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Attitude Quotes
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Learn to leverage the Law of Cause and Effect to your advantage in positive ways!
Susan C.Young
Many people go through life complaining, whining, and obsessing so much about what they don’t have that they are doing exactly what it takes to block it.
Susan C.Young
Would you like to feel a calm confidence when you walk into a room full of strangers, knowing that you can start new a conversation with anyone?
Susan C.Young
Your mindset brings together your attitude, perceptions, experience, interpretations, opinions, beliefs, values, and understanding to determine how you think, act, walk, talk, behave, and engage.
Susan C.Young
To say your mindset is critical to your success is a gross understatement—it is the underpinning!
Susan C.Young
Developing your emotional intelligence will allow you to explore new depths of understanding in yourself and others.
Susan C.Young
Emotional intelligence will give you insight as to why people behave as they do and assist you in areas which you may wish to improve.
Susan C.Young
All the elements of greater emotional awareness can weave together to ensure you make a more positive impact.
Susan C.Young
Emotional intelligence marks one’s ability to perceive, understand, control, and evaluate his or her emotions.
Susan C.Young
Haven’t you known people who seem to have a “sixth sense” super-power when it comes to connecting, communicating, and understanding others? These emotionally intelligent people always know the right things to say to make us feel that we matter.
Susan C.Young
Your EQ (emotional quotient) is your capacity to recognize, discriminate, and label emotions accurately and interpret them to help guide your thinking and behavior.
Susan C.Young
Create and nurture a mindset that works for you rather than against you.
Susan C.Young
Strive to be optimistic rather than pessimistic— forgiving rather than a grudge holder.
Susan C.Young
Strive to be a possibility thinker rather than an impossibility thinker.
Susan C.Young
Strive to be happy rather than downhearted or miserable—hopeful rather than resigned and doubtful.
Susan C.Young
Strive to be pleased and accepting rather than angry and resistant.
Susan C.Young
Strive to be daring and brave rather than reluctant or afraid.
Susan C.Young
Strive to be a proactive participant rather than a passive procrastinator.
Susan C.Young
Strive to be active rather than lethargic—determined rather than wavering or lazy.
Susan C.Young
When you make a deliberate effort to keep your thoughts positive, and authentically feel that way, more positive outcomes are inevitable.
Susan C.Young
Your mindset buffet is filled with possibilities that can feed your heart, mind, and soul if you will simply serve yourself and go for it! Choose wisely, my friends, choose wisely.
Susan C.Young
Your thoughts, beliefs, and interpretations filter how you see everything in your world—and here is the clincher—you get to choose!
Susan C.Young
Your thoughts, beliefs, and interpretations initiate and largely determine how you experience your reality.
Susan C.Young
You wear your attitude. It is highly visible to every person you meet and shows up in the way act, live, and love.
Susan C.Young
Your attitude is the outward expression of your internal perceptions, self-esteem, and current thoughts.
Susan C.Young
Share your happiness with others—its contagious!
Susan C.Young
A positive attitude will empower you to be more resilient to proactively adapt to change.
Susan C.Young
A positive attitude will help you edge out cynicism and pessimism to restore hope and optimism.
Susan C.Young
When adversity hits, reframe the challenge and find lessons learned; acknowledge gifts that have come from the pain.
Susan C.Young
Stretch your imagination to a new dimension with hope and flexibility—opening your world to new possibilities.
Susan C.Young
Smile generously at others and you may find that their smiles are returned right back to you.
Susan C.Young
Don’t participate or allow yourself to be dragged into other people’s dramas, complaints, or gossip.
Susan C.Young
Become a lifelong learner. Read books, watch videos, listen to audio, and seek lessons for learning how to live your best life now.
Susan C.Young
Take a moral inventory of ways you may be self-sabotaging and then take proactive steps to change them.
Susan C.Young
Be a source of positive energy and inspiration for others.
Susan C.Young
Strive to see the best in others, situations, and experiences.
Susan C.Young
A positive attitude will help you be more inspiring and motivating to others.
Susan C.Young
Celebrate the success of others and they will be happy to see you succeed.
Susan C.Young
Be mindful of the words in your mind and in your mouth. Choose to use an affirming and positive vocabulary because your actions and outcomes will follow suit.
Susan C.Young
Remember that your attitude towards life determines life’s attitude toward you. At any moment, you can choose to change everything for the better.
Susan C.Young
Exercise and get moving to pump up your endorphins and elevate your mood. Take an adult recess.
Susan C.Young
Wake up early, do your best, practice self-care, and finish strong.
Susan C.Young
You are the only one who can choose your attitude for you.
Susan C.Young
The Art of First Impressions for Positive Impact is based on the premise that when you become self-aware and learn how to shine bright as your best self, you can transform your relationships in life and in business.
Susan C.Young
Absolutely everything associated with your success is relationship based and emotionally connected. Developing your emotional intelligence is one of the wisest action you can take for personal and professional transformation.
Susan C.Young
Even if what you’re preparing for does not happen, your efforts aren’t for naught. With preparation comes knowledge of each situation, as well as the confidence to handle every new encounter with more grace and ease than the time before.
Susan C.Young
Without proper readiness, we’re subject to a 'flub,' or a costly mistake which might have been easily prevented with some simple homework beforehand. Failing to do so deteriorates credibility and reputation, leaving us vulnerable to an unfavorable impression.
Susan C.Young
Discover an interest, a passion, a preference or need your client has, and take the time to give them some small item related to it. By making the extra effort to learn about the person and their business, you become very appealing and much more memorable.
Susan C.Young
Living in the age of the Internet and being a part of the information generation, we have unlimited access to an unprecedented wealth of knowledge and learning. We have no excuse to show up to an appointment, a sales call, a date, or an important meeting without learning everything we can to tip the odds in our favor.
Susan C.Young
Knowledge imparts a sense of authority. It will help you stand out and give you an edge over your competition.
Susan C.Young
Being prepared and sharing your knowledge earns the confidence of those who are interviewing you, depend on your expertise, or seek you out for solutions, answers, or presentations.
Susan C.Young
Give yourself and others the gift of your brilliance to deliver a more compelling and memorable presentation.
Susan C.Young
Homework doesn’t end when you receive a diploma. Often, it's just the beginning of your learning.
Susan C.Young
Doing your homework and being well prepared for appointments is one of the most powerful ways to set yourself apart from your competition to gain and retain new clients.
Susan C.Young
If there is someone whom you would really like to impress, learn as much as you can to be informed, enlightened, and aware of them before you meet.
Susan C.Young
By performing a simple Google search, a website review, a visit to their LinkedIn profile, or a media release search on the person you are about to meet, you can find out where they’ve been, what they care about, and where they’re going. Whether you learn an interesting fact about a hobby they enjoy, the breed of their dog, or something you both have in common, it will show that you took the time to research and that you care about them as a person.
Susan C.Young
Whether you are staying in someone’s home as a house guest, attending a dinner party, or visiting a sick friend, when you bring a “hostess gift” or a thoughtful token, you are providing a gesture of kindness which will extend far beyond your visit.
Susan C.Young
Doing your research ahead of time shows that you care about your client and your reputation. Referencing this information will better enable you to ask relevant questions and link their answers to your product or service to create a win-win situation.
Susan C.Young
Emotionally intelligent people have the capacity to understand and express their own emotions—you are in touch with your strengths and weaknesses and realize where you might like to make improvements”.
Susan C.Young
Emotionally intelligent people can focus their emotions to improve performance and productivity.
Susan C.Young
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