Ryze - Business Networking Buy Ethereum and Bitcoin
Get started with Cryptocurrency investing
Home Invite Friends Networks Friends classifieds
Home

Apply for Membership

About Ryze


*The Suggestion Box
Previous Topic | Next Topic | Topics
The *The Suggestion Box Network is not currently active and cannot accept new posts
The Eagle's Network Marketing Messages for 2012Views: 449
Dec 29, 2011 9:00 amThe Eagle's Network Marketing Messages for 2012#

The Eagle: Motivating Champions Around The World


This is the new Thread for 2012 for my Network Marketing Messages. I will continue to bring you great messages to help you in your Network Marketing Business.


The Eagle


Private Reply to The Eagle: Motivating Champions Around The World

Jan 05, 2012 12:33 amThe Eagle's Network Marketing Messages for 2012#

The Eagle: Motivating Champions Around The World


Measuring Success

By: Chris Widener

As I have worked with people over the years I have seen an amazing thing. People often get frustrated because they aren't achieving "success." There are lots of possible reasons for this but one reason I have found that sticks out is that many people allow their definition of "Success" to be driven by someone or something else.

Instead, we ought to be looking at our own, skills, opportunities, life situations, etc. to determine what it would mean for us to be a success in our own mind rather than someone else's.

Thus, the key to "Success" is all in the head - our head! We develop our own thinking about what it will mean to become a success.


The Eagle


Private Reply to The Eagle: Motivating Champions Around The World

Jan 12, 2012 7:12 amThe Eagle's Network Marketing Messages for 2012#

The Eagle: Motivating Champions Around The World


It Was My Day

Saturday morning - a bright January sun barely cleared the horizon; a light wind pushed the -5 degree Fahrenheit air and made the wind chill ten degrees colder. "No school." I thought to myself. I leapt from bed, dressed in layers of clothes: two pairs of socks, long-johns, pants, T- shirt, sweater and topped it all off with my much loved Boston Bruins' jersey. They were having a good year. Bobby Orr would lead them to another Stanley Cup championship that year. (1972)

"Time for some hockey." I thought and hurried to the kitchen for breakfast. The house was quiet. My parents and brothers slept late on the weekends. I was always the early riser, especially when the pond was frozen. There were times the ice would be so smooth and clear, you could see all the way to mud at the bottom, where the frogs hid from winter.

I ate my peanut butter and toast, put on my jacket, grabbed my hockey stick and slung it over my shoulder. My laced-together skates dangled from the end of the stick, where they slapped me in the back with each step I took.

A mist rose from the surface of the bitterly cold ocean. The wind carried the small clouds of frozen steam across the dirt road and over the pond, where it coated the grass at the edge in thick layers of bright white frost.

I sat on the crusty snow and surveyed the pond. No one else was out this early on such a frigid morning. Two hand-made goals sat frozen to the ice on either end of the rink. The rink was bordered by a wall of snow, shoveled from the ice by us kids after a recent snowstorm.

I picked up a frozen skate. The leather, hard from the cold, resisted my double-socked feet. Fifteen minutes later, both skates were laced tightly. I stood, walked across the snow, reached the clear ice and pushed off.

The ice, rough from freezing during a wind and the multitude of blades that scared its surface, rattled under my blades. My feet became numb from the cold. I ignored them. If the ice was frozen and clear, we played hockey. No whining was allowed.

I skated clockwise around the area. Left turns were my weak point. I learned to turn right, which was why I liked to play left wing: I had to skate to the right to go for the goal and for glory. I tossed a puck to the ice and practiced stick handling. I moved the puck to the right, the left, the right ...it flew out of control into the snowy ring boundary.

My stick dug into the snow, felt the frozen puck and pulled it out. I stickhandled toward the net and felt a warmth. I imagined the goalie - crouched - ready for my shot. Defensemen bounced off my rock-hard body. My fans screamed. The puck lifted from the ice by the sheer power of my shot. The goalie dove. The puck soared over his shoulder and knocked the frost from the net behind him.

"He scores!" I raised my stick in the air as my imaginary fans cheered and the ocean mist floated around me. The warmth of victory was in my heart. I could feel it. This would be my day. Stardom was near.

"Mike!" Ramon waved at me. "It's cold this morning."

"Good day for hockey!" I smiled with chapped lips and red cheeks. I watched him approach with my eyes barely visible through the zipped up hood of my winter coat. "Anyone else coming?"

"They'll be here." Ramon quickly pulled his skates on. He lived across the street from the pond. His skates were still warm and slipped on easily.

Ramon practiced. He skated effortlessly over the ice and made perfect shots into the net. I envied him. He was a year younger but a much better hockey player. I was the big clumsy kid who couldn't turn left.

Other boys arrived. We soon had enough for a game. The ice was alive with the scrape of blades, the slap of sticks and the yells of boys playing. The temperature climbed into the twenties, as we rushed back-and-forth over the ice, now coated white with the scrapings from our blades.

We played for five goals. The team who reached five, won.

Noon passed. We played on. My day did not go well. After four games, I hadn't scored a goal. I remembered my elation that morning - this would be my day. A sense of calm came over me. I looked across our makeshift rink. "I can do this!" I vowed and skated out for the next game.

In the first play, I received a pass, skated toward the net, and took a wrist shot that went over the goalie's stick, between his legs and into the net for the first score. On the next play their goalie kicked away a shot. I picked up the rebound. The goalie was still down. I lifted it over him for my second goal.

The other team quickly tied the game at two goals apiece. This was a battle as good as any professional game. We played like demons. Nothing would keep us from victory.

We got the puck and headed toward the opposing goalie. I approached from left wing, my normal spot, took a pass from the center, and slapped the puck toward the goal. It hit their defense men's skate and popped right back to me. My second shot slid under the goaltender's outstretched pad and into the net. Three goals - my first "hat trick".

They tied it up at three. We had the puck again. This time there was a scramble in front of the net. Every player seemed to be slapping at the puck, but luck was with me that day. The puck slipped out from under the maze of steel blades and stopped by my stick. The goaltender, screened by the tangle of players, was an easy mark. I slapped the puck into the wide open corner.

Once again the other team tied the game. It was four to four. The next goal would win. It wasn't easy. Both teams fought passionately. Back-and-forth we skated. Neither goaltender wanted to let his team down. They slid, dove and blocked. They looked like pros.

There was another scramble in front of their net. I was knocked off my skates. Lying flat on my stomach on the ice, I watched the puck bounce between the players. Occasional flashes of sunlight reflected off their skate blades, momentarily blinding me with their brilliance.

I blinked. There it was. The puck slipped away from them unnoticed. It lay unattended. I reached out with my stick, swept it across the ice and slid the puck into the net.

Five Goals and the game! I'd scored five of them. It was a miracle on ice. I was a hero.

The day was my one and only moment of glory at the game of hockey. It goes down in my history as one of my personal triumphs.

It was my day.

By: Michael T. Smith


The Eagle


Private Reply to The Eagle: Motivating Champions Around The World

Jan 19, 2012 7:16 amThe Eagle's Network Marketing Messages for 2012#

The Eagle: Motivating Champions Around The World


Kick Open The Doors

By: Brian Tracy

Anyone who does a great job consistently, over and over, kicks open the doors of opportunity in all directions. Such a person will be hired, paid well, promoted, advanced and given additional responsibilities because there are so few of them.

Make a Decision Today...

You can put your life and career into an upward trajectory by making the decision, today, that you are going to become one of the best time managers in your field. And in this session, you will learn how to do it.

Benjamin Franklin once wrote, "Dost thou love life? Then do not squander time, for that's the stuff life is made of."

Exploit Your Most Precious Recourse...

Time is your most precious resource. It is all you really have. It is your life. As long as you have lots of time, you can do almost anything. But if your time is cut off for any reason, all of your possibilities are cut off as well.

Queen Elizabeth I of England was one of the richest women in the world. She owned half the country. Yet, when she was on her deathbed, she turned to her doctor and said, "I would give all I have for a few more minutes of time."

Start This Very Minute...

The time for you and I to begin to appreciate how valuable and precious each minute is right now, not a later time when our minutes and hours are draining away.

Action Exercises:

Resolve to become an expert at time management. Work on becoming more efficient every day.

Ask, "Why am I on the payroll?" Whatever your answer to this question, work on it all day long.

Courtesy Of:

Brian Tracy is one of the world's leading authorities on personal and business success. Visit the Brian Tracy web site.


The Eagle


Private Reply to The Eagle: Motivating Champions Around The World

Jan 26, 2012 7:23 amThe Eagle's Network Marketing Messages for 2012#

The Eagle: Motivating Champions Around The World



10 Questions: Do You Have What It Takes?

By: John Assaraf

Do you have what it takes to be really successful?

Have you ever thought about what you must be prepared to endure and do in order to be successful in business or your career?

I think I have been asked at least 5,000 times what it really takes to be successful in business, so I jotted down 10 questions you can use to gauge whether you already have what it takes, or if you need to do a little "work" to get there.

Many years ago I heard Jim Rohn say that you either pay the price of discipline or the price of regret. Discipline weighs ounces... regret weighs tons!

With that said, here are 10 questions to ask yourself:

1. Are you disciplined?

2. Do you take rejection personally? What about criticism?

3. Do you bounce back quickly from making errors or failing over and over again?

4. Are you a planner or do you do things by the seat of your pants?

5. Are you prepared to take risks? Moderate or Big?

6. Do you stay focused on one thing and one thing only until the result you want is achieved?

7. Do you have the stamina to keep going long after everyone else is tired?

8. Can you delegate well, or are you the only one who can do things right?

9. Do you wait for things to happen or do you aggressively go after what you want?

10. Do you do whatever it takes to achieve your goals or just what's convenient?

These questions are critical for you to ask yourself in order to get a true picture of your nature and behavior.

What I have found is that successful people are aware of the consequences of not being efficient in these areas, and find other ways, resources or people to manage for them.

Food for thought?

Remember to create a masterpiece!

Courtesy Of:

John Assaraf is a speaker, author, and entrepreneur. To learn more about the work he does visit http://www.johnassaraf.com


The Eagle


Private Reply to The Eagle: Motivating Champions Around The World

Previous Topic | Next Topic | Topics

Back to *The Suggestion Box





Ryze Admin - Support   |   About Ryze



© Ryze Limited. Ryze is a trademark of Ryze Limited.  Terms of Service, including the Privacy Policy