#OtakadaMondayMorningMotivationalStories Otakada.org Monday Morning Motivational and Inspirational Quotes and Real Stories for Engaging the Marketplace Series 4 of 52 Series: 4 of 52 – Oct 2019 Date: 14th of October 2019 Blog Link – https://www.otakada.org/Monday-Morning-Motivational-Stories-4-of-52 Youtube Channel Introduction. Welcome to today’s series of Otakada.org Monday Morning Motivational and Inspirational Quotes and Real Life Real Success Stories for The Marketplace Series 4 of 52. At Otakada.org, we bring YOU over 2 million products and services for wholesome lifestyle all in one place! This week, you are receiving the following engaging content from Otakada.org Monday Morning Motivation Series 4 of 52: – Ten (10) motivational and inspirational quotes, strategies and stories on productivity to cover you for the week. John D. Rockefeller Business Success Story – A Genius For Money Making – His life, his early dreams, school days, his business, his personality – At work, at home and in philanthropy. One (1) Story – A Cost Benefit Analysis of your entire life by the greatest teacher from the mountain. 3 Proven Business Productivity tools to help you succeed in your online and offline business Ten (10) Motivational Quotes and strategies for this week! I have tried 99 times and have failed, but on the 100th time came success. – Albert Einstein Success is more attitude than aptitude – Otakada.org Our mind is the most valuable possession that we have. The quality of our lives is, and will be, a reflection of how well we develop, train, and utilize this precious gift – Brian Tracy The past is over…..forget it. The future holds hope…reach for it – Charles R. Swindoll There is always a better way – Thomas Edison Having conceived of his purpose, a man should mentally mark out a straight pathway to its achievement, looking neither to the right or to the left, but straight. – James Allen The habit of persistence is the habit of victory – Herbert Kaufman People with goals always succeed because they know where they are going. Earl Nightingale I press toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus. Apostle Paul in Philippians 3:14 There are many homes up there where my Father lives, and I am going to prepare them for your coming. When everything is ready, then I will come and get you, so that you can always be with me where I am. If this weren’t so, I would tell you plainly – Jesus Christ in John 14:2.3 The Interview with John D. Rockefeller – His life, his early dreams, school days, his business, his personality – At work, at home and in philanthropy JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER – A GENIOUS FOR MONEY MAKING THE richest man in the United States, John Davidson Rockefeller, has consented to break his rule never to talk for publication; and he has told me the story of his early struggles and triumphs, and given utterance to some strikingly interesting observations aren’t the same. In doing so, he was influenced by the argument that there is something of helpfulness, of inspiration, in the career of every self-made man. While many such careers have been prolific of vivid contrasts, this one is simply marvelous. Whatever may be said by political economists of the dangers of vast aggregations of wealth in the hands of the few, there can be no question of the extraordinary interest attaching to the life story of a man who was a farm laborer at the age of fifteen, who left school at eighteen, because he felt it to be his duty to care for his mother and brother, and who, at the zenith of his business career, has endowed Chicago University with $7,500,000 out of a fortune estimated at over $300,000,000, probably the largest single fortune on earth. The story opens in a fertile valley in Tioga ~ County, New York, near the village of Richford, where John D. Rockefeller was born on his father’s farm in July, 1838. The parents of the boy were church-going, conscientious, debt- abhorring folk, who preferred the independence of a few acres to a mortgaged domain. They were Americans to the backbone, intelligent, industrious people, not very poor and certainly not very rich, for at fourteen John hired out to neighboring farmers during the summer months, in order to earn his way and not be dependent upon those he loved. His father was able to attend to the little farm himself, and thus it happened that the youth spent several summers away from home, toiling from sunrise to sunset, and sharing the humble life of the people he served. HIS EARLY DREAM AND PURPOSE Did the tired boy, peering from his attic window, ever dream of his future? He said to a youthful companion of Richford, a farmer’s boy like himself: “I would like to own all the land in this valley, as far as I can see. I sometimes dream of wealth and power. Do you think we shall ever be worth one hundred thousand dollars, you and I? I hope to some day.” Who can estimate the influence such a life as this must have had upon the future multi-millionaire? I asked Mr. Rockefeller about this, and found him enthusiastic over the advantages which he had received from his rural surroundings, and full of faith in the ability of the country boy to surpass his city cousin. ” To my mind,” he said, ” there is something unfortunate in being born in a city. Most young men raised in New York and other large centers have not had the struggles which come to us who were reared in the country. It is a noticeable fact that the country men are crowding out the city fellows who have wealthy fathers. They are willing to do more work and go through more for the sake of winning success in the end. Sons of wealthy parents haven’t a ghost of a show in competition with the fellows who come from the country
