It’s Not How Good You Are, It’s How Good You Want to Be (2003) by Paul Arden & the Attitude of Champions
Taking risks is all about seeking a better life and realizing dreams into reality. Not about failure.
Where Books and Readers Come Together
Taking risks is all about seeking a better life and realizing dreams into reality. Not about failure.
“To do great work,” write the authors, “you need to feel that you’re making a difference. That you’re putting a meaningful dent in the universe. That you’re part of something important.”
If you think Khaled is the boy Amir who witnesses his servant and childhood friend, Hassan, being anally raped in an alley and does nothing and then seeks a life-long journey of redemption, then I am afraid your credulity may make it difficult to separate fact from fiction in any story or event.
“We kill our dreams because we are afraid to fight the good fight.”
A book you’d like to keep by your bedside to read a chapter each night before sleep or upon waking early in the morning.
Aleph is an inspirational story
Maria goes in search for her dreams without losing the best parts of her soul or her faith.
“Whenever we do something that fills us with enthusiasm, we are following our legend. However, we don’t all have the courage to confront our own dream.”
Holden is a grieving young man unable to cope with his brother’s death and much like Quentin Compson in The Sound and the Fury, we watch a sixteen-year-old Holden as he indirectly contemplates suicide over the course of a few days.
One can sense the sheer joy words must have given Orwell when he describes his history with reading and writing, and it makes this reader all the more glad that such poetry can live in the hearts of men and women.
“It was inevitable: the scent of bitter almonds always reminded him of the fate of unrequited love.”














