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  • - I wanted to be really successful,

  • but not to just, like, get shoes;

  • I knew I wanted to make money

  • because I wanted to make a difference.

  • Listen to your gut and your heart,

  • because, no matter what any expert tells you,

  • your wisdom inside needs to be paramount.

  • When I was bartending, I was fully bartending.

  • Like, I wasn't talking to myself about:

  • "Oh, my God, I should be dancing right now," or,

  • "I should be working on my coaching practice."

  • While I was growing my personal coaching practice,

  • I kept feeling conflicted because

  • I didn't want to just be one thing.

  • Are you guys here because you want to be mediocre?

  • - [Audience] No.

  • - Mediocre sucks, does it not?

  • Don't get taken over by the world's definition of success.

  • It's like, everything that I've learned

  • and I've been able to do in my business,

  • we never know what's going to work.

  • You should just engage an experience

  • and actually get your foot in the industry.

  • That can inform whether or not you should move ahead.

  • I have been this way, meaning goofy, silly,

  • since I was very, very little.

  • You walk around your day, and you're like,

  • "Wow, I have so many things to do," and I'm like,

  • "Wait a minute. This is all awesome stuff to do."

  • - She's an American life coach, motivational speaker,

  • author, and YouTuber.

  • She's the owner and creator of Marie Forleo International,

  • B-School, and MarieTV.

  • Forbes.com listed her website

  • as one of the top 100 websites for entrepreneurs.

  • She's Marie Forleo,

  • and here are her top ten rules for success.

  • - You know, my first gig out of college was on Wall Street,

  • on the New York Stock Exchange, and-

  • - [Interviewer] This is pre-?

  • - This is pre-everything.

  • This is like, just out of college, twenty-one years old,

  • and I knew one of my drives:

  • I wanted to be really successful,

  • but not to just, like, get shoes.

  • I knew I wanted to make money

  • because I wanted to make a difference.

  • I wanted to be able to take care of my family.

  • I wanted to be able to contribute

  • to causes that I believe in,

  • and so I knew, in order to do that,

  • in my own mind, I was like:

  • "Well, I want to make a lot of money

  • and make this stuff happen."

  • But, when I was on Wall Street,

  • even though so many people that I worked with-

  • multi-multi-millionaires, I mean, the money was ridiculous-

  • while they were financially rich,

  • they were spiritually bankrupt.

  • And I felt, like, there was a part of me

  • that was dying inside, and I said,

  • "This is not my path. I don't know what my path is,

  • but I need to leave this because I feel sick."

  • And so, I think many people feel like that.

  • You can find yourself a job, and job, and job,

  • and you want to do a really-

  • you want to do great work in the world,

  • you're giving it your best,

  • but some little voice inside is saying "This isn't me."

  • - [Interviewer] Right.

  • - "This isn't me."

  • And I kept having that voice

  • until finally I left the corporate world

  • and started my own business.

  • - Listen to your gut, and your heart,

  • because, no matter what any expert tells you,

  • your wisdom inside needs to be paramount.

  • It needs to always drive all of your decisions.

  • Even, you know, when I was first starting out,

  • I would pay attention to people

  • that absolutely knew what they were doing.

  • They were completely ethical, they were smart,

  • they were good teachers as well.

  • Sometimes, their advice just didn't sit right with me,

  • and if I wasn't as secure in my own inner voice,

  • I might have gone down paths

  • that wouldn't have been that great.

  • So, I think it's wonderful to get an education,

  • it's wonderful to take in experiences,

  • but never, ever, ever listen to anything other

  • than what is that true voice within you,

  • and that takes practice.

  • - When I was bartending, I was fully bartending.

  • Like, I wasn't talking to myself about:

  • "Oh, my God, I should be dancing right now," or,

  • "I should be working on my coaching practice."

  • I was just really into bartending,

  • and, when I was dancing, I was like, you know,

  • being the best hip-hop teacher/dancer I could possibly be.

  • When I was being a coach, same kind of thing.

  • And I think that practice of being fully engaged,

  • in the thing that you're doing,

  • conserves a ton of energy,

  • and that's what most people don't do.

  • - Part of what was also challenging for me,

  • when I was starting off as a coach,

  • was recognizing the truth:

  • that I didn't just want to be a coach.

  • I loved writing, I loved hip-hop,

  • I loved dance, I loved fitness.

  • There were all these different things

  • that I was passionate about;

  • and, while I was growing my personal coaching practice,

  • I kept feeling conflicted because I didn't want

  • to just be one thing.

  • Has anyone ever felt that way?

  • - [Interviewer laughs.]

  • - Yeah. So, I would listen to the voices

  • in my head which were like- and, basically, the voices

  • in my head were so trained by traditional wisdom

  • and traditional thoughts about:

  • "You have to pick a niche. You have to narrow down.

  • You have to choose one thing and be good for it,

  • be really good at it, and that's how you'll be known."

  • And, when I realized that that voice wasn't the voice

  • that I should listen to, that there was this truth:

  • that I was this multi-passionate person,

  • and that living in the present moment,

  • which Eckhart teaches,

  • was all about really listening

  • to your own inner guidance and being in the here and now,

  • and not stressing so much up here.

  • That really opened the door for me to say,

  • "You know what? Screw it.

  • I'm going to go take dance classes.

  • I'm going to go learn about this.

  • I'm going to do all these different things."

  • And that training, to be in the moment,

  • and to listen to my own inner guidance,

  • allowed me to disconnect from all the B.S. voices in my head

  • that were torturing me.

  • Torturing me.

  • - How would you behave if you were the best in the world

  • at what you do?

  • How would that change what time you wake up in the morning?

  • How would that change the food you put in your body?

  • How would that change the people you hang out with?

  • How you spend your time throughout the day?

  • What websites you visit?

  • Whether or not you work from a schedule?

  • If you were world class,

  • and the best in the world at what you do,

  • how would your behavior change?

  • It's a really interesting question

  • that I started asking myself a few years ago,

  • and, I will tell you, it has changed everything.

  • It's one of those singular questions;

  • whether you put it on your screensaver,

  • you have a little reminder on your cell phone,

  • you have it on the top of a notebook;

  • I guarantee you, if you start looking at your world

  • through this lens, it's going to shift everything.

  • Now, let me ask you this,

  • just to back this up a little bit more:

  • are you guys here because you want to be mediocre?

  • - [Audience] No.

  • - Mediocre sucks, does it not?

  • - [Audience] Yes!

  • - We want to be world-class.

  • We want to be the best, and let me ask you this:

  • who's in charge of you being the best in the world?

  • Yes? Can I hear an "I am?"

  • - [Audience] I am.

  • - A little louder?

  • - [Audience] I AM.

  • - One more?

  • - [Audience] I AM!

  • - Amen, and it's not even a Sunday. Okay, good.

  • - If you had to give someone who's recently graduating

  • from our program a piece of advice,

  • what would you say?

  • - I would say to learn and to execute on your unique vision.

  • Define success for yourself.

  • Figure out what that means to you.

  • Don't get taken over by the world's definition of success,

  • or your family's, or what your friends are doing,

  • or what anyone says that equals success.

  • Once you can get clear on that vision,

  • then you need to create a plan to make that come to life,

  • and to prioritize.

  • I think one of the biggest tragedies of our time is:

  • I hear so many people from every walk of life,

  • health coaches, all over,

  • feeling so overwhelmed, and overworked,

  • and there's so much that they can do,

  • that they feel paralyzed.

  • "Well, I don't know what to do first,"

  • "How do I make all of this happen,"

  • and I think that we all need

  • to take a few steps back and start to get clear

  • on our own vision for success,

  • and then actually prioritize making that come to life,

  • because then it gives you such clarity, and such freedom;

  • and all of that static and the overwhelm starts

  • to fall away.

  • - What if I actually follow my heart,

  • and I don't make a living at it?

  • All my friends say, "You suck. See, I told you so?"

  • Eckhart actually talked about when, he was moving once,

  • his parents said, "Really? You're going to do this again?"

  • Like, they'd seen him as a failure for years,

  • and then- anyways. There's that, always that voice,

  • that's like, "Yeah, yeah, yeah,"

  • but you might just really fail.

  • - Yeah, and, you know, I think all of us have that,

  • and there's perhaps some of them, like a myth,

  • that many of us can think,

  • especially when we're first starting out,

  • that successful people don't have the voice anymore.

  • That's total crap.

  • Anyone that you've ever seen, anyone that I've encountered,

  • and I've had the opportunity to interview

  • a lot of people and talk to them;

  • no matter how successful, how accomplished,

  • how well-known, they still have those voices of self-doubt.

  • They still get afraid.

  • They still question:

  • "Am I going in the right direction?

  • What's next for me?"

  • And, I think, the more that we can recognize that

  • that voice of, basically, "You suck," is universal,

  • and we can disengage from that and actually engage

  • with what we want in our lives,

  • the happier we're going to be.

  • And, this is the other thing: none of us know.

  • It's like, everything that I've learned

  • and I've been able to do in my business,

  • we never know what's going to work.

  • We treat every single thing as an experiment.

  • That's the only way that you learn.

  • I think 99% of what each of us

  • need to do to learn and grow,

  • not only as businesspeople,

  • but also as human beings, if we're going to grow,

  • it means that we've never done that before.

  • It's going to be uncomfortable.

  • And, to be okay in that uncertainty and that discomfort,

  • is where the juice of life lives.

  • - I really went into pursuing different passions

  • with eyes wide open; meaning:

  • knowing, because my focus was split,

  • I probably wouldn't be getting very far in any of them;

  • but I made a conscious choice that I just wanted

  • to experience them.

  • I wanted to understand them from the inside out.

  • I spent so much time thinking, in my mind,

  • "Is this the right choice for me?

  • Is this the right career for me?

  • Should I try to build a business around this?",

  • and I said, "That's such a dumb way to go around it."

  • Like, you should just engage and experience

  • and actually get your foot in the industry.

  • That can inform whether or not you should move ahead.

  • - What about someone who's stuck, or struggling?

  • What would you tell them?

  • - Stuck or struggling is typically someone

  • who is more engaged in their thoughts

  • than actually taking action.

  • So, it's a really interesting, subtle shift;

  • but, if you catch yourself complaining like,

  • "Oh, I'm so stuck, and-"

  • Stop.

  • Write an e-mail, make a call, take a step,

  • and the more you actually do that

  • and catch yourself, we actually-

  • Sorry, this is me, A.D.D., my toes are exactly that color.

  • - Awesome. - Yes.

  • - I love it.

  • - But it is.

  • It's really a practice of checking in with yourself.

  • You got to check yourself before you wreck yourself.

  • Like, stop complaining,

  • stop talking to yourself in your head,

  • and do something.

  • I have been this way, meaning goofy, silly,

  • since I was very, very little.

  • And, when I first started my coaching practice

  • when I was twenty-three,

  • I tried to be what I thought

  • in my mind was a "businesswoman".

  • I had this idea of, like, a power suit,

  • and some big old shoulder pads,

  • and I would speak in a certain way,

  • and I remember trying to do that, and I felt horrible.

  • Like, I felt so stunted.

  • It was like I had writer's block.

  • I had speaker's block.

  • I just felt like I was in somebody else's skin,

  • and it was so painful for me that I was just like,

  • "I can't do this, but I really want to do this thing.

  • I'm going to let go of my idea of who I think I should be,

  • and talk about the fact I'm from Jersey,

  • I don't use proper language all the time,

  • I have kind of a weird sense of humor,

  • I love zombies, Smurfs, all kinds of things,

  • and what would happen if I actually just expressed that?"

  • And something funny actually did happen, is:

  • not only did I find myself to be more creative,

  • I found myself more fulfilled,

  • and people actually connected with me more.

  • I didn't feel like I had to push myself out into the world;

  • it was more like things started to come to me.

  • And I didn't feel like there was so much of a separation

  • between my "work day" and the rest of my life,

  • which felt great.

  • For me, a good life is a couple of things.

  • One, being fully present in each moment,

  • because I find that, when I am fully present, like,

  • you know, you and I having this great conversation now,

  • or if I'm with Josh and we're just hanging out.

  • It does not matter what we're doing,

  • but I feel so-

  • peaceful, and content,

  • and like all is well in the world.

  • Even if there's challenges, I feel a sense of peace,

  • and that's one component of it;

  • and, I think the other component, for me,

  • of living a good life, is having good friends

  • and having a lot of fun.

  • I think any time that I slip

  • into taking things too seriously;

  • like, you walk around in your day, and you're like,

  • "Wow, I have so many things to do,"

  • and I'm like, "Wait a minute.

  • This is all awesome stuff to do,

  • and I set my life up this way.

  • I'd better not take it so seriously,

  • and have a little fun, and put on some music and dance."

  • When that kind of thread of celebration and irreverence

  • and not taking things too seriously-

  • That's what living a good life feels like to me.

  • - Thank you guys so much for watching!

  • I made this video because Ewelina asked me to;

  • so, if there's a famous entrepreneur

  • that you want me to profile next,

  • leave it in the comments below,

  • and I'll join the discussion.

  • I'd also love to know which of Marie's top ten rules

  • meant the most to you, and had the biggest impact.

  • Leave it in the comments and I'll join the discussion.

  • And, one last thing:

  • my personal goal is to hit one million subscribers

  • on this channel, so anything that you can think of

  • to share the video, tweet it, add the playlist,

  • tell your friends about it,

  • I'd really, really, really, really appreciate it.

  • Thank you guys so much!

  • Continue to believe, and I'll see you soon.

  • - The fact that,

  • when you're good at whatever you're good at;

  • so, for me, I was so passionate about spirituality

  • and personal development,

  • and all of the tools that come in that toolbox;

  • but recognizing you also have to know how to run a business.

  • Being good at something isn't the same thing as

  • being able to run a business doing that thing.

  • And I recognized very quickly that I needed

  • to understand how to market,

  • and I wanted to use these new online tools

  • specifically because I was so embarrassed

  • about my age because I was so young,

  • that I wanted to use the internet, which I did,

  • to mask my age.

  • And I never lied, but I got headshots done

  • that made me look much older than I was,

  • and I put up a website,

  • and all of my clients came to me through the internet;

  • and, if they didn't ask how old I was, I didn't tell them.

  • I just did the best work I could.

  • But that key lesson about:

  • even if you love something, and even if it's your passion,

  • you have to also get passionate about entrepreneurship.

  • - [Interviewer] If you want to make a living at it.

  • - If you want to make a living at it as a solo entrepreneur,

  • as a business owner.

  • - Nothing will kill your business faster

  • than being lost in a crowd of sameys.

  • How many people here ever feel like you look around,

  • and it's like: "Everybody's doing the same shit!"

  • Right? Do you feel like that?

  • Everybody starts copying each other,

  • and it all starts to look the same,

  • and it all starts to sound the same,

  • so positioning is all about

  • positioning yourself to be vastly different.

  • This is probably one of my favorite parts

  • of this presentation.

  • I'm going to teach you something that is so damn good.

  • I promise, if you do this for your whole business

  • and every product or service you have,

  • you'll be able to articulate very, very clearly

  • exactly how you are different;

  • and, more importantly than articulating it,

  • it's going to be a living, breathing essence

  • of how you stand apart from everybody else.

  • - I feel like I love

  • the process of learning and discovering new things so much,

  • and I love seeing other people win.

  • So, like, learning these new ideas and new skills

  • that I've never been exposed to before,

  • and then being able to teach them to other people

  • and watch the ah-hah moments or the breakthroughs

  • or the progress happen for them.

  • I love seeing other people win.

  • So that's what kept driving me,

  • and I was like:

  • "Wow, if I could do this with five people,

  • I could do this with, like, twenty people,

  • or a hundred people, or a thousand people,"

  • and it was really exciting.

- I wanted to be really successful,

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マリー・フォレオの成功のためのトップ10のルール (@marieforleo) (Marie Forleo's Top 10 Rules For Success (@marieforleo))

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    gs0930 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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