Have you ever been severely blown you like you think you can never recover? When you get up, you become more difficult. Regardless of whether you received poor grades on the report card or whether you lost your family and family during the quake, trying perseverance can make you physically, mentally or mentally strong I can. If something can not kill you, you have to decide to continue. You should ask yourself this question: If something can not kill you, it will make you stronger.
I believe that the concept of Nietzsche will not kill you and strengthen you. When you can hit and stand up again, you will prove how powerful your strength is to you. Many of us think I underestimate our ability, especially our flexibility and persistence. It is said that Colonel Sanders eventually had dozens of failed companies before cooperating with KFC.
There is an unhealthy belief in the entrepreneurial world that adversity can become a great entrepreneur. That is "if it does not kill you, it will make you stronger." Statistics such as "one in seven entrepreneurs see traumatic childhood experience as a cause of their business success" was abandoned to support it. My father is facing adversity and underestimation. At the age of nine, he ran away from Cuba with his sister as part of Pedroban's actions. His parents stayed in Cuba, where they were imprisoned for many years. Many of the people he knows are growing up for Peredon's cry! In the United States, he and his sister jumped off among foster families and lived in poverty until their uncle fled from Cuba and lived in Port Chester, New York.
They say that not killing you will strengthen you. This may be true. The problem is that they did not tell you the middle thing. About the timing of the crisis and what is happening. When I grew up with a Christian family, I am constantly told to tell God about the importance of my struggle. This is the reason I quit. This is the story of the way I redoed. I said to my wife that night, or the next day, "I am very pleased that I sent this to her." I took out the cell phone and showed it to her. My last textual conversation with my mother has been raised. The last time I said to her in the conversation is "Thank you! I love you." A few days before I spent, I said to my mother, "I love you," It was.