Mark Twain may be my favorite author to quote and here’s a doozy from the master:
“I’ve known many problems, but rarely do they come true.”
I love this one. It illustrates and paints the picture for us of the sad fretting individual who is always awaiting calamity, but it never arrives. He has walled himself off from disasters and by doing so has walled himself off from life.
There are much better ways to spend your time and energy than to worry about things that will likely never happen.
Seth Godin, another of my favorites, defines worrying as “practicing to fail in advance.”
One of my newest mentors, Matt Furey, would tell you that instead of worrying and practicing failing over and over in your head, practice and picture succeeding over and over. Picture how winning looks and feels rather than spending all of your time on losing. That’s how you get there and where your energy SHOULD be spent.
In the Get Your Dream Job Fast and Start Getting Your Hands on the Money That You’ve Been Promised package, which is available this weekend, you’ll learn exactly how to use that technique on a job interview, and anywhere else you need it. We’re going to be covering the elusive job interview questions more in-depth and more specifically than you do at your school.
I’m going to give you the dirt straight from the horse’s mouth. (Yes I’ve spoken with the horse, in this case represented by several frustrated surgeons looking to hire a PA and seeing bad candidate after bad candidate.)
This package will disappear Sunday night like a candidate who shows up late to a job interview.
Click here:
Get Your Dream Job Fast and Start Getting Your Hands on the Money That You’ve Been Promised
Brian Wallace