Think and Grow Rich Audiobook (Free)
- Erik Synnestvedt
- 9 h 36 min
- Gildan Media
- 2015-03-01
Summary:
Think and Grow Full is the number 1 Inspirational and motivational common for individuals who want in furthering their lives and achieving their goals by learning from important figures ever sold. The written text read in this audio book is the first 1937 edition written by Napoleon Hill and motivated by Andrew Carnegie and while it has frequently been reproduced, no up to date version has ever been able to contend with the original. It has been used being a roadmap to accomplishment by countless about Think and Grow Rich individuals.
The 13 Methods to Riches described within this audio book offer the shortest dependable beliefs of individual achievement ever presented for the benefit of the man or woman who’s searching for an absolute goal in existence. It comes directly from the experiences of a huge selection of America’s most effective men.
The 13 Concepts of Success
1. Desire
2. Faith
3. Auto-suggestion
4. Specialized Knowledge
5. Imagination
6. Organized Planning
7. Decision
8. Persistence
9. The Master Mind
10. The Secret of Sex Transmutation
11. The Unconscious Mind
12. THE MIND
13. The Sixth Sense
… and outwit your Concerns
Hill interviewed 504 people, including Ford, Wrigley, Wanamaker, Eastman, Rockefeller, Edison, Woolworth, Darrow, Burbank, Morgan, Firestone, and three United States Presidents. The process of performing these interviews required an purchase of twenty years of Napoleon Hill’s life This audio book will lead many to success, and has offered millions of printed copies for pretty much three quarters of a century. Yes, one can gather through the title, how the starting place for wealth is within someone’s thoughts and this title may be the source for some of today’s motivational loudspeakers.. So why not get back to the original source?
‘Whatever your brain can conceive and believe, it could achieve.’
‘A quitter never wins and successful hardly ever quits.’
‘Success requires no explanations. Failure permits no alibis’
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