My original mentor, Mr.  Shoaff, over a five-year period of time before he died at age 49, taught  me some extraordinarily simple things. He only went through the 9th grade  in school. He never finished high school, never went to college, never  went to a university. So he put his experiences and ideas in very simple  language, which, I think for me - kid from the farms of Idaho - was so  important. When I would say, "This is all the company pays." Mr. Shoaff  would say, "No, that is all they pay YOU." I thought, "That is a new way  to look at it." I told him things cost too much. But he said, "No, you  can't afford them." Well, that was a new concept for me. He promised that  if I would improve, then I would qualify for more money. So I learned that  we don't have to work on the company, we have to work on ourselves. If it  had been technical, I would have missed it. If it had been mystic, I would  have backed away. But it was just basic, blunt "a-b-c" familiar stuff that  I hadn't thought of before. For me it was the beginning of what he called  "personal development".

Mr. Shoaff also  taught me that life puts some of the more valuable things on the high  shelf so that you can't get to them until you qualify. If you want the  things on the high shelf, you must stand on the books you read. With every  book you read, you get to stand a little higher. And the "biggie" that  forever had an impact on me, "Success is something you attract by the  person you become." That phrase changed my life. Success is not to be  pursued, but to be attracted by the person you become. Put your energy  into becoming a better you, the best you. Learn the skills. Practice the  skills. Attract the success.

Those simple strategies  and ideas helped change my life, forever, for the better. Thank you, once  again, Mr. Shoaff.


To Your Success, 
Jim Rohn
MR. SHOAFF'S SIMPLE  STRATEGIES TO SUCCESS
"There is  nothing so fatal to character as half finished tasks."
David  Lloyd George
The world's largest art gallery is the Winter Palace and the Hermitage in Leningrad. Visitors walk fifteen miles to visit each of the 322 galleries, which house nearly 3 million works of art and archaeological remains. 
Baia Mediterranea