Harvey Mackay Academy

There Are No Negatives To Keeping A Positive Attitude

A small boy was auditioning with his classmates for a school play. His mother knew that he’d set his heart on being in the play – just like all the other children hoped too – and she feared how he would react if he was not chosen. On the day the parts were awarded, the little boy’s mother went to the school gates to collect her son. The boy rushed up to her, eyes shining with pride and excitement.

“Guess what, mom,” he shouted, and then said the words that provide a lesson to us all, “I’ve been chosen to clap and cheer.”

Not everyone gets to play the part they want, but a positive attitude like this little boy’s goes a long way.

I am an eternal optimist. I firmly believe that there is hardly anything we can’t do if we set our minds to it. It helps to be realistic – I know I am never going to pitch in the World Series, but I can be a player/manager of a top-notch company. I took a big gamble getting my company off the ground, but I’ve never looked back.

All the technology in the world will never replace a positive attitude. It’s good to know that a positive attitude can be booted up anywhere, anytime, by anyone.

In these uncertain times, we are bombarded by bad news and human misery, criticism and pessimism, so it’s understandable that we all get a little down from time to time. Fight it. I have never met a successful pessimist.

The mind can convince competent people that they are incompetent, or conversely that merely adequate performers are highly talented. Unfortunately, self-doubt and negative attitudes seem to have a more powerful influence on the mind than positive attitudes.

So concentrate on developing a positive attitude.  Here are some ideas.

It’s like the old farmer who was celebrating his 90th birthday. He’d seen it all — the Dust Bowl, years of flooding rains and scorching heat, banks taking back mortgages on every farm in the country. But through it all, he’d remained positive and determined, even downright cheerful. His family and friends pressed him for his secret to maintain his optimism.

“It ain’t so hard,” he said with a twinkle in his eye. “I just learned early on to cooperate with the inevitable.”

Mackay’s Moral: Our minds are like a garden; each day you need to weed out the negativity and feed it positively.

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