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Get Motivated Today With These 4 Essential Pillars of Motivation
by
Adam Eason
I want to give you four wonderful pillars for motivation, four main
themes to underpin a healthy sense of drive and inspiration.
- The first main pillar of
motivation is to gain recognition from peers.
When soldiers in wartime give up their lives during combat, why do they
do it? Is it because of patriotism, a belief in the cause they are
fighting for, or a fear of court martial if they do otherwise?
Perhaps
all these things play a part, but extensive research has shown that
what really motivates a soldier to fight well incombat is the desire
for the respect of the person who is fighting right beside him.
This
is much more important than medals or other forms of public
recognition. This is similar to what motivates salesmen on the floor of
a car dealership, students in a classroom or a team of lawyers trying
to win a case.
In the English Premier football league, all the players will tell you
the best award that they want to receive is the acclaim of the others
players and to receive the players player of the year award.
Think of ways that you can develop recognition from your peers to
enhance your motivation. The apply them to your life.
- The second pillar of
motivation is recognition from respected experts or authorities.
In my own life, I love the fact that the wonderful multi-selling author
in the US has helped me, guided me and become my friend professionally
and personally. I desperately wanted to earn his respect.
Has there been someone like that in your life? It is important to
realise that a respected expert does not have to be someone who is
known far and wide throughout the world.
You
are the one who establishes the qualifications, though very often
people whom you find impressive will be equally impressive to others.
Once you've met such a person, or even if you have just seen them from
a distance or perhaps read an article about them, stop hesitating and
politely approach them and introduce yourself.
Unless
you happen to catch them at a particularly difficult moment, most
successful people are eager to help others and to pass on what they've
learned.
The great thing about establishing a relationship with a mentor is that
you eventually come close to that person that you can sometimes hear
them advising you when they are not actually around.
Think about how you can get recognition from a respected expert or
authority. You can really stretch this concept to be good parents,
local teachers, councillors as well as business people; interpret this
in the best way for you.
- The third pillar of motivation
is family.
Although the approval of peers and experts may be important to your
career, in your life, nothing compares to the influence of your family.
Let me explain what I mean by this with an example of my own; when I
had come off stage speaking at an event in Dublin last year, a man
approached me and asked me for some advice on the best way to stop
smoking, he knew that I was the author of The Secrets of Self-Hypnosis
and wanted assistance.
My
immediate response was to ask him what his reasons were for wanting to
stop smoking and he said the following to me:
"My wife is pregnant with our first child and I want to have more after
that. I want to be able to enjoy playing and having fun with my
children and I want to be a healthy influence on their lives too."
I spent some time talking to him about some specific techniques and
strategies. I have not heard from that man, but I know that he was
driven by his family and am sure of his success. Think about your
wealth goals; so many of us want to be able to rpovide for our family
and for them to have what they want.
So think about the ways in which you your fmaily can motivate you and
get that lodged into your mind.
- The fourth pillar of
motivation for today is something closely related to number three and
that is sharing the wealth and wisdom for the good of your fellows.
To illustrate this pillar, I am going to mention a story I love about
Andrew Carnegie, the Scottish immigrant who founded the United States
Steel Company in the early nineteen hundreds.
When
Carnegie died, a yellow sheet of paper was found in his desk on which
he had written a note to himself when he was in his twenties. This note
illustrated the main purpose of his life. It read:
"I am going to spend the first half of my life accumulating money, and
I am going to spend the last half of my life giving it all away."
During his lifetime, Carnegie's fortune was estimated a four hundred
and fifty million dollars - the equivalent to four and a half billion
dollars today.
In
addition to building Carnegie Hall in New York City, he founded
libraries in hundreds of small towns all across America and
participated in dozens of other philanthropic activities as well.
When we look at these found pillars of motivation, what do you really
see? The thing that I immediately notice is that they all involve other
people, whether they are peers, mentors, family members, or simply
fellows of the human race.
Ironic
isn't it? To be successfully motivated you need this very internal,
very unique thing called your motivation.
To
acquire that innermost quality and set it to work, you need to
recognise other people as reasons to believe.
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Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Adam_Eason
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Adam Eason is a UK based consultant, speaker and best-selling author -
one of his books is The
Secrets of Self Hypnosis.
See his website for a vast range of resources from the fields
of hypnosis, NLP, personal development and human potential: Adam-Eason.com

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