The path to success is to take massive, determined action.
In order to succeed, your desire for success should be greater than your fear of failure.
Many of life's failures are people who did not realize how close they were to success when they gave up.
Ambition is the path to success. Persistence is the vehicle you arrive in.
If one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams, and endeavors to live the life which he has imagined, he will meet with a success unexpected in common hours.
One important key to success is self-confidence. An important key to self-confidence is preparation.
If you do not change direction, you may end up where you are heading.
The only place success comes before work is in the dictionary.
The secret of success is learning how to use pain and pleasure instead of having pain and pleasure use you. If you do that, you're in control of your life. If you don't, life controls you.
If you want to succeed you should strike out on new paths, rather than travel the worn paths of accepted success.
If you don't change direction, you end up where you are headed.
Our greatest glory is not in never falling, but in rising every time we fall.
If you do what you've always done, you'll get what you've always gotten.
It is in your moments of decision that your destiny is shaped.
Setting goals is the first step in turning the invisible into the visible.
The starting point of all achievement is desire.
For true success ask yourself these four questions: Why? Why not? Why not me? Why not now?
The ladder of success is never crowded at the top.
Most people are searching for a path to success that is both easy and certain. Most paths are neither.
Incrementalism: In the first generation, the goal of the movement was wholesale social and cultural transformation. Small, incremental victories were too little given the magnitude of America's moral decay. Since 1988, the new leaders have recognized that incrementalism is the surest path to success in political competition. The current movement is committed to securing small victories now, postponing for the long-term more fundamental changes in society and politics.
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