Try to walk straight keeping your eyes shut. After some time you will see that you got shifted or tilted a bit from the main course. Now open your eyes and correct the deviation. Then start again. We call these making balance. The balance between concentration and correction. Walking on the road with eyes closed, is the weirdest idea. Because you can not see what’s in the road, you may stumble on stones or people from opposite direction, or even you may not be in the footpath. Just like that, you can’t precisely see what’s in the future of your life, what you are going to be after 10 years. You can only sense the surroundings and act upon them.
21. Success defines the path
Thank You
Whatever you do, whatever you think, you don’t
know if it’s success until you reach at the end. Before
that you have to try consistently. And there is no end
to this trying. That’s why we can not define any
static path to success.
22. Success defines the path
Everyone's situation is different to others. Each of us
has an unique environment to grow, which makes
the path-to-success more dynamic. The environment
is mostly familiar, yet different. You have to adapt
with those variable behaviors of surroundings.
Thank You
Whatever you do, whatever you think, you don’t
know if it’s success until you reach at the end. Before
that you have to try consistently. And there is no end
to this trying. That’s why we can not define any
static path to success.
23. Success defines the path
Everyone's situation is different to others. Each of us
has an unique environment to grow, which makes
the path-to-success more dynamic. The environment
is mostly familiar, yet different. You have to adapt
with those variable behaviors of surroundings.
Thank You
Whatever you do, whatever you think, you don’t
know if it’s success until you reach at the end. Before
that you have to try consistently. And there is no end
to this trying. That’s why we can not define any
static path to success.
Target something, work on it. Look back for the
deviation, correct it. But be careful not to look back
frequently to avoid disruptions on the concentration.
Happy walking.
Editor's Notes
Sotheby's
Black Fire I was sold to a private collector[3] for $84.2 million dollars on 13 May 2014, New York, Rockefeller Plaza