| CAREERYou Can Be Great By Dan Miller 48days.com
 
 CBN.com 
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    I love this age-old   argument. Are some people just born with “natural talent” or can anyone   be great if they study and practice enough? Was Tiger Woods just born with more   talent than most of us have? Or was it the fact that his father introduced him   to golf at 18 months old, and then encouraged him to practice intensely? Tiger   had already racked up 15 years of practice by the time he became the   youngest-ever winner of the U.S. Amateur Championship, at age 18. And he has   never stopped practicing to improve, devoting many hours every day to   conditioning. Even while the undisputed champion, he has twice elected to remake   his swing, temporarily causing losses, but never losing his commitment to   unrelenting practice. 
 Winston Churchill, one of the 20th century's   greatest orators, practiced his speeches compulsively. Vladimir Horowitz, the   great pianist, once said, "If I don't practice for a day, I know it. If I   don't practice for two days, my wife knows it. If I don't practice for three   days, the world knows it."
 
 So what does this mean for us? The   evidence seems to indicate that greatness is less about finding some hidden   talent and more about committing to practice in your chosen area. If you want to   be great in sales, then practice selling until you’re great. If you want to be   great in Internet marketing, then study and practice more than anyone else. If   you want to be a great husband, wife, mommy or daddy, then practice doing it   with excellence. Don’t expect to just wake up being great in any of those   areas.
 
 When I was 5 years old my family moved from New York to Ohio.   There my dad bought a 97-acre farm for $13,000. We had one Jersey cow and   started the long years of building a dairy herd. I decided early on that I   wanted to figure out a better way to make a living. I found books to be a   wonderful escape and inspiration. Today I get paid extremely well for writing   books to inspire others. Along the way I wrote hundreds of articles and provided   them freely to anyone – and continue to do so today as a constant form of   practicing the area where I want to be great.
 
 A recent article in Fortune   Magazine says this: “The critical reality is that we are not hostage to   some naturally granted level of talent. We can make ourselves what we will.   Strangely, that idea is not popular. People hate abandoning the notion that they   would coast to fame and riches if they found their talent. But that view is   tragically constraining, because when they hit life's inevitable bumps in the   road, they conclude that they just aren't gifted and give up.”
 
 This should be good news. You don’t have to fret that you were not born   with “natural talent.” You can choose where you want to be great and   practice your way to the top.
 
 Read the Fortune article
 
 
 An hour to   re-live?
 On the last Saturday in   October we set our clocks back one hour. I always tell people that time is the   one resource we can never recapture. We can replace gas, money, possessions and   even health – but once time is gone, it is gone forever. But not on this one day   of the year. Here we get to back the clock up and re-live a whole   hour.
 
 Which hour of your life would you like to live over? Would you   change the hour when you chose a college major? When you signed the loan papers   at the bank? When you spoke in anger to someone you loved? When you accepted   your current job? Would you just want to extend by an hour one of the best   moments of your life?
 
 I actually thought about this and chose to get up   when I normally do, went for a long walk and purposely took time to talk with   some of our neighbors that I seldom encourage in conversation. I returned home   at the regular time (with the one hour extension) refreshed and energized by the   renewed encounters.
 
 What did you do with your extra hour? If you   recognize an hour you would like to live over, have you prayerfully considered   how you would like to re-live it?
 
 
 Stop rubbing your   nose
 When you walk in for an   interview, you have about 3-4 minutes to make either a positive or a negative   impression. The old adages about body language are still true, and this is a big   reason companies have gone back to face-to-face interviews rather than just on   the phone or Internet.
 
 So here’s your big chance – don’t blow it. Here   are some quick tips:
 Have a firm handshake. I still cringe when I get a limp noodle for a   handshake. It reeks of weakness.
Don’t sit with your arms crossed over your chest. You’ll appear unfriendly   and disinterested.
Be conservative on jewelry. Don’t be too flamboyant. 
If you wear a tie, have it pulled up tightly. A loose tie is worse than no   tie.
Practice in advance having a strong confident voice. Energy and enthusiasm   will do more than extra degrees.
Don’t slouch in the seat. Just don’t expect to get that comfortable.
And don’t rub or touch your nose. It suggests that you’re not being   completely honest.
 
 Humor -- Under   Control
 A mechanic accidentally   swallowed some brake fluid and really liked the taste. Before he knew it, he'd   polished off a whole bottle of the stuff. His buddy George caught him sneaking a   swig the next day.
 
 "That stuff is dangerous," George said. "You've gotta give it up." "Don't worry," the mechanic said, "I can   stop any time I want."
 
 
 Quotes -- Lessons   on being Great!
 “Don’t wait for   extraordinary opportunities. Seize common occasions and make them great. Weak   men wait for opportunities; great men make them.” Orison Swett   Marden
 
 "The great composer does not set to work because he is   inspired, but becomes inspired because he is working. Beethoven, Wagner, Bach,   and Mozart settled down day after day to the job in hand. They didn't waste time   waiting for inspiration." Ernest Newman, Writer
 
 "Times of general   calamity and confusion create great minds. The purest ore is produced from the   hottest furnace, and the brightest thunderbolt is elicited from the darkest   storms." Charles Caleb Colton (1780-1832)
 
 "Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds." Albert   Einstein
 
 "You don't have to be great to get started, but you have to   get started to be great." Les Brown
 
 "To accomplish great things,   we must not only act, but also dream; not only plan, but also believe." Anatole France
 
 
 News You Can Use
 White-collar jobs head   into the night Circadian Technologies reports that 24 million Americans work   outside the hours of 7 AM and 7 PM. Unfortunately in our attempts to go global   and work 24/7 these workers are suffering from sleep disturbances, marriage   stresses, nutrition and digestion problems, and a “general lack of social   interaction. Be careful about agreeing to a weird work schedule. Night   Owls
 
 Thes graduits cant speal Companies are increasingly   alarmed by the deficiency of high school graduates' reading and writing skills.   Experts blame e-mail and text messaging for the abbreviated sentence structures   and short-cuts with words that now pass for written communications. So this   generation is getting by with writing that may pass for rudimentary   communication – “Me cave man – wanna jam tonite?” Grads   Unprepared
 
 Just do something honest The dishonest things   people do to try to make money often strike me as being more difficult than just   pursuing one of the thousands of legitimate ideas available. Two idiots   conspired with a secretary at Coke to steal some company trade secrets and sell   them to Pepsi. Now all three are looking at 10 years in prison and a $250,000   fine. These guys must have just jumped off the turnip truck. The alleged plans   were foiled after Pepsi, based in Purchase, N.Y., warned Coca-Cola. Pepsi did   what any reputable company would have done. Now why didn’t these guys start a   yard mowing business, or buying and selling baseball cards on eBay, or importing   pottery from Mexico, or write a best-selling book on being stupid?
 
 Have Fun – Make Money: I always chuckle when I see   yet another example of someone turning an unusual interest into a profitable   business. Mark Mason found success doing what adults make fun of -- he makes a   living building sand castles. His company helps grownups reconnect with their   inner child through "sand sculpture" projects at corporate events, conventions,   theme parties, and lots more. Check this out. Sand   Man
 
 
 Want to start your   own business?
 If you have any desire to   move into your own business – this is the best opportunity you’ll find anywhere.   We are providing an instant website, with your own blog and product or service   information. Here’s a quick look at the growing list of people who are committed   to having the best year of their lives in 2007: 48   Days Coaches
 
 What are your plans to make 2007 different than   2006?
 
 Follow this link if you want to be the leader and businessperson   you’ve been dreaming about. Coaching   Connection
 
 
 
 Dan Miller is the bestselling author of 48 Days To The Work You Love and a renowned Life   Coach specializing in career fulfillment. His weekly newsletter reaches 70,000   subscribers. Dan’s articles are featured here at CBN every Tuesday, and you can   find out more about Dan at www.48days.com.
 
 
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