Live
- Study Reveals Teabags Release Billions of Microplastics and Nanoplastics, Entering Your Body
- Kumbh Mela 2025: Essential Guide to Comfortable and Respectful Attire for Maha Kumbh
- Hyderabad Real Estate Faces Setback: Property Sales Drop 7% Year-on-Year in 2024
- Gnani’s Gen AI Solutions Revolutionising BFSI
- Trump's WHO threat sparks debate on the efficiency of global health governance
- ICC Champions Trophy 2025 Schedule: India vs Pakistan Match Set for February 23 in Dubai
- Champions Trophy 2025: Full Schedule, Match Dates, Venues, Timings, and Updates
- FRAI Urges Government to Provide Technology Platform for Kirana Stores to Stay Competitive
- Not just Gen Z, millennials too: Redditors discuss the wave of pet parenthood embraced by young Indians
- Innovation can expedite the journey to a Smoke-Free future- in focus at Technovation Abu Dhabi
Just In
The key reason confidence is so powerful and magnetic is simple, confident people ask for what they want. Whether it is advice, a sale or a date, confident people ask others for what they want.
The key reason confidence is so powerful and magnetic is simple, confident people ask for what they want. Whether it is advice, a sale or a date, confident people ask others for what they want. They ask for what they want out of the world and they ask for what they want out of themselves. Surprisingly much of achieving goals is simply building up the courage to ask for them.
You need to ask because:
Asking for what you want, gets you what you want.
You need to ask to be able to serve.
The first answer may seem obvious. When you ask for what you want you can receive what you want. But the second answer may have surprised you. How does asking for what you want to increase your capacity to serve?
Service through growth
The reason for asking helps you serve is that asking is critical to growth. When you don't ask for what you want, you can't improve the value you are offering. And unless you are an extremely rare individual that already comes with tremendous value, your real ability to serve doesn't lie in your current talents. Your ability to serve comes from improving the value you offer.
The first articles I wrote before I started this website were pretty lousy. My writing style was poor and it didn't really capture the essence of what I wanted to say. But do you think that if I had just kept the articles to myself, if I didn't ask people to read them, I would have improved? Hardly. It took the sometimes harsh evaluations of others to improve my writing and provide value today.
Growth works in a cycle. You create value, you ask for what you want and where you get rejected you modify your approach. This applies whether your entire intent is self-interest or service. Create value. Ask. Use rejection and success to improve.
A goal is asking the world for what you want
I've talked to people who are seriously overweight. I used to believe that such people were fat because they tried really hard to lose weight and just failed. But from the people I have talked with it seems like the real issue is that they didn't ask for it strongly enough. They didn't ask of the world and themselves to be healthy. This isn't to be trite and to say that losing weight is easy. But without the intention, nothing can happen.
The goals you set are the requests you make of the world. The Law of Attraction works because when you set an intention you are finally asking of the world and yourself what you actually want. Without asking, you can never figure out how to get it.
What about spam?
We live in a spam culture. This is where many large organizations are completely unabashed when asking for what they want. Pushy salespeople, annoying advertisements and an e-mail inbox full of unwanted garbage.
Spam is a sign of a poor request. Spamming people for what you want is a crude and ultimately ineffective way to ask. But this doesn't mean that asking is bad or wrong. You just have to know how to ask. Asking in a way that provides more value than you are requesting back. Asking in a way that displaces grace and tact.
There are really three approaches when it comes to working towards your goals. Not asking at all, asking ineffectively and asking effectively.
I'm sure most women wouldn't appreciate a greasy guy who hasn't showered in a week asking if she wants to go on a date. Most single women would rather have a nice, charming and attractive guy approach them. But remember that even if you are the nice, charming and attractive guy – you still aren't getting the data if you don't ask.
Not asking at all is just as bad as asking poorly. Unfortunately, even a rude, greasy guy with poor social skills will get more dates than the guy that doesn't ask anyone.
Asking often seems greedy and unwanted in our culture. We get too many requests from people who simply aren't providing enough value in return. But that doesn't mean people don't want you to ask. If you are asking the right way, most people are dying for you to ask them.
Taking the initiative
When most people hear the word ask, they are thinking of a one-sided transaction. If I ask you for fifteen bucks and you comply, I'm fifteen bucks richer and you are fifteen bucks poorer.
The truth is very few transactions you will have are this extreme. Successful asking usually takes an almost opposite tact where the other person profited far more from the transaction than you did.
© 2024 Hyderabad Media House Limited/The Hans India. All rights reserved. Powered by hocalwire.com