NEWS FLASH: The
American Dream is NOT Dead
(Chuck Muth) - A
recent headline in the Los Angeles Times
blared: “American dream slips out of reach for millennials, study finds.”
What
a crock of shinola!
If
anything, it’s not that the “dream” has disappeared, but the number of dreamers.
For
decades now, liberals – especially in Hollywood - have been teaching our kids
that “the rich” are evil and that society has created artificial barriers - race,
gender, physical handicaps, family income, etc. – which prevent them from
becoming successful.
They’ve
discouraged “rugged individualism” and have foisted upon our youth a culture of
entitlement and dependence on government.
Our schools teach kids, at best, how to get a job, not how to start
their own business. No wonder so many have
given up hope for a better life.
But
it doesn’t have to be that way. When
that Times story came out, I was
attending James Malinchak’s marketing conference in Los Angeles with 300+ fellow
small business owners and wanna-be entrepreneurs. Here are two of their stories…
Amy
Jordan was a dancer. Back in 2009 she was hit by a bus in New York City. Her right leg “was completely crushed” and
the doctor wanted to amputate it. Amy
refused. Instead, a “nine-surgeon team
began the arduous task of rebuilding my right leg, literally bit by bit.”
This
was followed by years of excruciatingly painful rehab. But today, Amy’s
walking again. More importantly, she found a way to overcome
the obstacle and pursue her dreams by founding her own professional
dance
company. Its slogan: “To make the
impossible possible.”
Another
young man took the stage and told the story of the successful business he
created. But he jokingly informed the
crowd, “You have to come see me, because I can’t come see you.” Why?
He’s
blind.
And
do you know what the most remarkable part of these stories is? That
they’re not all that unusual. Ordinary Americans - who have been told
by
society and the media that they can’t do something – are doing it
anyway, every
day.
The
American dream isn’t dead. It’s just been
smothered by losers who would rather you be a victim than a success.
If
you’re a millennial – or anyone else – who wants to achieve the American Dream,
here are three simple pieces of advice to start turning things around in your
life…
1.) Get up an hour earlier every day to give
yourself an advantage over those who sleep in.
2.) Read “The Magic of Thinking Big” by David
Schwartz.
3.) Get the heck off social media!
More
importantly, ignore ANYONE who tells you you can’t do something – including
family, friends and the Los Angeles Times. Instead, keep these words of wisdom by Henry
Ford in mind: “Whether you believe you can or can’t do something, you’re
right.”
Now
go grab your piece of the American Dream!
No comments:
Post a Comment