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The Everyday Hero Manifesto: Activate Your Positivity, Maximize Your Productivity, Serve the World

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So I started studying heroism. I've worked with a lot of successful business people and sports celebrities in the world. I decided to take everything I've learned, and the methodology I've been teaching, and put it in this book. A principal once told my beloved mother that I showed no promise and that it was unlikely I’d graduate from high school. Other teachers quietly warned my parents that I had minimal potential. A few predicted I’d end up as a drifter or a vagrant. Most people simply made fun of me.

Q. In a chapter you mentioned the problems an introverted individual faces. What three tips would you give such a person to better their communication skills? Life really does favor the obsessed. Great fortune truly does shine on those mesmerized by their gorgeous ambitions. And the universe most definitely supports the human being unwilling to surrender to the forces of fear, rejection and self-doubt. Pioneering insights on adopting world-class routines that will lead you to achieve superhuman fitness and become the most disciplined person you know You are a mighty force of nature and a dynamic producer, not a slumbering casualty caught flat-footed in a world of degrading mediocrity, dehumanizing complaint, compliance and entitlement.

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Our society has schooled us into thinking that heroes are cut from some kind of magnificent cloth that we don't have. I wrote it for 16 months during the pandemic. It's a playbook for people to be hopeful in a toxic world — to be productive versus playing with their phones all day — and to live with a greater sense of meaning in a world where a lot of us know we can live more. I must say that at times the process was confusing, uncomfortable and terrifying. It was also electrifying, fascinating, rewarding and often breathtakingly beautiful. Fundamental personal change is often painful because it is so very transformational. And we cannot become everything we are meant to be without leaving behind who we once were. The weaker you must experience a death of sorts before the strongest you can know a rebirth. If improvement doesn’t feel difficult, it’s not real improvement, is it? Leadership expert and author Robin Sharma says he has thought a lot about what it takes to be a hero — and how to live more heroically in today's world. These are everyday heroes. So-called ordinary people conducting themselves in virtuous and honorable ways.

No. Genius has far less to do with your genetics and much more to do with your habits. Stepping into the person you’ve always imagined you could be is a trained result—available to anyone willing to open themselves up, do the work and run the practices that make magic real. I enlisted peak performance coaches, worked with acupuncturists, hypnotherapists, emotional healers and spiritual counselors, took cold showers, sweated in hot saunas and invested in weekly massage therapy. Instead, the letter I received from the editor was a litany of criticisms. It began, "There are major problems with The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari, Robin. There’s no use mincing words." Study the greats. Read masterful speeches. Get into books written by the best speakers. Spend some time daily improving your craft of communicating. We grow better at what we focus on.

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The journey to your most heroic life will be colorful, inspirational, messy, marvelous, tumultuous and most definitely glorious. Dedicating yourself to inhabiting your greatness, generating a vast barrage of beautiful results and doing your part to build a brighter world will be the wisest and best ride you’ll ever take. This, I promise you. And stepping into the immense splendor of your most creative, powerful and compassionate self will energize everyone around you to awaken to their gifts, making our planet a friendlier place. You don’t need a Batmobile or a golden lasso to be a superhero. All you need is . . . to be yourself! Q. There are mentions of Bukowski , Nietzsche in your chapters . Which philosopher did you feel influenced you the most? As Theodore Roosevelt said in a speech entitled Citizenship in a Republic, delivered at the Sorbonne in Paris on April 23, 1910: After a few minutes, the man approached me and said, speaking very precisely: " The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari. That’s a great title. Tell me about yourself."

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