Archive for the ‘Inspiration’ Category

6 Steps To Eliminating Your But

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

Do you have a big "but"?

Are you a big “but” person?

“I would, BUT…”

“Yeah, BUT…”

“I know, BUT…”

“I could, BUT…”

“I understand that, BUT…”

“I should, BUT…”

Big buts are usually precursors to statements like “I don’t have the time” or “it’s too hard” or “I’ve tried before and it didn’t work”…

The word “but” is often the introduction to every rationalization for mediocre performance, inaction, and self-pity.

Most people allow their environment to direct their actions: if you work for a boss who is not interested in your new ideas, you stop creating new ideas. If your co-worker avoids teamwork, you retreat to your desk and sulk. If your partner fails to hold their end of the bargain, you stop trying. If you haven’t followed your food plan perfectly for the whole week, you give up…

That three letter word can create big problems: Big but problems.

Your big but is a symptom. Not of what others do to you, but of a poor attitude.

Your poor attitude. And your poor belief system. So, what you need to do is get your butt in gear right now! How?

Here are 6 steps to help you eliminate your big but:

1. Start moving: The hardest part of any task is starting. Once you get moving, you will find that inertia will keep you motivated. This is not time to overthink or to feel, this is time to take action!

2. Give yourself a chance: If you give up a task or project at the first sign of adversity, eventually you will convince yourself that your next project is not worth starting. Instead, focus all of your energy on completing the task at hand, no matter what. It doesn’t have to be perfect, it just has to be done to the best of your ability.

3. Build a powerful belief system: Powerful beliefs will beat big buts anytime. The bigger your own self-belief, the more likely you are to overcome any real or made up challenges.

4. Be bold: Do it anyway, regardless of your but! Basically, tell the devil on your left shoulder to just shut the heck up, and take the reins of your mind.

5. Exercise your freedom: Freedom to succeed implies freedom to fail. Even the best football players fail more often than they score . But the goals they score when they do score are the ones that make them win the match, and the ones we remember.

6. Know when to quit: Sometimes we fail. Sometimes shit happens. Quitting is a choice, and sometimes it’s the best choice. Most times though, it is not the best choice. Especially, if  there are things you want to achieve in life. So, what are you going to do? Give up, or try something different?

The bottom line is: your biggest but is in your head!

Anna

anna@delite.ie

BEAT SELF SABOTAGE

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

“Quit bullying yourself”


Shut uuuuup!

I remember one evening at a boot camp session, when a fellow boot camper working out right beside me managed to slightly vex me, to put it nicely… her self-talk, which she let out for everyone to “enjoy” went on something like this:

“O my god, it’s so hard, it’s so hard, it’s so hard, it’s so hard, it’s so hard…”

Now, when you are in the middle of an interval session trying to get as many burpees as you can in 30 seconds, let me tell you, it doesn’t help. Now, I wasn’t going to let her spoil my fun, so I started shouting: “It’s so easy, it’s easy, it’s easy, it’s easy, it’s easy…”, which is not easy when you can barely breathe! Needless to say she didn’t get many burpees. I did. To this day, she hasn’t lost any weight, which is why she joined the boot camp. Wonder why?

See, a lot of people, for some strange reason, insist on sabotaging their efforts in life. Be it in the gym, in their personal life, or in work… they are great at messing things up for themselves, and sometimes for others too.

“You can’t do that!”, “That’s way too hard!”, “If you try, you’ll probably just fail anyway”…

Statements like these sound as if they’re coming from a tyrannical and cruel person with a mission to destroy one’s self-confidence. If a stranger on the street, a friend, or even a family member spoke to you like that you probably wouldn’t take it. The chances are you would tell them to “shut the F**k up” and get lost, or worse!

So, why bully yourself like that?

Negative self-talk is something we have all engaged in at some time. A lot of us have heard our own parents verbally abuse themselves, or each other, or us.

Since we were kids many of us were consciously or subconsciously taught that being too confident is not a good thing, as it may be mistaken for arrogance; that life is hard and even if you work really hard you’ll never amount to anything; that you are not beautiful enough or intelligent enough and you’ll never be…

Then, you turn into an adult, maybe a well educated one, but one that is messed up. Then, you meet other messed up adults whose behaviour reinforces what you allowed yourself to believe about yourself and the world.

Maybe you have low self-esteem, confidence issues, maybe you procrastinate, or lack zest for life and direction… and wonder why you keep sabotaging your dreams and goals in life.

See, you have to be very careful about what you allow yourself to believe.

What you were told or decided to make up in your head may or may not be true. So, be very careful what you choose to believe about yourself and the world around you, because whether it’s good, or bad, it most certainly will shape your future.

What’s worse is that we usually don’t recognize that we have been sabotaging our own efforts. We attribute our lack of success to inadequacy. This, in turn, strengthens the negative messages we feed ourselves, and we get caught in a self-sabotaging cycle that can be difficult to break.

The tell-tale sign that you have been sabotaging yourself is when you grind to a halt when you’re getting close to achieving your goals, for no rational reason.  Or when you achieve them, but then regress. Like when people lose weight, and then put it all back on again, or when someone longs to be in a relationship, but then they are in one and do something stupid to cause a break up.

The skill, ability and desire may be there. But something seems to be getting in the way of your happiness.

Your beliefs direct your inner dialogue and the way you talk to others, which in turn determines your actions, which in turn affect your results.

It’s vital that before you set off to achieve your goals, you make right with yourself and the state of your internal affairs.

If you crave the respect of others, you need to respect yourself first.

If you want to lose weight and maintain it for life, you need to believe you’re worth it, and believe you can do it.

If you want a promotion, it’s a good thing to desire it, and also truly believe you are the best person for the job.

See, your brain already knows how to help you succeed, you just need to get out of the way.

Feelings of unworthiness, negative thoughts, preconceptions about things, crappy past experiences, bleak future predictions… put them all together in the jug that is your brain, stir them a little, and you have the perfect cocktail for eternal misery!

The truth is that just because you “feel” something is true, it doesn’t mean it is true.

A few months ago I had my body fat percentage measured. I thought I was going to be 20%. My husband, a fitness trainer, told me not to be stupid, that he reckoned I would be maximum 16%. I said no way, and that I felt like I was about 20% for sure. As it turned out I was less than 14%!

My advice is that you feel less and do more. But we are governed by emotions. Emotions are the result of thoughts. So, wouldn’t it be a good idea to start to actually think more useful thoughts, think better thoughts, so that you can get to feel good more often, so that you can get on with things and get stuff done.

Even the most successful and happy people have critical, inner voices – they just don’t hear them very well, or they choose to disbelieve them, or they ignore them, or they simply tell themselves to just shut the **** up, whenever they catch themselves thinking crappy thoughts.

What if every time that annoying little voice creeps up at the back of your head, you think about a person who told you the biggest lie ever and hear the same lying voice. Or, maybe you know someone who every time they open their mouth you go “oh here we go again, what a load of BS! Blah, blah, blah…”

Once you’ven take control of your mind, now, what would you do if you had all the confidence, tenacity, power and determination you could ever need?

Free your mind


Anna

anna@delite.ie

Do you want to get noticed? Here's 2 things you need to do…

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

LOTS OF PASSION + A LITTLE CRAZINESS = 2 MILLION VIEWS!

If you don’t think passion matters, then please watch this video pay attention to the drummer, as if you could miss him!

He exudes passion and the video has gone viral to the tune of over 2 million views and growing…

Do you want to get noticed? Light up your fire and let everyone you meet bathe in your warmth!

Anna
anna@delite.ie

Why you need lots of good quality Brain Juice and how to make your own

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

Ever wondered how your brain works? While we don’t know everything about it, what we do know is this:

The human brain weighs about 7 lbs and is about the size of a small head of cauliflower. It is a knot of 100 billion neurons and support cells. We can store a lifetime of memories there. We use it to write a poem, build a home, hear a song, enjoy a sunset, love and imagine…

The brain performs an incredible number of tasks:

* It controls body temperature, blood pressure, heart rate and breathing

* It accepts a flood of information about the world around you from your various senses: seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting, touching…

* It handles physical motion when walking, talking, standing or sitting

* It lets you think, dream, reason and experience emotions

Your brain is packed with neurones. A neurone, or nerve cell, is an electrically excitable cell that processes and transmits information by electrical and chemical signalling. Neurons tell your body to move, breathe, and create. They have the amazing ability to gather and transmit electrochemical signals – they are something like the gates and wires in your computer.

Given the brain’s complexity, it requires a highly developed system of communication in order to co-ordinate all of its neurons. This system is based on electrochemical impulses. Like your computer, these impulses travel along circuits.

But unlike computers, these signals are created chemically. These chemical transmissions are called neurotransmitters. And they are responsible for the incredibly rapid communication between neurons. Just imagine how quickly you feel happy when your favourite song starts to play on the radio, or when you see someone you like!

Neurotransmitters transmit information within the brain and from the brain to all the parts of the body. And abnormalities in the production or functioning of certain neurotransmitters have been implicated in a number of diseases including depression.

The effects of a neurotransmitter system depend on the connections of the neurons that use the transmitter, and the chemical properties of the receptors that the transmitter binds to.

This is why it’s so important that you get to make lots of good “brain juice” all the time. Good brain juice means nicely functioning neurotransmitters and good quality chemical transmissions.

Good quality transmissions in your brain means you get to feel good, about yourself and about things. You get to think more clearly, look at things in a more positive light, talk to yourself in more useful ways, and make better decisions. When you make good brain juice every day, you’ll notice everything goes much more smoothly in your life.

How do you make good brain juice?

As Dr. Richard Bandler (co-creator of Neuro-Linguistic Programming) says, the trick is to feel good for no reason at all, for as long as you can.

Because I know there is something that makes you feel really good. Or, that other thing that makes you feel even better!

That thing that when you think about it makes you smile straight away. Allow yourself to fully immerse yourself in that experience now. As you keep going through this memory, close your eyes and take a deep breath in through your nose. Hold on to this breath for four counts, and exhale slowly for eight counts. After about five counts, you may feel the need to push the remaining air out of your lungs. Notice how much more relaxed and happier you are.

Repeat this process 8-10 times.

Congratulations, you’ve just made some great quality brain juice!

Take time to do this twice a day for the next two to three weeks, and you’ll find yourself looking happier, and feeling more centred and free.

Anna

anna@delite.ie

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The story of Nick Vujicic – a giant of a man

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

Every now and then someone comes along that manages to blow my mind.

I watched Nick’s video without even blinking. If his story doesn’t inspire you, I don’t know what will.

Sometimes we just need to put things into perspective…

Nick Vujicic – no arms, no legs, NO WORRIES!

I am off to Rome to attend a 3 day seminar by co-creator of NLP Richard Bandler. I’ll be back next Monday with lots more to tell!

Until then, stay inspired!

Anna
anna@delite.ie




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INSPIRATIONAL PERSON OF THE MONTH – MAY 2010

Sunday, May 2nd, 2010

Jayme Lyon is one of my new friends at superfastfitness camps. We train together, we sweat, laugh and swear together. All in the name of health and fitness! In the space of a few months she has dramatically transformed her shape. She is one of the hardest working members of the camp and has the most amazing attitude, which has carried me through some of the toughest workouts!

In this interview you’ll get an insight into some of the things she’s doing, inside her head, that are causing her to be in the best shape of her life.

A: How where things before you joined the camp?

J: Wobbly, literally.. before I joined the camp I was feeling pretty down. I was starting to feel pretty isolated and the fun outgoing person I used to be was fading away. I felt like I was slowly being trapped inside a body and  personality that didn’t seem like me anymore.  I was constantly pulling out of social engagements because none of my clothes fit properly and I couldn’t bear the thought of going shopping to try things on.

I was deleting photos that friends would tag of me on facebook because I thought I looked too big, and when it was getting to much and I would have a little cry about it, I was tired of family and friends always saying “but you’re healthy” to try to make me feel better. To make matters worse, I was planning my wedding, and what was supposed to be the most exciting thing in the world was becoming a source of real anxiety, the thought of trying on dresses, and photos… was really starting to upset me.

A: What made you apply to the camp as opposed to doing other forms of training?

J: I was a member of a gym for 3 years and I went every single day, I actually did.  I followed the workout plan the trainers gave me to the letter. In addition, I was walking to the gym from work to top off my work out, I even did a  half marathon in Achill, but despite all this, I was still getting bigger and wobblier.

I even went to the doctor and had every blood test known to man done because I was convinced there had to be something wrong with me, I was trying so hard and never losing one single pound or inch, I refused to accept that “genetics” was the answer and that my waistline was eternally doomed, no matter what I did about it.

So, while I was out walking I saw the camp, I saw everyone working hard, and at first I thought.. I’ve done exercise classes before, they don’t work for me. But I decided to check out the web page, and I realised  quickly this was different. I really liked how knowledgeable the trainer was, how much information he was giving and wanted you to have, how involved he was willing to get in your personal fitness goals.  Right away you could tell he was very passionate about fitness and nutrition and he wasn’t just a zombie trainer putting in his hours at the office, he cared and wanted you to do well.  So I thought, well I’ll try one month, one month, and I’ll see what happens I had nothing to lose.

A: How did you fit your training and new good habits around your busy life?

J: It was a little difficult at first. I am a very busy person and constantly on the run, but I just made it work, no excuses, to others or myself.. not this time! I tried to be a little more organised with my groceries, making sure I had healthy snacks for the days I had to grab something and go. Planning ahead is key it makes it so much easier to grab a healthy option instead of reaching for a shop roll or crisps in starvation.

For the training, I just made a pact with myself to just do itHow could I know if it would work or not unless I really tried 100% , no self sabotage, I just made it work, planned meetings and appointment around training days, after all it is only 45 mins,  I had already been trying other things for years, I could do this for 45 mins.

A: How do you keep motivated?

J: I enjoy camp but sometimes it’s hard to stay motivated, I won’t lie. I’m only human, I get tired, I get cranky, I get moany, there are some days when I get home from work and want to crawl directly into bed. On days like that I just think in small steps, it’s easy to get overwhelmed as a busy person especially if you try to think of everything you have left to do all at once. So I don’t think of all the sessions I have left that month, or the list of things I have to do that week… I just think about getting through the one session that night.

I try to remember the things I like about camp: the challenge, the fun and laughs, the little community of regulars, new friends… and I then I make a deal with myself, if I just go to bootcamp just today for 45 mins, then I can come home and stay under the duvet the rest of the night if I still want to. The funny thing is, I never want to! I always feel great afterwards, It’s very weird, but I go in feeling like Clark Kent, the run down boring office worker and come out feeling like superman!

A: What have you learned from doing things differently for the past few months?

J: To get what you have never had you have to do what you’ve never done… or something like that ha ha… John  (our trainer) always says it, it’s sooo cheesy, but actually very true. I have learned that fad diets don’t work, and I never have to go hungry again. I can be healthy and fit, it just takes organisation, and a little elbow grease.

A: How have things changed for you since you joined the camp?

J: I’m not hopeless, hot me is not dead!

I’ve dropped two dress sizes, lost 3 inches from my waist, an inch from each arm a few inches of the old posterior and toned my legs, my calves look smoking in heels! That in itself is just amazing.  I have done everything, and never had results and finally …something that worked. I’m not the freak who used to exercise for ages with no results anymore, I was so tired of wondering what I was doing wrong!

It has given me a renewed sense of hope that I am not doomed to just get older and wobblier, that I have a choice, I can be me again… oh yeah… and I bought my wedding dress, it looks amazing!

A: What has been your biggest challenge and how did you get through it?

J: My biggest challenge is continually challenging myself. I can be lazy, if I find something a little easy I might go through the movements like it’s a break from the harder stuff, when I should be doing double, or faster, or heavier, I’m afraid to push myself all the way, because well I guess I’ve never done that before. I’m still working through it a little everyday, part of me knows I can do it, but another part of me is  afraid to try.  So I force myself to try a little, and when I realise that it wasn’t actually that bad… I do it again a little more, and again, and so on.

Somedays I’m braver than others, but having the group around who are all trying to do the same thing helps. It’s nice to know that you are probably not the only one feeling that exact same way!

Anna

anna@delite.ie



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Are you letting opportunities pass you by?

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

So, I am just back from a casting for a commercial advertisement.

A while ago, I had the chance to become a commercial model with a Dublin modelling agency. Let me tell you, I am no model, and probably the least photogenic person I know, but I thought “ah sure why not”, so I went to see if I qualified, and surprisingly they said yes.

Then I thought there would be no chance I was ever going to be called for a job anyway, so I had nothing to lose really.

I was wrong.The other day, I was called for a casting.My first one ever!

I was told to dress up officy, so I did, thanks to the wonderful stylist Lisa Fitzpatrick who sent a fabulous  suit my way (thank you Lisa!).

When I got there, I didn’t know what to expect. I was told to fill out a paper with my measurements (on which unfortunately I wasn’t allowed to fib) and hold it up to my chin. I felt a little like a prisoner, only chic-er. The photographer took a photo.

Then he said, go crazy. I though “whattttt????” and went crazy. Another photo.

Then he said to go crazier but not to jump. I though “jeez!” and went crazy, but I didn’t jump. A third photo was taken.

“Ok that’s it” he said.

So, after about 40 seconds I left slightly confused and bemused. I thought “wow, so this is a little taster of what the world of modelling is about, hey?”

There were many other girls waiting to be “accepted” after me. I don’t know if I will be the chosen one, but what I do know is that I am delighted and proud of myself for jumping into an unexpected opportunity like this one.

Even though I believe that in life it is up to us to make our own opportunities, sometimes life throws some interesting things at us; little gift boxes you have to dare to open to find out what’s inside.

Are you openning your gifts when you receive them? Or are you passing them over to someone else out of fear?

Opportunities are never lost. Someone will take the ones you miss.

Think about how many chances you may have passed by in your life time. Some of them may have appeared to you in disguise, and you may have failed to recognise them. Sometimes opportunity is missed because it’s dressed in overalls and looks like work.

Do you have any regrets? If so, there is something you can do about it.

You can start to take more risks, become bolder, have a “what the heck” attitude, be ready to do what it takes, go for it and have fun with it.

Summing up, it is clear the future holds great opportunities.  It also holds pitfalls.  The trick will be to avoid the pitfalls, seize the opportunities, and get back home by six o’clock.  ~Woody Allen, “My Speech to the Graduates,” Side Effects, 1980


Taking risks is part of life

Anna

anna@delite.ie



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INSPIRATIONAL PERSON OF THE MONTH – APRIL 2010

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

Vivienne Goodwin is one of the three recent mums who appeared in The Afternoon Show’s “Start again in 2010″ baby weight loss challenge.

She is a busy mum of three from Drogheda who, with the help of Ireland’s top fitness trainer John O’Connell, lost 2 stone in 8 weeks!

Her great attitude and determination has inspired many people across the country, including me. So I asked her to share her secrets with all of us, to which she kindly agreed. Thank you Vivienne!

1/ How were things before you decided to apply for The Afternoon Show’s challenge?

I was very self conscious about my weight but felt it was an impossibly difficult task to try to lose weight. It was soul destroying when I went shopping for clothes, nothing would fit. I was tired all the time and had no energy. I was breathless on going up the stairs and I was finding it difficult to bend down to help my kids with little tasks like putting on their shoes. I avoided social situations as much as I could and had stopped going swimming or on walks with the family.

2/What made you apply?

I used to sit on the sofa in the afternoon feeding my baby (and myself) and watch the afternoon show. When they advertised the “start again in 2010″ programme I thought ‘could that be for me?’.  I watched all the reality diet programmes and always wished it was me. I was unsure whether I really wanted to put myself in such a public domain but I really felt I needed help and it was now or never. Drastic measures were needed.

3/How did you fit your training and new food habits around your already busy life?

I have wonderful family and friends around me and when I asked for support they all rallied around. I have to admit at times I had to be selfish and just drop everything and go training. Food wise I needed to be really organised, shop frequently and bring my food with me if I was going out anywhere.

4/What is the biggest challenge you’ve overcome and how?

Probably my biggest challenge has been going out to the gym. I felt embarrassed at the beginning being in the gym amongst a lot of fit people but I am ignoring them now and focusing on my own training session. Also I sometimes I will use any excuse not to go, but my husband knows me well and pushes me out the door!!

5/How did you keep motivated?

The results have really kept me motivated. losing the weight and feeling fitter and more energised. Being on the show of course has been an added incentive. The support I have got from a wide range of people has been so encouraging and definitely motivates me to continue. Mostly my hubby and kids and my own health are a huge motivation.

6/What has this experience taught you?

that I can achieve things if I really focus and work hard for it. It’s taught me to grasp opportunities and not let them pass me by.

7/What inspired you during this process?

The encouragement and support from everybody around me and people I have met has been the most inspiring thing during this process. It really has spurred me on and made me more determined to keep going and reach my goal.

Vivienne looking amazing after her transformation

Anna

anna@delite.ie




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THIS YEAR'S OSCAR WINNERS inspire you…

Monday, March 8th, 2010

Kathryn Bigelow

Her Oscar winning film The Hurt Locker is the lowest-grossing best picture winner in Oscar history.

“If there’s specific resistance to women making movies, I just choose to ignore that as an obstacle for two reasons: I can’t change my gender, and I refuse to stop making movies. It’s irrelevant who or what directed a movie, the important thing is that you either respond to it or you don’t. There should be more women directing; I think there’s just not the awareness that it’s really possible. It is.”

James Cameron

Nicknamed Iron Jim, he jokingly refers to Titanic as his 190 Million Dollar “Chick Flick”.

On how he came up with the idea of The Terminator (1984):

“I would see these images of a metallic death figure rising Phoenix-like out of fire, I woke up and grabbed a pencil and paper and started writing. When I originally got the idea for Terminator, I was sick, I was broke, I was in Rome, I had no way to get home and I could barely speak the language. I was surrounded by people I could not get help from. I felt very alienated and so it was very easy for me to imagine a machine with a gun. At the point of the greatest alienation in my life, it was easy to create the character.”

Sandra Bullock

At age 10, she attended the town’s Washington-Lee High School. She immediately had a hard time. Coming from Europe, she was different. “I was still in green velvet bell-bottoms” she explained later “when everyone else was wearing straight legs. I always had these stupid barrettes holding my hair back. I was just a couple of beats off”. Of course, she was teased, and teased some more for her ugliness! Indeed, so badly hurt was she by the abuse that she vowed to never treat anyone that way. She kept it, too, her reputation for down-to-Earth decency being unparalleled in Hollywood.

“Did I really earn this or did I just wear you down?” Bullock, 45, exclaimed as she took the stage to accept her Oscar, before saluting each of her four contenders.

Jeff Bridges

He turned down the lead role of Indiana Jones, one of the most famous movie characters of all time, in Raiders of the Lost Ark. He says he does not regret it.

“Basically, one of the hardest things about being an actor is getting your first break. I’m a product of nepotism. The doors were open to me. I’d done several movies before I decided what I wanted to do. There was a certain amount of guilt and worry about whether I really had what it takes. I thought I’d spare my girls that.”

Mo’nique

Never shying away from her status as a full-figured woman, Mo’nique has used her notoriety and her famously sarcastic wit in order to advocate for voluptuous women everywhere.

Her funny and empowering book Skinny Women are Evil became a best seller in 2003, and she soon afterward began working with the Oxygen network on a beauty pageant for full-figured women called F.A.T. Chance-an acronym for Fabulous and Thick.

The Oscars, and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences were conceived by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studio boss, Louis B Mayer. It was an attempt to improve Hollywood and the motion picture’s image.

The 1st award ceremony was held May 16, 1929 at the Hotel Roosevelt in Hollywood. There was no taping or telecast of the ceremony. Only 250 people were in attendance. The ceremony was to honor achievements for the years of 1927 and 1928. It was hosted by Douglas Fairbanks.

The origin of the name “Oscar” is a bit contested! Bette Davis claims in a biography that it was named  after her first husband. Also claiming credit is the Academy secretary, Margaret Herrick, who first saw the award in 1931. She stated that the statuette reminded her of her Uncle Oscar. The official name of the Oscar statuette is the Academy Award of Merit.


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Anna

anna@delite.ie




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Delight at the end of the tunnel

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

Two fishermen went off on their daily trip off shore.

The first one stayed close to shore and spent the day listening to the radio while waiting for the fish to get into his net.

The second fisherman chose to venture further off shore and try different spots during the day.

He regularly checked his net, adjusted it when necessary, and moved to a different spot whenever he noticed that catch wouldn’t be good were he was.

In the afternoon, a storm struck and the seas got rough.

The first fisherman saw lightning and got scared. He didn’t want to get wet and cold so he packed up his things and hurried back to shore.

The second fisherman was also a bit afraid but chose to stay and worked hard in the rain and cold until late in the afternoon.

Then, in the distance, he saw a rock formation resembling a tunnel, and he decided to take shelter there while he kept fishing until sunset.

Surprisingly, it turned out fish were abundant in this spot under the tunnel. The second fisherman was shocked and delighted with himself.

Back in the harbour the first fisherman had spend the afternoon in the canteen. As he came out to head back home ,the two fishermen met and talked about their catch.

The first one said angrily: “Terrible day, I didn’t catch a thing. There’s just nothing out there these days. My family will have to eat potatoes for dinner again tonight!”

The second fisherman nodded and smiled while loading his bike with bags full of fresh fish.

This story illustrates the what in my opinion make healthy people get healthier and unhealthy people get unhealthier.

This is why fit people get even fitter and unfit people stay unfit. Because they are not prepared to do what it takes.

Whatever it is you want in life, you can have it, as long as you are willing to go the extra mile.

Through rough or calm seas, keep sailing, adjusting your direction and taking risks.

And never ever give up!


Anna

anna@delite.ie

If you want to catch a big fish, you need to think big!

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