For many years I have been making the point that we don’t overcome fear by thinking our way out of it. We overcome fear by action. It is what we do on a daily basis that makes all the difference. In today’s episode I talk about the impact of a powerful quote from Napoleon Hill and how it can help all of us face our fears and move forward with our lives.

Grab a free copy of my book Bridging the Gap here:

https://go.jonathandoyle.co/btg-pdf

Transcript
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Hey guys, Jonathan, with you again, welcome to today's message.

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It is nice to have the pleasure of your company and hope one day,

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we can get an event together.

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I get to meet a whole bunch of you.

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I mean, I have met many of you over the years in different parts of the world.

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We wouldn't be nice are going.

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Heaven's going to be a bit like that.

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You're going to get to meet all these great people that you just

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want to spend a lot of time with.

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I mean, if you're watching this channel, if you subscribe to my stuff, then

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you're obviously somebody that is trying.

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To improve and a lot of the times that's all your needs.

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So thank you.

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Thank you for being here today, watching this content and

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make sure you've subscribed.

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Hit the whacking.

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Great big subscribe thing.

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Wherever you're listening.

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Grab a free copy of my book, bridging the gap.

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I want to give it to you.

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Yeah.

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I just want to give you a free copy.

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It's a book I wrote a few years ago.

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It, it captures my basic approach to all this stuff.

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I'm going to send you a chapter every two days.

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So hit that link, grab yourself a free copy today.

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We're going to talk about a quote from one of the absolute giants

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of the whole personal development movement, Napoleon hill, and Nepalian

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is going to talk to us today about the thing that holds everybody back.

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We're going to talk about fear, fear.

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The worst of all enemies can be effectively.

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By forced repetition of acts of courage.

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All right.

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One of the biggest principles that I teach, I teach it to my kids.

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I try and teach it to myself.

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It's taken me years to master it is feelings, follow actions.

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If I could just give you that one gift.

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So many people go through life thinking that they will do it.

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When they feel right when they feel confident in doing it, then they'll do

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the thing, whatever the thing is, job promotion, marriage, career, starting

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a business, whatever it is, right?

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So many people waste their life thinking, well, I'm going to start

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the second that I feel ready to do it.

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Feelings, follow actions.

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Napoleon hill is telling us a few key things here.

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Number one, fear.

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Greatest of all enemies.

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So.

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For most of us, we're not going to be held back really by stupidity

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or lack of resources or, you know, Major character flaws.

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Most of us get held back in any carrier by the one thing I do fear, right?

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We're afraid.

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And that fear can be mild.

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It can be extreme.

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It can be subtle.

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It can be in your face, but fear is just this self-preservation thing that we've

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evolved with as a species that used to serve an incredibly useful purpose

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when we were getting eaten by everyday.

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But nowadays our fear mechanisms are pretty much the same as they

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were 300,000 years ago, but the environments changed, but we can

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still get easily triggered by fear.

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So what Hill's saying in this message is simply, you don't

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think your way out of this.

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So right now I'm talking to you as you're listening or watching, if

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you're afraid of something right now, and, and you think that you'll

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be able to think your way through it, you may be waiting a long time.

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Thinking is really important.

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And I love to think actually I recommend it.

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I really do, because I think there's times when we need to really carefully

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think about important decisions and issues in our lives, but when we're

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really confronting things that are fearful for us it's action that matters

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and not Napoleon hill says today is forced repetition of acts of courage.

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I can't remember if I said this last week, but long story short.

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Uh, recently I jumped off a bridge.

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I'm gonna tell you this last week.

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Um, can't remember, but I was with a family and it was weird, a big

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holiday destination a few months ago, and it's illegal to jump

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off this bridge 365 days a year.

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And one day a year, it was Australia's national day.

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The police allowed people to jump off it or they turn a blind.

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So I'm like my kids, like, I've got to go down to five

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o'clock everyone starts jumping.

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You got to be there, dad.

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And I'm like, yeah, we'll go down and check it out.

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And then they go and all day, my kids are like, you're going to jump you to jump.

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And I'm like, yeah, jump course.

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I'll jump.

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Why wouldn't I jump?

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Then I saw the bridge.

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It was like, you know, it's about six to seven meters above

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the water and it's open ocean.

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Right.

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So you're just jumping off this perfectly good bridge into an ocean.

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You know, how many bull sharks were in there?

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I don't know.

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But I get to this thing and you climb over the railing and you're

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sitting there and all of a sudden I'm like, uh, what have I done?

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Uh, somebody, you would know, I had a really bad accident a few years ago.

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I almost died.

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And, uh, so I've got titanium in both wrists destroyed both arms and

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I've got titanium and both sides.

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And I'm sitting on this bridge thinking.

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Um, if I hit this wrong, I don't want to be back in hospital with these hands.

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And, but here's the thing, right?

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There's hundreds and hundreds of people there watching.

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And I'm the, you know, the, the middle aged dude on the bridge.

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And then my kids, especially my youngest daughter, Stephanie, she's

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like, she's like big personality.

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She's like jump, jump.

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And she's like, build it up the crowd.

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She's a whole crash, go jump, jump, jump.

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And I'm guy, uh, wait till you get home and eight.

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So finally out of this moment of first thing, I was, I was genuinely afraid.

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So FIA was, I think FIA was present.

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It was real, it was there.

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So I'm not going to tell you, I was just like, oh, this is all good.

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I wasn't, I was afraid finally, by the grace of God, I just jumped off

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and it was the coolest thing ever.

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It was the best.

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It was like this rush on the way down.

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And then you hit the water and you have that sudden moment where

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you realize you're not dead.

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And then you're like, I'm not dead.

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That's a good thing.

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And the bars, like I know the chemicals in your brain, the

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endorphins, the dopamine hit.

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And I just literally like swam out of there so quick.

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And it wasn't because the bull sharks, it was because I just want to do it again.

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So I just kept doing it again, long story.

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I hope you've enjoyed listening to it, but my point is that Pauline Hills, right?

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It was the forced repetition of active acts of courage that brought me to

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a very new experience and a really awesome experience and a great.

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So, I just want to tell you that all the good stuff is on the other

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side of what you're afraid of.

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Now.

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I know that sounds like an Instagram post.

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I know that sounds like a t-shirt slogan, but it is true.

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I mean, I've been in this space now for what?

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Maybe close to 30 years, all the good stuff is on the other side of what you're.

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It just is, I don't mean do frivolous things or dangerous things.

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And I don't mean have conversations with people that they're not ready

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for, but you feel you are, don't do that, but you know what I mean?

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Right.

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There'll be things in your life that are holding you back.

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And I just want to encourage you that when you take that.

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It's like the universe.

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God just loves the leap.

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God's just say, God, if they take the leap, it's going to be really cool.

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But we're so afraid.

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So I want to encourage you if you're afraid of something right now, and that

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fear, isn't like a dangerous fear or a fear that's going to hurt other people.

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It's just something personal to you.

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I just wanna encourage you.

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I want to tell you my bridge story and tell you to jump at the

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right time when you feel ready.

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We might not always feel ready, but it's worth doing this has gone too

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long, but I just want to tell you that the actions come before the feelings.

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And if we do the hard things that we don't think we can do the

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feelings come after that, and life gets richer and you get better.

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All right, please subscribe.

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Grab a free copy of bridging the gap.

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God bless you.

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My name is Jonathan Doyle.

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I'm going to have another message for you tomorrow.

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