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Pick
Your Picnic: How To Recognize And Trust Your Instinct
by
Leslie Householder
Often
we mimic the actions of others in an attempt to achieve their
same results. We read their books, listen to their tapes, and
follow their directions. Much of the time, we still fail to enjoy
their promises of success. Why? Because we're more about doing
what the winners do, than we are about thinking the way they think.
Learn how to think like a winner!
John
Sims was traveling with an associate. The associate said, "John,
aren't you going to put on your seatbelt?"
John
replied with his raspy tenor voice, "Why, are we going to
get into a crash?"
"No,
but seatbelts save lives..."
John
retorted abruptly in his usual blunt way, "Seatbelts don't
save lives."
"Of
course they do! Once I was driving with my family and something
told me to make sure everyone was wearing their seatbelts. So
we all belted up, and just as we turned a corner, there was another
vehicle coming at us in our lane. Even though it was a head-on
collision, we all survived because of those seatbelts!"
John
was firm, "No, the seatbelts didn't save your life, whatever
told you to put them on saved your life."
Probably
a decade has passed since I heard John relate that story. Leaving
a lasting impression on me, its message has deepened and taken
on new meaning. He's right. It wasn't the seatbelts that saved
their lives. True, they played a part in the actual physics of
keeping the bodies secure during impact, but the credit belongs
to the voice of warning. The "life-saving" seatbelts
were there during the entire trip. But the timeliness of the prompting,
and the man's response to it, changed the would-be tragedy into
a miracle.
I
am reminded of a game I played in high school. Planning to take
some friends to a picnic, my friend and I prepared a tape recorder
which described our every move as we traveled from our starting
point to the final destination.
When
it came time for the event, we told our unsuspecting friends to
wait at a payphone until we called them and told them where to
find the hidden tape recorder. Our instructions: "Turn it
on and follow the directions explicitly!"
At
the end of the journey was the picnic fit for a king. But along
the way, we followed our friends, incognito. The most hilarious
moments came when they tried to mimic what we had done, but in
the wrong places. Having accidentally fallen out of step, our
friends found that the description of our actions no longer suited
their surroundings and, to us, it became absolutely laughable.
If they had only known where they were trying to go, they could
have improvised and found their own way.
Sometimes
we look at others who have reached an admirable destination in
their life, and then imitate their same steps in an effort to
achieve their results. We listen to their tapes, read their books,
and attend their seminars; and then we do our best to follow what
they say. While we can learn a great deal from people who have
what we want, we must realize that we're not always on the same
sidewalk, so to speak, as they were when they began their journey
to the picnic. We've had different life experiences and carry
with us a different variety of baggage. These elements make a
difference. We need to have the destination clearly in view, so
that when someone else's instructions do not work, we are still
able to improvise our way to success.
So,
how do you identify your picnic? It's so simple that most people
discard the idea as unimportant. This is one reason why few ever
discover the power behind it. All you have to do is simply DECIDE
WHAT YOU WANT.
If
you knew you could not fail, what would your goals be? This is
actually the toughest part of achieving success; the part that
at least ninety-seven percent of the population will never do.
Create a description of the success you desire, and commit it
to paper. Write it in the form of a gratitude statement as though
it has already happened. Then you are entitled to, and can trust
the impressions which come to your mind. By doing this, you've
done it: you've 'spotted' your picnic table. As you hang on to
the vision, you'll know instinctively just how to get to it, because
it will be in clear view. Without it committed to paper, your
impressions will seem random and you'll struggle to know what
to do next. Perhaps you've already felt that way.
Take
control of your life, and experience the exhilaration which comes
from proceeding methodically toward your worthy ideal. Your success
begins with the dream...and happens after you've done your part
to enlist the voice of inspiration on your journey. See it in
your mind, commit it to paper, and be grateful for it before it's
even yours. This puts you in tune with that 'inner voice', and
you'll finally know just what to do, and when.
Leslie
Householder is the author of The
Jackrabbit Factor: Why You Can, and Hidden Treasures: Heaven's
Astonishing Help with Your Money Matters. Watch the Jackrabbit
Factor movie, or receive 8 free Jackrabbit eLessons by visiting
http://www.jackrabbitfactor.com.
Editor's
note: This
is my testimonial to Leslie Householder:
"In
the past few years, I thought I did know some things about the
Law of Attraction. 'The Jackrabbit Factor' is the first
book I ever come across that fully dedicates itself to the explanation
of this universal law in detail. Readers, you won't find yourselves
reading drab theories. It has a story with an emotional
resonance...Leslie, I REALLY love your story-driven narration
and I thank you for your sacrifice in time and effort to produce
your wisdom on paper. Your work certainly renews my strength to
transcend beyond my current reality." – Nelson
Finding
a jackrabbit can change your life! Find
out how.

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