When I was an eight year old child, I remember the day and the moment I realized that I had a mission to accomplish. While I was surrounded only by dolls and stuffed animals, I declared “out loud” that I would make a global contribution. I didn’t know those words, but I clearly knew the feeling. Like a salmon runs agains the white water to find where it was spawned. I , too, traveled great distances to be celebrating Strategy Leadership and the Soul.
It took Koby and I five years from our first meeting to have you reading these pages. There was no promise of being published. There was no promise of money or reward. There was only the idea that felt too precious to let escape. In our world of immediate gratification, plug & play, point & click– I want to remind all of you that truly wonderful things come from sustaining your need for immediate gratification. We need more patience, we need more vision, we need more practice in seeking out things that we desire when there is no “proof” in sight.
I want my story to have you ask these meaningful questions:
How can I build in 15 minutes each day to work on a project that is close to my heart but I keep putting off?
How can I practice stillness so I can “hear” what my purpose is?
How can I trust that who I need to meet and the resources that I need will reveal themselves to me?
These are the questions that kept me writing, speaking, and asking for help. Each question was answered in miraculous way.
Give yourself the time and space to ask these questions.
When I was an eight year old child, I remember the day and the moment I realized that I had a mission to accomplish. While I was surrounded only by dolls and stuffed animals, I declared “out loud” that I would make a global contribution. I didn’t know those words, but I clearly knew the feeling. Like a salmon runs agains the white water to find where it was spawned. I , too, traveled great distances to be celebrating Strategy Leadership and the Soul.
It took Koby and I five years from our first meeting to have you reading these pages. There was no promise of being published. There was no promise of money or reward. There was only the idea that felt too precious to let escape. In our world of immediate gratification, plug & play, point & click– I want to remind all of you that truly wonderful things come from sustaining your need for immediate gratification. We need more patience, we need more vision, we need more practice in seeking out things that we desire when there is no “proof” in sight.
I want my story to have you ask these meaningful questions:
How can I build in 15 minutes each day to work on a project that is close to my heart but I keep putting off?
How can I practice stillness so I can “hear” what my purpose is?
How can I trust that who I need to meet and the resources that I need will reveal themselves to me?
These are the questions that kept me writing, speaking, and asking for help. Each question was answered in miraculous way.
Give yourself the time and space to ask these questions.