your head, that would be a good one. You see what you aim at. One inference you might draw from that is: be careful what you aim at. What you aim at determines the way the world manifests itself to you. So if the world is manifesting itself in a very negative way, one thing to ask is: are you aiming at the right thing?"

Jaynit

68,491 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten