The Daily Mastery Podcast by Robin Sharma

Become An Inspirationalist

Robin Sharma Season 1 Episode 1423

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0:00 | 3:23

The ones who are happy—daily—are those who exploit hard events that have happened for their gain. 

 Re-perceive the hurts that others have caused you and all disappointments you’ve endured as “friends” that arrived to teach you valuable lessons and blessings that have made you wiser, stronger, more creative and kinder.

My latest book “The Wealth Money Can’t Buy” is full of fresh ideas and original tools that I’m absolutely certain will cause quantum leaps in your positivity, productivity, wellness, and happiness. You can order it now by clicking here.

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Inspiration is unbelievably important when you go to work every day. You want to radiate that positive energy. You want to be that person, even if things are falling apart or you lost the deal or people are negative. You say, hey, you know what? Adversity is nothing more than opportunity in wolf's clothing. What's good about this? How can we turn it around? How can we pivot so we get even stronger? One of my favorite stories on leadership and being an inspiration, even in difficult times, comes from Steve Jobs. You know, when he was a young kid, his father said, Steve, go outside and paint the fence in front of the house. Steve Jobs said to his father, no problem. He loved his dad very much. His dad was a craftsman. That's where he learned this love of detail. So a few hours later, his father comes outside and sort of inspects the fence. And he goes, well, Steve, you you did a great job painting the outside of the fence, but you didn't paint the inside of the fence. And Steve Jobs looks up at his dad and he says, well, dad, no one's going to see the inside of the fence. And Steve Jobs' father looks at his son and says, but son, we will. Well, now it's the mid 1980s and Steve Jobs is sitting around with his design team and they're working on the first Apple Macintosh. And he looks at his team and he says, you know, I want this computer to be a work of art because, you know, he loved works of art. But he said, the real deliverable is this. I want the inside of the computer to be so beautiful it brings tears to people's eyes.And the people around him said, well, Steve, no one's going to see the inside of the computer.And Steve Jobs looked at his design team and said, but we will. And when Steve Jobs saw the first Apple Macintosh, he started to cry because Steve Jobs was really not an entrepreneur. He was an artist. And he looked at his design team and he said, I want you to sign the circuit board. And they said, why Steve? And he said, because all artists sign their work.