Today I want to talk to you about self-criticism and effort
to achieve anything we set out to do.
This phrase that some attribute to Gary Player and others to Arnold Palmer (two masters of golf), I think it found its “inspiration” in an earlier one by Thomas Jefferson:
“The harder I work, the luckier I get.”
Both have the same message:
Work and stop crying.
If you train (a golfer’s job is to train, not to play tournaments) you will find that you will automatically get better results not linked to providence.
We all have a friend or acquaintance who always complains about his or her bad luck. I recognize that I myself have had that attitude on occasions. They are the same people who justify the success of others with precisely that, with the luck they have and that they do not find.
They do not have the slightest internal self-criticism. They commit emotional suicide on their own.
We know the theory, but sometimes it is difficult to put it into practice.
I can’t stand that way of justifying one’s own failures and the successes of others.
In short, it’s envy. As I heard MagoMore say, something that is free and infinite.
As it can’t be otherwise, you do what you want. It is clear to me.
I don’t come from a wealthy family (I’m not complaining) and my parents taught me the culture of effort.
The tools of the poor, as Luis Monge Malo says, are:
Talent or effort. If you put the two together, you should never have money problems.
I have the talent I have, but no one can tell me that I haven’t been working hard all my life.
First I did it with architecture and, since years ago, with architectural visualization with a main objective:
Learn every day to be better.
My customers appreciate it.
I love it when they tell me:
Fuck, motherfucker, I didn’t expect this. This is different.
If you want to tell me the same, send me a message and you will see how your next promotion will sell in a flash.