Thursday, October 17, 2013

'Now's your inning! Stand the world on its ear! Set it spinning! That'll be just the beginning!' The world's premier success coach tells you how to become obsessed with success... starting right now!



by Dr. Jeffrey Lant.

 Author's program note.  For my entire life, now creeping close to 7 decades,  I have made the study of successful people my metier. I have surrounded myself by  them... scrutinized them (as upclose and personal as possible)... I have dissected,  emulated, researched and dogged their heels the better to understand why some  folks make it, not just having but living their expansive dreams, whilst for others,  the overwhelming majority of others, success is never any closer than a word in  the dictionary, an elusive chimera to be wondered at, never seized or enjoyed.

 Well, the cavalry has just arrived, the heavy guns, the Marines... all wrapped up in  one unstoppable guy with sap to spare; that would be me. You've crossed into  my territory now and here the writ than runs is mine... and its message is clear,  unmistakable, pure, unadulterated: unqualified success is the goal... and your  unqualified attention is absolutely required, every minute you say you want success.  Each word that follows, every sentence will, if followed religiously, advance your  success.

 By the same token, your failure to follow these essential words ensures your success  is diminished, degraded, diluted; not merely lessoned but unachievable.

 Today's music, the sound of success.

 Want to expedite your success? Then use all five senses. See it. Touch it. Taste it.  Smell it... and hear it. For this you need music, bold, audacious, in your face, "lead,  follow, or get out of the way". The music Jule (pronounced Ju-Lee) Styne composed  and for which lyricist extraordinaire Stephen Sondheim worked his magic is what I've  got in mind.

 This song is "Everything's Coming Up Roses" from the 1959 Broadway musical  "Gypsy: A  Musical Fable". This is not merely a song. It is an acute, strident, even  chilling declaration about what success entails, costs, and what you must do  including the obsessive megalomania that is so very much a part of the upward trajectory.

 The song was originally written for Ethel Merman (1908-1984). Both Styne and Songheim,  while recognizing Merman's vocal power and range had doubts about her for this number.  After all, she had risen to stardom via Cole Porter's smooth, glib, witty, sophisticated  genius.

 Porter (1891-1964) was the petted heir to a multi-million dollar fortune from Miles  Laboratories. He never had to work; never wanted for money, for anything. Every time  America belched and took an Alka-Seltzer Porter's net worth increased. Thus Porter's  sophisticated genius, realized by Merman, enlivened the Roaring Twenties parties of  the night  before, whilst the tablets they took the morning after made him richer and  richer still.

 His songs, therefore, were chic,clever, delightful, delicious, delectable, delovely... but  that was not what Styne and Songheim wanted from Merman's rendition of Mama Rose,  and they were afraid she could not rise to the occasion which called for the singer to  deliver the smell of rancid sweat, gnawing hunger, bills not paid, midnight despair, anxieties  galore and profound fears... and from these unlikely, even toxic ingredients produce a  bona fide anthem to soaring, glorious, success and all the sacrificing it took to get it.

 Go now to any search engine and play Merman's triumphant rendition... particularly in  the half dozen lines at the end of this masterpiece; "Everything's coming up roses and  daffodils:..". Play this song when you want the authentic sound of success. You'll hear  just what you must do. Are you ready to get started?

 Mirror, mirror...

 Look at yourself in the looking glass. Put that face you think you know so well under the  most precise and unrelenting of microscopes. Then ask yourself this absolutely  essential question: Do you look like a success?

 Successful people have a look, an aura, that unmistakable je ne sais quoi that so clearly  indicates that they are in possession of a vital insight that you probably don't have -- yet.  This insight is a cocktail of key ingredients, each one necessary, none expendable..   Look in the mirror now to see what you're working with.

 Do you look alive? Do you look confident? Do you look like someone who projects  a "can-do" aura? Or do you look like someone who's let himself go... someone who  would rather be in bed... someone who gave up on life's struggles long ago and is  now hoping for nothing more than to get by in reasonable comfort and privacy before  the Grim Reaper claims your hide?

 Successful people do not merely live life. They are engaged with life, fully aware that  life is a thing of short duration, pitfalls, crises, catastrophes, set backs, obstacles,  misjudgments, miscalculations, and painful errors of every size and variety. Successful  people understand that these things, despite the best and most thorough preparation  will happen. Because they expect them, they are not unhinged by them. Rather they look  at each such event as an inevitability... a problem to be solved... an opportunity to show  what you've learned and apply it promptly to minimize damage and return to the serious  business of success, more experienced, tougher, and street smart than ever. In short,  lemons into the pinkest of lemonades.

 Clothes.

 Unless you intend to be the popinjay on fashion's run-way, a certifiable clothes horse  where every thread is examined, evaluated, critiqued, ridiculed, catty comments twelve  for a penny, clothes must assist in making the necessary statement of who you are  and should never, ever be the statement.  In other words clothes at all times must  be subservient to the overall effect, never the focus. With this in mind, have you checked  your basic wardrobe lately?

 Here's a hint. In one of Agatha Christie's novels, the solution to the crime hinges on  the lady's fashion insight. One suspect dresses to kill, the flashiest of ensembles,  while the second wears clothes a trifle thread-bare and past their prime.The deduction?  Miss Marple could tell from the cut who was the gentleman (and hence less likely to  murder in those distant days), and who wasn't.

 In short it is not the age of the clothes or their pretensions to being a la mode. Rather,  it is the look that is everything... and that look should never scream... but rather project  the aura of quiet confidence and absolute assurance. Does yours?

 The essential people.

 We have now arrived at the most important thing it takes to be successful... and that  is a resolute, honest, hard-working team of people who look out for you, in every and  any way. This will include but not be restricted to health and wellness mavens, keeping  you physically (and mentally) at the peak of perfection; investment counselors; personal  assistants, bookkeepers and accountants, lawyers, the experts who advise on what  pictures you buy and the wizard who has always helped you select just the right  diamonds when, like Holly Golightly, you had only the toy from a box of Cracker  Jack to engrave.

 These are the people, each one both essential to your success and reflecting the  degree to which you have achieved it, who ensure you reach it and ensure you  keep it. How many of these key personnel do you have? The extent to which you  do everything yourself is the discernible measure of how far from success you still  remain.

 99% say NO, and I'm thriiled; a cautionary  tale.

 Years ago, I owned the largest advertising card deck in the world. Each quarterly  edition went to 100,000 people. Of these up to 99% would throw it away upon receipt.  That's right 99%! But the key is not all the people who didn't respond, but the 1% who  did. From those 1000 people every 90 days, I quickly, inevitably became not just a  millionaire, but a multi-millionaire. I called myself the "most rejected man in America."...  and the happiest. Get the point? Each rejection, yes every one, moves you measurably  closer to the next acceptance and the success it has brought closer.

 This, then, is the question: how many times have you been rejected today, yesterday,  the day before that, because if you are not being rejected, you cannot be accepted and  thus your failure is inevitable?

 Thus, when you've finished this article risk rejection, by a business prospect, by a  supplier where you want better terms, by a company you'd like to work for. This can be  daunting, difficult, demanding poise, confidence, and grit.

 It also happens it is the only guaranteed way to succeed. Capisce?

About the Author


Harvard-educated Dr. Jeffrey Lant is the author of over a dozen publications also several ebooks and over one thousand online articles. Republished with author's permission by Ruthsella Corasol http://WorkingAtHome101.com.



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