Lunar Letter
eppa²
Perseverance: Sowing the Seeds of Confidence

Perseverance
allows us to achieve our dreams and increases our confidence. In previous
editions of the “Lunar Letter” we have talked about and referred to the
formula:
C =
eppa²
Success comes
from confidence and confidence comes from experience, preparation,
perseverance and attitude squared. Today we will embark on an adventure
in perseverance.
Many of us know
the story of the Chinese Bamboo. The bamboo seed is planted, watered and cared
for during one year and nothing can be seen. There is no sign of life.
The seed is watered and cared for during an additional year and still
nothing. The years pass and one wonders what is going on. During the
fifth year the Chinese Bamboo tree grows 90 feet in 6 weeks.
We know that the
Chinese Bamboo was preparing for its incredible growth. During the five
years that nothing could be seen above ground, an elaborate system of
roots was formed to enable the extraordinary growth in the fifth year.
Our success and
confidence comes from the seeds that we sow in our mind. We water the
seeds of success and confidence with our actions and habits of each day.
Similar to the Chinese Bamboo, if we stop watering our seeds, they will
wither away and die before we can see the results.
The secret that
many of us desire is to know how we can be more perseverant when we want
to “throw in the
towel” and quit. There is no easy answer and no magic formula. What we
can do is
to concentrate on the results of all that we do and be bold in the actions
that we take in order to achieve our objective. In the times that we need
it most, we can focus on the words of wise men who have persevered under
the most difficult of circumstances:
“Continuous
effort - not strength or intelligence - is the key to unlocking our potential.”
-
Winston Churchill
“It's not that
I'm so smart; it's just that I stay with problems longer.”
-
Albert Einstein
“The credit
belongs to the man, who is actually in the arena, whose face is
marred by
dust and
sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs
and comes short again and
again, who knows
the great enthusiasms, the great devotions and spends himself in a worthy
cause; who at the best, knows the triumph of high achievement; and who, at
the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his
place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who know neither
victory nor defeat.”
-
Theodore Roosevelt
By following
these steps, we can be sure to put our best foot forward in all that we do
and never have to look back wondering what might have been.

Copyright © 2003
Rob McBride ~
Inspire C.A.
All rights reserved
October
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