Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Those Limitations


Albert Einstein did not speak until he was four years old and didn't read until he was seven. His teacher described him as "mentally slow, unsociable and adrift forever in his foolish dreams." He was expelled and was refused admittance to the Zurich Polytechnic School.

It's a superb question, what makes us felt limited or finite? Is that anyone elses around? Or the born awful condition? Or maybe this world itself that made us so miserably limited?

“i can't get another higher educations since my thight-scheduled job has take it off”

“I've stopped my guitar lessons since i doubt my talent on it”

“so, what's the point for me to doing my exercises each day, my job has got me tired all day long”

“i shall stopped to smile,nobody loves my smile”

There were alot.... a bunch of things that made us (seems)Limited, and easily giving up into those 'finitively', but... I'd like to asked you to take a deep breath for a while and take your quite time from the rush of this world and having a thought and re-thought about everything, it'd lead us into the simple conclusion that everything, every 'hard' feeling is sourced from our shelves, our own mind that made us so finited and the words of “I Can't” would easily spreading into our veins, it's in ourself, not from others, not from every bad term that we put a guilt on it, but ourself.

That's why, Do we prefer those limitation-feeling burdened us to reaching the thing that we always wanted and supposed to be reached already? I do believe that every single person in this world has an enormous ability to makes their dream to come true, even their wildest and most impossible dreams.

So What are we waiting for? This very time is the right time for us to start it all over, from the small thing shall lead us into the gratest achievement we might wanted before, this is the right moment to pushed our veins and muscles to break all of the limitaitions, just be faithful that every person was born to be EXTRAORDINARY.

BE UNLIMITED....

Beethoven handled the violin awkwardly and preferred playing his own compositions instead of improving his technique. His teacher called him hopeless as a composer.

When Peter J. Daniel was in the fourth grade, his teacher, Mrs. Phillips, constantly said, "Peter J. Daniel, you're no good, you're a bad apple and you're never going to amount to anything." Peter was totally illiterate until he was 26. A friend stayed up with him all night and read him a copy of Think and Grow Rich. Now he owns the street corners he used to fight on and just published his latest book: Mrs. Phillips, You Were Wrong!

Inspired by the notes of 'Consider This - Jack Canfield and Mark V. Hansen'

Candra D.F

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