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Lets look at another definition of success. What is success to you? What is the final touch that defines a successful lifestyle? Having all the good things in life is of course, excellent but what about the success that comes from within.
I know someone who has worked extremely hard to achieve everything he now has and is very successful He also has a lovely wife and family. However, he still worries. Is he going to lose everything hes worked so hard for?
In modern society, money and recognition are amongst the most important success definitions. You might be a complete and fulfilled person, yet if you dont have tons of money or youre not quite a popular figure, youre not going to be accepted as a successful person.
What you now need to do is look at yourself and what you want from your successful business and life in general. Of course its good to have the outward signs but the real success also comes from within.
Success is a state of well being. A personal choice. It is not a social label. Is not a widely accepted set of criteria, that, once met, turn you into a successful human being.
It is true that brains alone are no influence on success, and that money alone is no influence either, but brains and money combined are power. And fame, the other object of ambition, is only another name for either money or power.
Nearly everything had to go. A few months after losing her administrative job in the summer of 2008, 23-year-old Brianna Karp got rid of her furniture, a beloved piano, and most of her books so she could move back in with her parents. When that didn't work out, she moved into an old trailer a relative had left her, settling into an informal homeless community in a Wal-Mart parking lot in Brea, Calif. By the summer of 2009, she was living without electricity, regular showers, home-cooked food, and most basic conveniences.
Karp held tight to one appurtenance, however: her laptop computer. She spent hours at a nearby Starbucks, using the wireless network to surf for jobs. A friend suggested she start a blog about her life on the edge, which she called the Girl's Guide to Homelessness. It generated attention that helped land a part-time magazine internship. Then came an offer to write a book about her ordeal, which is due out in 2011--and might get turned into a movie. With some money from a book advance, Karp has upgraded to a better trailer, on a friend's property, and she's eyeing a Victorian fixer-upper she'd like to make her permanent home. Yet she craves few of the material things she's given up, while cherishing the friends and opportunities she's discovered online. 'When you're in survival mode, you slash everything,' Karp says. 'That makes the online community that much more important. Online, somebody will always be there for me.'
Karp held tight to one appurtenance, however: her laptop computer. She spent hours at a nearby Starbucks, using the wireless network to surf for jobs. A friend suggested she start a blog about her life on the edge, which she called the Girl's Guide to Homelessness. It generated attention that helped land a part-time magazine internship. Then came an offer to write a book about her ordeal, which is due out in 2011--and might get turned into a movie. With some money from a book advance, Karp has upgraded to a better trailer, on a friend's property, and she's eyeing a Victorian fixer-upper she'd like to make her permanent home. Yet she craves few of the material things she's given up, while cherishing the friends and opportunities she's discovered online. 'When you're in survival mode, you slash everything,' Karp says. 'That makes the online community that much more important. Online, somebody will always be there for me.'