Description
Walt Disney, Co-Founder Of The Walt Disney Company. He is one of the world's most famous filmmakers, directors, playwrights, voice actors, and animators, and remains the world's most-awarded Oscar winner to this day.
"The way to get started is to quit talking and begin doing."
That means you have to stop talking as the first step in the process. Once you’ve stopped talking, you can actually come to a decision. Then, once you’ve decided, you can finally get to the doing part.
Even if you aren’t sure about what you should do, at some point you have to try something, see what the results are, adjust your approach, then try it again. But before you can start, you’ve got to stop talking.
Grab some paper and start a list of things you have spent a great deal of time talking about, but on which you still haven’t taken any action. Write a few things down. Try to reach into a couple of different areas of your life, from work, from home, from family, from social, or how ever you logically divide your life.
Consider what could you do to get started? Can you start with little steps, if the project is very large? Can you start with a model or a small scale test, if the project is complex or beyond your current abilities? How can you start crawling, if walking or running are not appropriate for the project at the moment?
Now take a moment to select what you want to work on first, and which of the options you are most interested in trying out. Congratulations, you have stopped talking and made a decision. Is it the right decision? The only way to find out is to begin the doing of your plan.
Walt Disney, Co-Founder Of The Walt Disney Company. He is one of the world's most famous filmmakers, directors, playwrights, voice actors, and animators, and remains the world's most-awarded Oscar winner to this day.
"The way to get started is to quit talking and begin doing."
That means you have to stop talking as the first step in the process. Once you’ve stopped talking, you can actually come to a decision. Then, once you’ve decided, you can finally get to the doing part.
Even if you aren’t sure about what you should do, at some point you have to try something, see what the results are, adjust your approach, then try it again. But before you can start, you’ve got to stop talking.
Grab some paper and start a list of things you have spent a great deal of time talking about, but on which you still haven’t taken any action. Write a few things down. Try to reach into a couple of different areas of your life, from work, from home, from family, from social, or how ever you logically divide your life.
Consider what could you do to get started? Can you start with little steps, if the project is very large? Can you start with a model or a small scale test, if the project is complex or beyond your current abilities? How can you start crawling, if walking or running are not appropriate for the project at the moment?
Now take a moment to select what you want to work on first, and which of the options you are most interested in trying out. Congratulations, you have stopped talking and made a decision. Is it the right decision? The only way to find out is to begin the doing of your plan.