Benjamin P. Hardy Quotes



Best 9 How to Consciously Design Your Ideal Future Quotes by Benjamin P. Hardy

How to Consciously Design Your Ideal Future Quotes

“Humility, gratitude, and recognition of your blessings keeps your success in proper perspective. You couldn’t do what you’ve without the help of countless other people. You are extremely lucky to be able to contribute in the way you have.”

How to Consciously Design Your Ideal Future

“Never ask advice of someone with whom you wouldn’t want to trade places.”

How to Consciously Design Your Ideal Future

“Ordinary people seek entertainment. Extraordinary people seek education and learning.”

How to Consciously Design Your Ideal Future

“Small things — if not corrected — become big things, always.”

How to Consciously Design Your Ideal Future

“The fastest way to move forward in life is not doing more. It starts with stopping the behaviors holding you back.”

How to Consciously Design Your Ideal Future

“The worst comes first. Do that thing you’ve been needing to do. Then do it again tomorrow.”

How to Consciously Design Your Ideal Future

“Understanding the value of one dollar is the same as coming to appreciate the value of time. To thoughtlessly spend one dollar may not seem like a big deal, but it actually is. That frivolous spending compounded over a long enough time could be millions.”

How to Consciously Design Your Ideal Future

“You are never pre-qualified to live your dreams. You qualify yourself by doing the work. By committing — even overcommitting — to what you believe you should do.”

How to Consciously Design Your Ideal Future

“You are never pre-qualified to live your dreams. You qualify yourself by doing the work. By committing—even overcommitting—to what you believe you should do.”

How to Consciously Design Your Ideal Future

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“The learning principle is to plunge into the detailed mystery of the micro in order to understand what makes the macro tick. Our obstacle is that we live in an attention-deficit culture.

We are bombarded with more and more information on television, radio, cell phones, video games, the Internet. The constant supply of stimulus has the potential to turn us into addicts, always hungering for something new and prefabricated to keep us entertained.

When nothing exciting is going on, we might get bored, distracted, separated from the moment. So we look for new entertainment, surf channels, flip through magazines. If caught in these rhythms, we are like tiny current-bound surface fish, floating along a two-dimensional world without any sense for the gorgeous abyss below.

When these societally induced tendencies translate into the learning process, they have devastating effect.”


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