The two that I can remember are these:
-Winners train, losers complain
and
- One day or day one - you choose. (Personally, I think it would sound better the other way round.)
- One day or day one - you choose. (Personally, I think it would sound better the other way round.)
I read a lot of positive-thinking books and motivational sayings to give me a bit of a kick up the backside. My family is generally very cautious. If I had followed their lead, I'd not have done anything but find a safe little job and watch TV in the evenings.
Now, I know these motivational sayings get up some people's noses, but they are nothing new. A couple of days ago, I came across a quotation and couldn't believe the source. Sceptical as I am, I had to check and, yes, it was really a quotation from Goethe and this is how it went: "Erfolg hat drei Buchstaben: tun."
Translated, this says: "Success has three letters: doing." (Obviously, if you wanted to be correct, you'd have to change the 'three' to 'five'.)
What does this remind me of? The Nike slogan: just do it!
When I tell people of all the studying I've done, they think I'm clever to have done all that. However, I put it all down to 'chipping away' at things. I do it and I cope with the study material by breaking it down into chunks and only doing so much a day from Monday to Friday, with a bit of extra time at the weekend - if need be.
The hardest thing about going to the gym is actually getting past my front door. When I just let my feet lead me to the gym and I don't think about things, I get there and enjoy myself - and the sense of achievement.
And when I'm there, I get to read motivational sayings. I particularly like the "One day or day one" slogan, because, for me, every day is day one. Every day is a new day and a new beginning, a new start. And it's a new chance to try to achieve the mantra from decades ago: "Every day, and in every day, I'm getting better and better." (As the Germans say: "Die Hoffnung stirbt zuletzt" - "Hope is the last thing to die.")
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