My dad’s mistake. You can learn from it.

Not that he doesn’t exercise. I’m twenty years old already. I’ve observed one certain thing about my dad. It was disheartening.

He’s 52 now. He has seen the world. The good side and the bad side. He has read a ton of newspapers and a myriad of magazines. Irrespective of the genre, he is into almost everything except gaming.

I reckon a time when I was being chastised by him for not getting good grades. He told me that building a cement factory was his dream. Upon asking him why didn’t he set it up, he looks to the extreme upper left and gives a taciturn excuse.

If he were my age now, I’m affirmative that he would be a billionaire. Sometimes he finds it hard to digest that I’m his son. I’m not at all like him. I don’t work hard, I slack and I’m filled with humor.

In the age of no internet, everyone worked hard. Surely that hasn’t been the same now. My dad never lived in the present. Being diligent in his youth, he seldom used to rejoice the present. Nonetheless he’s positive about that.

My dad did not think about executing what he had planned. Regardless of the reason, he did not do what he always wanted to do. He still thinks about it and I think of inheriting that factory.

That execution, is what matters the most. No matter how well you plan it, all goes in vain if you don’t step in and get going. If you plan well and still don’t work on it, you will keep thinking that for the rest of your life.

Design a plan for what you wanna do. And if you have time(you’re not the busiest person in this world)….

Make the investment required to make a positive difference on that topic.

Make time for what you can. Make peace with for what you can’t.

Simple isn’t it !

I adapted this technique and it works just fine !

Good luck, so long !!!