Personal growth: how to overcome your critics

Everyone knows that it is part of the path to success.

They know they just can’t get away from it.

Let me share with you a powerful perspective on your success and why achieving it is critical to you.

*** The more successful you are, the more critics and complainers will find their way to you.

That’s how it is.

And the sooner you realize this, the better off you will be.

Sometimes I am surprised by the type of emails I receive.

My ratio is, I would say, 175 positive emails to 1 ‘reviewer’ and that’s fine, but what makes me laugh is the ‘reviewer’.

Complaining, complaining, this person wants everything for free.

They even curse you, insult you; in the ‘Conquer Yourself’ manual they call these people ‘levellers’.

Because they can’t get over their own fear and weakness, they want to bring other people down, we see it in the junk tabloids every day.

Going for your dreams is not easy, that’s why it’s so rewarding.

What’s even funnier is that yelling, cursing people can unsubscribe and never get an email again, but they’d rather ‘get high’ by trying to bring someone else down.

So what we do is we unsubscribe ourselves.

Why am I telling you all this?

Because I want you to go out and kick some ass.

I want you to be aware of the detractors, critics, ‘levellers’.

You need to be aware because if you’re not, it’s easy to get shot down.

All the presidents, Bush, Clinton, all the businessmen like Gates, Oprah, Spielberg, etc… they all have a lot of critics and they keep moving forward.

We are not here for everyone, just for someone. Find those “someone”
and serve them.

Don’t go where they tolerate you, go where they celebrate you.
(read this again)

Going for your dreams requires courage, self-assertion, conquering and managing your weaknesses.

Create a storm of success that melts your critics.

Become a doer, be encouraged, motivated and take action every day.

The late President Teddy Roosevelt could have said it better:

“It is not the critic who counts, nor the man who points out how the strong man stumbled, or where the deed-maker might have done better. The credit belongs to the man who is really in the arena, whose face is marred by the dust, sweat, and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs and falls short again and again; who knows great enthusiasms, great devotions, and dedicates himself to a worthy cause; who, at best , knows in the end the triumph of great achievements; and that, at worst, if he fails, at least he fails while he dares greatly, so that his place will never be with those cold and timid souls who know neither the victory nor defeat.”

He said it best.

Dodge the complainers and complainers and join a team of supercharged winners.

Today is your day.

Make your move.

mike litman

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