Empower Your Life: Finding Greater Motivation Within
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About this ebook
Do you ever wonder whether you are living life to your potential? Do you sometimes feel as though you are standing on a busy street corner while the rest of the world is engaged in meaningful activities? Do you feel like you are being carried or sometimes even dragged along by lifes trials and challenges? Now you can get motivated and take action toward accomplishing your goals. Empower Your Life: Finding Greater Motivation Within provides real-world solutions and creative tools to help empower your life and motivate you to action.
Author Bradley D. Castle offers unique insights and guidelines that can help you accomplish your goals and overcome challenges. In this helpful guidebook, you will discover the following:
Motivational activities designed to drive you toward achieving your goals Creative methods that discipline your mind to overcome negativity and build positive thought patterns that push you toward accomplishment Techniques to help you increase your driving force and view obstacles as stepping stones to your dreams Step-by-step advice on how to be a powerful influence to motivate and inspire others Effective and powerful strategies that can help you to create an environment where you can be successfulEmpower Your Life: Finding Greater Motivation Within provides valuable guidance to help you maximize your skills, gifts, and talents to empower your life.
Bradley D. Castle
Bradley D. Castle is an entrepreneur and business strategy consultant. He has provided leadership and professional development solutions to government and private sector clients. His ventures have included founding and leading a government consulting firm, consulting for a gifted education program in Romania, serving as a volunteer in the Ukraine, advising CEOs on performance improvement, and leading an investment and development firm.
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Empower Your Life - Bradley D. Castle
Chapter 1
The Power of Motivation
The first thing I want to do is explore the power of motivation. How can motivation change your life? Does being motivated really affect your level of happiness or ability to reach what you would consider success? To answer these questions, you must look at your past experiences to contrast and compare those moments in your life when you were motivated. Did you accomplish more than you thought you could? Did you find fulfillment doing things that you otherwise would not have enjoyed? Often we spend so much time focusing on our future goals that we forget our past experiences, how much we already have accomplished, and how we overcame the challenges we have already faced. It is vital that you take the time to remember. Remember those defining moments in your life and the circumstances surrounding the experience. Include even the little things because we know that by small and simple things, great things can be accomplished.
I would like to share some of my past experiences to hopefully ignite the fire within you as we explore some of the little and big things that have helped me understand the power of motivation. One of my first experiences with being motivated to reach a goal happened when I was only five years old. My twin brother and I learned about a beverage company’s promotional giveaway that promised prizes, including a dirt bike. I had seven siblings, and money was not in abundance for my family at that time. I knew that the only way I was going to get a bike was to win this prize, even if it meant sharing it with my brother. In order to win this bike, we had to collect bottle caps. On the inside of each bottle cap was a letter of the alphabet, and we had to collect the correct letters to spell a five—or six-word phrase. For the next couple of months, I was extremely excited about the prospect of winning the bike.
Every morning and afternoon, as I walked to and from elementary school, which was about a fifteen-minute walk, I would look for bottle caps along the side of the road. I was amazed at how many people would pop the cap of their soda bottles and throw the cap out of the window of the car as they drove along this road. After a few months of collecting caps, we had the entire phrase spelled out with the exception of one letter. As the deadline approached, we spent hours after school walking the neighborhood roads to find this last letter, sifting through discarded bottle caps.
When I look back at this experience, I realize that at five years old, I did not have any ambitions in life beyond having fun with neighborhood friends. But as soon as I envisioned winning this bike, I became a very motivated child, working hard every day to collect the letters from the bottle caps I needed. My brother and I never actually found that last letter before the promo expired, but I would have done it again if given the opportunity. I learned a valuable lesson in life about the power of motivation and the role that having a goal can play as a catalyst for action. I went from only being interested in the day-to-day activities of a child to having a burning desire to accomplish something that, at the time, I considered great. I also enjoyed the work. It was fun and exciting collecting these bottle caps. I would be outside in the hot sun and heat of a Florida day, doing something that some people would consider too challenging and too difficult for a five-year-old, but I considered the work to be the most exciting part of my day. I believe that if you can identify that motivating factor in your life, mundane work can become the most exciting part of your day. So many of us underestimate the power of motivation and overlook the potential we have to find purpose in our daily tasks as we labor to reach our goals.
Many of us have identified areas in our lives that we want to improve and have set goals that we want to accomplish. To reach these goals, we must change how we do things. However, it can be difficult to find the motivation within to make that change a reality. How often do we think about all the things that we could potentially accomplish without having a clear plan for moving forward. We often want to make change. The desire is there to make the change, but something is holding us back. Something is preventing you from taking the next step forward. I urge you to seize the day and move forward with the notion that now is the time to act.
I recall a story¹ of a young teenage boy who felt lost in his life. He felt alone sitting on the bench of an almost deserted park, wondering where his life was going. He felt he was no good to himself and was doing no good for anyone else. As he sat in despair and utter loneliness, he thought about how he had walked out on his family and made several poor choices, thinking little about the consequences of his actions. While the poor choices he made seemed to meet an immediate desire at the time, he realized he had given up what he wanted most for something he wanted now. However, in the corner of his eye, he caught the glimpse of an artist painting a portrait. The artist seemed to be looking in his direction as he worked. Out of curiosity, the boy asked the artist what he was painting. The artist responded by suggesting that he was painting a picture of the boy and asked if he wanted to see the portrait. The boy looked at the picture and exclaimed that it looked nothing like him. The painter responded that the picture did not depict what the boy looked like today. The picture focused less on the main physical features but more on subtle changes that came from overcoming challenges, personal growth, and character development. The painter began to explain how he depicted the boy with his chin held a little higher with confidence and a gaze that affirmed he knew where he was going, with shoulders back and head held high. As the boy focused more on the possibilities of his future in the painting, he began to see his potential. The painting portrayed the potential of this boy’s future, which he struggled to see in himself. Like this boy in the story, many of us know we want change but have difficulty recognizing our potential. We may even try to focus on the exterior with trendier clothing, radical hairstyles, or other extreme changes to the way we look physically. However, changes that take place within can have a greater impact on our countenance. Take the time to reflect on your life and paint a picture of who you want to become. Become the person you have always wanted to become, not in an artificial way but with a real sense of your internal worth based on a genuine assessment of your potential. Draw a picture of yourself in your mind’s eye, but don’t focus on the surface. Focus on what changes can be made within to enrich your intrinsic value and self-worth.
Understanding what you truly want out of life will give you a sense of direction. Make the decision to change your way of life. We sometimes set lofty goals, and when we don’t meet those goals, we give up and end up back where we started. Don’t focus on the goal itself. Focus on the journey and the habits that you will need to change to reach the goal. Focus on the lifestyle change it will take to meet the goal. In other words, you must look before the goal and consider the changes needed to form new routines. A quality of life does not come from just meeting every single goal you have set for yourself. A quality of life comes from living the life you have chosen. The problem with just setting goals is that we often reach the goal and then cross it off a list and forget about our goals over time, reverting back to the place where we started. However, when we change our habits and routines, those changes become parts of our lives in such a way that we no longer have to focus on outcomes because the actions are engrained in our behaviors and bring about the desired