“Just as you deserve an abundance of physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual health, you deserve an abundance of financial health. Money in itself is neither good nor bad, it is neutral. Financial abundance can be used to support tremendous projects to help save tortured animals, grow trees, protect the land, and heal the planet.
One common attribute of self-made millionaires is that they are doing what they love to do. They love what they do so much that they challenge themselves continuously to achieve the highest levels of success in that field, and the financial abundance followed.” The Sunfood Diet Success System, by David Wolfe.
“…It is rarely possible-or even particularly fruitful-to look too far ahead. A plan can usually cover no more tan 18 months and still be reasonably clear and specific. So the question in most cases should be, Where and how can I achieve results that will make a difference within the next year and a half? The answer must balance several things. First, the results should be hard to achieve-they should require “stretching,” to use the current buzz word. But also, they should be within reach. To aim at results that cannot be achieved-or that can be only under the most unlikely circumstances is not being ambitious; it is being foolish. Second, the results should be meaningful. They should make a difference. Finally, results should be visible and, if at all possible, measurable. From this will come a course of action: what to do, where and how to start, and what goals and deadlines to set.” Managing Oneself, by Peter F. Drucker.
“The inner aspect of the new work situation is that each of us has some unique combination of motivation, capability, style, and incidental advantages that represents the work that fits us, the work that we were made for, our lifework. In the old job world this was equally true, but it was essentially irrelevant since jobs were boxes and we trimmed ourselves to fit them. Besides, after that first job got us started, many of us found ourselves on a vocational moving sidewalk that had a predetermined destination. Hopes, preferences, and talents were pretty things, but not very practical.
In the dejobbed world, the truth that each one of us has an inherent lifework is suddenly rich with meaning. Nothing less than finding what you were meant to be and do will give you the motivation and the capability that today’s work world demands. Identifying your lifework is no longer an escapist fantasy. It is a condition for being successful. You now have to discover your lifework if you are to have a chance of creating a satisfactory and satisfying work life. ” Creating You & Co, by William Bridges.
“Walking through clutter, grime, and piles of dirty laundry or dishes as you leave the house every morning will rob you of the vitality you need to get through the day. And when it’s the first thing you see when you come home at night, it will drag your energy down no matter how many good things happened to you that day.” Feng Shui, by Stephanie Roberts.
“Just like a computer, your brain has a search function-but it’s even more phenomenal than a computer’s. It seems to be programmed by what we focus on and, more primarily, what we identify with. It’s the seat of what many people have referred to as the paradigms we maintain. We notice only what matches our internal belief systems and identified contexts…
The implication of how this filtering works-how we are unconsciously made conscious of information-could fill a week long seminar. Suffice it to say that something automatic and extraordinary happens in your mind when you create and focus on a clear picture of what you want.” Getting Things Done, by David Allen.
Tags: Abundance & Success

Everything is created twice. First in the mind then in reality. Unfortunately, most of us are stuck with the first and we find it hard to materialize our goals. But the truth of the matter is, we loose our faith upon our own capabilities.
What kind of tips do you have for materializing goals, and moving away from being stuck in the mind?