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How do you Motivate Yourself?
I interview many highly successful people, and one of the questions that I ask is, “How do you motivate yourself and stay motivated?” These very accomplished individuals know something that many do not know. They are self-motivated because they are doing what they love to do, so they just do it. Yes, many of them do work hard, but because they are doing what they want to do, and are having fun doing it, the time flies.
Are you doing the things that give you joy? What baby steps could you take, so that one year from now you are self-motivated because you are doing what gives you joy? Do you need help getting started? We are on this journey together, I am here to help you.
Photo credits: Avil Beckford
What Does This Benjamin Franklin Quote Mean to You?

- Image via Wikipedia
Benjamin Franklin said, “An investment in knowledge pays the best interest.”
The main purpose of the Invisible Mentor blog is to offer you a guiding hand through the information it provides. On a more basic level, its intent is to unleash the latent genius within you. After interviewing people for my book Tales of People Who Get It, a recurring theme that was apparent is that to be successful, you have to be focused, learn continuously and have passion. A few days ago, we talked about focus (You Can Only Walk Down One Road At A Time) and today we will talk about knowledge (learning).
What does Franklin’s quote mean to you?
For me, the quote means to plant the seed of knowledge, to learn continuously: read broadly, take courses, observe people, try new things, experiment, be prepared to fail, brainstorm, collaborate… This quote also reminds me of Jim Rohn‘s book, The Seasons of Life, see book review Planting to Reap Full Rewards: A Book Review of The Seasons of Life by Jim Rohn. In the spring farmers plant their crops, water and nurture them in the summer, harvest the crops in the fall, and rest the land in the winter.
Plant your seeds of knowledge, creating your body of knowledge. Continuously build on the knowledge, connecting the dots and taking care of what you know. Test yourself to ensure that you remember the important stuff. Whenever you need the information you harvest it, and you take a rest and reflect on the information. So, in Connecting the Dots When There Are No Dots, let’s add Graham Wallas‘ 4-Step Creativity Process: Preparation, Incubation, Illumination, Verification/Implementation into the mix.
- What type of information will allow you to perform your job better?
- What type of information will allow you to navigate your career to the next level?
- What type of information will allow you to significantly improve your life?
Based on the answers to the questions above, gather the relevant information (preparation). Take a break when you feel as if you have collected enough information (incubation). Mull over the information and start making connections among disparate pieces of data. At some point you will have an aha moment where you get an idea (illumination). Test the idea then implement it (verification/implementation).
When I started to write this post I had no idea that this is where I would end up. Who would have thought that thinking about a Benjamin Franklin quote about knowledge could lead to generating new ideas.
Again, what does ”An investment in knowledge pays the best interest” mean to you? Start with the quote and end with an idea, and fill in the dash, all that in-between information.
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