Put Your Dream to the Test
eBook - ePub

Put Your Dream to the Test

John C. Maxwell

Compartir libro
  1. 320 páginas
  2. English
  3. ePUB (apto para móviles)
  4. Disponible en iOS y Android
eBook - ePub

Put Your Dream to the Test

John C. Maxwell

Detalles del libro
Vista previa del libro
Índice
Citas

Información del libro

Do you dream big? Now you can put your dream to the test and bring it to life!

What's the difference between a dreamer and someone who achieves a dream? According to best-selling author and leadership expert Dr. John C. Maxwell, the answer lies in answering ten powerful, straightforward questions.

Whether you've lost sight of an old dream or you are searching for a new one within you,?this book provides a step-by-step action plan that you can start using today to see, own, and reach your dream. Dr. Maxwell draws on his forty years of mentoring experience to expertly guide you through the ten questions required of every successful dreamer.

In Put Your Dream to the Test, Maxwell will help you:

  • Discover and define what your dream should be
  • Create a blueprint for a path to achieve success
  • See real-world examples of what success could look like for you

It's one thing to have a dream. It's another to do the things needed to achieve it. If you're willing to put your dream to the test and do what's needed to answer yes to the ten dream questions, then your odds are very good for seeing your dream become reality.

Don't leave your dream to chance. This book is a must-have and can make the difference between failure and success.

Preguntas frecuentes

¿Cómo cancelo mi suscripción?
Simplemente, dirígete a la sección ajustes de la cuenta y haz clic en «Cancelar suscripción». Así de sencillo. Después de cancelar tu suscripción, esta permanecerá activa el tiempo restante que hayas pagado. Obtén más información aquí.
¿Cómo descargo los libros?
Por el momento, todos nuestros libros ePub adaptables a dispositivos móviles se pueden descargar a través de la aplicación. La mayor parte de nuestros PDF también se puede descargar y ya estamos trabajando para que el resto también sea descargable. Obtén más información aquí.
¿En qué se diferencian los planes de precios?
Ambos planes te permiten acceder por completo a la biblioteca y a todas las funciones de Perlego. Las únicas diferencias son el precio y el período de suscripción: con el plan anual ahorrarás en torno a un 30 % en comparación con 12 meses de un plan mensual.
¿Qué es Perlego?
Somos un servicio de suscripción de libros de texto en línea que te permite acceder a toda una biblioteca en línea por menos de lo que cuesta un libro al mes. Con más de un millón de libros sobre más de 1000 categorías, ¡tenemos todo lo que necesitas! Obtén más información aquí.
¿Perlego ofrece la función de texto a voz?
Busca el símbolo de lectura en voz alta en tu próximo libro para ver si puedes escucharlo. La herramienta de lectura en voz alta lee el texto en voz alta por ti, resaltando el texto a medida que se lee. Puedes pausarla, acelerarla y ralentizarla. Obtén más información aquí.
¿Es Put Your Dream to the Test un PDF/ePUB en línea?
Sí, puedes acceder a Put Your Dream to the Test de John C. Maxwell en formato PDF o ePUB, así como a otros libros populares de Personal Development y Personal Success. Tenemos más de un millón de libros disponibles en nuestro catálogo para que explores.

Información

Año
2011
ISBN
9781418573768
CHAPTER 1
The Ownership Question
Is My Dream Really My Dream?
Whatever you think, be sure it is what you think;
whatever you want, be sure that it is what you want;
whatever you feel, be sure that it is what you feel.
—T. S. ELIOT
His father wanted him to become a policeman. After all, his father was the chief of police in the small town where he grew up. His mother had other ideas. She believed he should become a carpenter. She saw that he didn’t have much interest or aptitude for academic subjects in school, and she wanted him to learn a practical trade. At her request, Arnold dutifully enrolled in a carpentry apprenticeship program while in high school, but his heart was never really in it.
WHOSE DREAM IS IT?
Many young people find themselves in this kind of situation when they are growing up. They don’t know what they’re good at. They don’t know what they want to do. So they listen to their parents or friends and start in a direction for their lives that reflects someone else’s desires and dreams, not their own. And that shouldn’t be a surprise. Children first see themselves through the eyes of their parents and other role models. They have no other point of reference. Counseling expert Cecil G. Osborne, in The Art of Understanding Yourself, observes, “The young child has no clear picture of himself. He sees himself only in the mirror of his parents’ evaluation of himself. . . . A child who is told repeatedly that he is a bad boy, or is lazy, or no good, or stupid, or shy, or clumsy, will tend to act out this picture which the parent or some other authority figure has given him.”1Many young people lose touch with their emerging identity—who they are and what they would really like to do—and they adopt the dreams and desires of someone else’s heart because they wish to gain approval or because they don’t know what else to do.
Anytime you see people pursuing a midlife career change, you can almost be certain they had been living someone else’s dream and lost their way.
How many people attend law school because that is what their parents want? How many get married to please their mother? How many get a “real job” instead of pursuing a career in movies or the theater? Anytime you see people pursuing a midlife career change, you can almost be certain they had been living someone else’s dream and lost their way. As disruptive as such a transition can be, they are more fortunate than the people who never discover and pursue their own dreams.
Even encouraging, positive, well-meaning parents can steer their children in a wrong direction. I know because I experienced it in a small way when I was seven years old. My parents were convinced that I possessed musical talent. They bought a piano and signed me up for lessons. For a couple of years, I enjoyed learning and practicing. I didn’t have a passion for it, but I kept playing because it brought joy to my mom and dad.
My parents decided to broaden my musical horizons when I reached the fifth grade, and they bought me a trumpet. My teacher informed them that my mouth was not shaped correctly for that instrument, so they switched me to the clarinet. A famous clarinet player named Ted Lewis had come from my hometown, Circleville, Ohio, so friends started saying, “Maybe you can become the next Ted Lewis!”
Not likely. I didn’t even have enough talent to make first chair in my elementary school band. I was the last clarinet!
At that age I really wanted to play basketball. I can still remember the pressure and heaviness of heart I felt when I finally sat down with my parents to tell them that I wanted to give up music to play sports. I can also remember the exhilaration I felt as they let go of their dream for me to become a great musician. It was with great joy that I packed away my clarinet for good and picked up a basketball.
ARNOLD’S DREAM
Arnold wasn’t sure of what he wanted to do, but he knew it wasn’t law enforcement or carpentry. It wasn’t for lack of trying to find his dream. He had ambition. In fact, one thing he did know was that he wanted to be the best in the world at whatever he chose. He loved athletics, but in his midteens, he still hadn’t found the right sport. He had tried many: ice curling, boxing, running, and field events such as javelin and shot put. For five years, he played soccer but had no strong passion for it. Then one day his soccer coach asked members of the team to start lifting weights once a week to improve their conditioning. It was then that his dream began to take shape.
“I still remember that first visit to the bodybuilding gym,” he recalls. “I had never seen anyone lifting weights before. Those guys were . . . powerful looking, Herculean. And there it was before me—my life, the answer I’d been seeking. It clicked. It was something I suddenly just seemed to reach out and find, as if I’d been crossing a suspended bridge and finally stepped off onto solid ground.”2
At age fourteen, Arnold Schwarzenegger had found his passion in a gymnasium. His dream came just a few months later when he spotted a magazine in a store window. On its cover was the image of a bodybuilder playing the role of Hercules in a movie. Arnold remembers what happened next:
I scraped up the pfennigs [Austrian pennies] that I had left and bought that magazine. It turned out that Hercules was an English guy [named Reg Park] who’d won the Mr. Universe title in bodybuilding and parlayed that into a movie career—then took the money and built a gym empire. Bingo! I had my role model! If he could do it, I could do it! I’d win Mr. Universe. I’d become a movie star. I’d get rich. One, two, three—bing, bang, boom! I found my passion. I got my goal.3
Not everyone understood Arnold’s dream—certainly not his parents or the friends he grew up with. His father hoped it would be a passing phase.
“Well, Arnold, what do you want to do?” he would ask.
“Dad, I’m going to be a professional bodybuilder. I’m going to make it my life,” Arnold would explain.
“I can see you’re serious, but how do you plan to apply it?”4
No one understood Arnold’s choice, his dedication, and his vision.
“I could not have chosen a less popular sport,” Arnold explains. “My school friends thought I was crazy. But I didn’t care. . . . I had found the thing to which I wanted to devote my total energies and there was no stopping me. My drive was unusual; I talked differently than my friends; I was hungrier for success than anyone I knew.”5That’s the power of a compelling dream. A dream is an inspiring picture of the future that energizes your mind, will, and emotions, empowering you to do everything you can to achieve it.
Once Arnold had found a dream of his own, he was relentless in its pursuit. He began working out for hours at a time, six days a week. His dream was to become the best built man in the world. At age eighteen while he served his mandatory year in the Austrian army, he won the Junior Mr. Europe, his first major competition. The next year he won Mr. Europe. He moved to Munich and kept working. He obtained part ownership in a gym there. And in 1967, he won the Mr. Universe amateur contest in London. He was only twenty years old, and his victory astounded everyone. When he called his parents to tell them about his success, they were less than excited.
“If it had been through the local Graz paper saying I had just completed my college degree, it would have meant more to them,” remarks Arnold. “In a way I cared that they didn’t understand it. I felt they ought to have at least realized what it meant to me. They knew how hard I had worked for it. . . . I think you’re always doing things for the approval of your parents.”6
Despite the lack of support for his career choice, Arnold went on to win every major bodybuilding competition in the world, including the prestigious Mr. Olympia contest an incredible seven times, the last in 1980. But becoming the world’s greatest bodybuilder—an amazing accomplishment in itself—was not Arnold’s only dream. Many people were shocked when he was able to turn his bodybuilding prowess into a successful movie career. Years later, they were flabbergasted when he ran for governor of California—and won. What most people didn’t know was that Arnold had dreamed of such things since his early days in Austria. At age twenty, he told a friend, “I want to win the Mr. Universe many times like Reg [Park, his idol]. I want to go into films like Reg. I want to be a billionaire. And I want to go into politics.”7
Arnold has lived his dream. He became Mr. Universe and Mr. Olympia many times. He’s made many movies, with his films earning more than $1.6 billion!8 He’s been a highly successful businessperson. Since the early days in the United States, he’s been a disciplined saver and wise investor in real estate, stocks, and businesses. (He’s not quite a billionaire yet; it’s estimated that his net worth is only $800 million.)9He is a political leader. Arnold Schwarzenegger has owned his dream, and as a result, he has been highly successful.
“From the very beginning I knew bodybuilding was the perfect choice for my career,” says Arnold. “No one else seemed to agree—at least not my family or teachers. To them the only acceptable way of life was being a banker, secretary, doctor, or salesman—being established in the ordinary way, taking the regular kind of job offered through an employment agency—something legitimate. My desire to build my body and be Mr. Universe was totally beyond their comprehension.”10But it wasn’t beyond Arnold’s comprehension—or his ability to achieve it because he was able to answer the Ownership Question affirmatively.
A DREAM IS POSSIBLE ONLY IF YOU OWN IT
How do you answer the Ownership Question? Is your dream really your dream? Are you willing to put it to the test? In the name of being sensible, many people ignore their desires. They undertake a career to please their parents, their spouses, or others. That may make them dutiful, but it will not make them successful. You cannot achieve a dream that you do not own.
You cannot achieve a dream that you do not own.
Think about your personal history. How have your plans, goals, and desires been influenced by others? Are you aware of how your vision for yourself has been impacted? Is it possible that your dreams are the result of . . .
Who your parents think you are?
Who others think you are?
Who you wish you were?
Or are they the result of . . .
Who you really are and are meant to be?
It is the responsibility of every individual to sort that out for himself or herself. In fact, you will fulfill your dream and live the life for which God created you only after you figure it out. As Nobel Prize winner for literature Joseph Brodsky observed, “One’s task consists first of all in mastering a life that is one’s own, not imposed or prescribed from without, no matter how noble its appearance may be. For each of us is issued but one life, and we know full well how it all ends. It would be regrettable to squander this one chance on someone else’s appearance, someone else’s experience.”11
How do you know whether you’re pursuing a dream that’s not really your dream? Here are some clues to help you figure it out:
WHEN SOMEONE ELSE OWNS YOUR DREAMWHEN YOU OWN YOUR DREAM
It will not have the right fit.It will feel right on you.
It will be a weight on your shoulders.It will provide wings to your spirit.
It will drain your energy.It will fire you up.
It will put you to sleep.It will keep you up at night.
It will take you out of your strength zone.It will take you out of your comfort zone.
It will be fulfilling to others.It will be fulfilling to you.
It will require others to make you do it.You will feel you were made to do it.
When the dream is right for the person and the person is right for the dream, the two cannot be separated from each other.
When t...

Índice