10 Tips to Transform Your Life

By John R. Barker


Beliefs create potential. Potential enables action. Action produces results. Transformation is the process of becoming, or recognizing we already are, whom we desire to be. Embodying these following ten points will transform your life and create whatever you desire.


1. Desire


Desire is greater than want. Desire is an intention. Desire is a burning need. You must be willing to surrender yourself to your passion; to become vulnerable enough to merge with your new creation as an act of love and faith.


2. Idea


We are all an idea away from transformation. In order to transform, we must be absolutely clear what it is we desire to transform our Self into.


3. Assume the Identity


We are all actors playing the role we know best - our Self; or more accurately, who we think our Self to be. We naturally assume different identities in different company, on different occasions. Create your dream role and act it out.


4. Feel Yourself Transformed


Transformation is not a thought process; it is a feeling.


5. Transformation is a Spiritual Experience


Transformation is an act of creation, which cannot be intellectualized. It is a feeling, like riding a bike or being in love which we cannot forget - or capture with words. Transformation is a feeling that is with us the rest of our life.


6. Assume a Higher Concept of Yourself


One can be no greater than their imagination allows them to be. You are nothing more - or less - than who you feel yourself to be.


7. Stop Spending, Start Investing


This includes not only money, but also our time and our thoughts. Every thought is an investment in your future. Invest wisely. Invest consistently.


8. Narrow Your Focus


One cannot reach their destination by attempting to travel more than one road simultaneously. One road. One purpose. One mission.


9. Be Unreasonable


Progress occurs when we set convention aside and risk being foolish in its eyes.


10. Abandon


What You Belief Yourself to Be One must be willing to leave behind who they are in order to become who they want to be. Inspired by the works of the late Goddard Neville.