Pull Yourself Up By Your Bootstraps

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Pull Yourself up by Your Bootstraps

Many self-help books promise a magical leap from rags to riches, but this book is different. Evelyn Cross went from being a homeless single mother to a professional woman steeped in success. Today, she owns a home, drives a new car, and has all the trappings of a put-together woman. In this book, she emphasizes the value of hard work, noting that we’re not all born with a special gift—and we’re not all destined to become celebrities, sports heroes, or business tycoons. With hard work, however, you can: • make the most of the cards you’re dealt; • create a plan to achieve goals; • identify the work you want to do; • spend your money wisely. You can act today to overcome obstacles and live a happy, healthy productive life. You can be a success! Make smart decisions, stop feeling sorry for yourself, and walk down a path that leads to success with the wisdom in Pull Yourself Up by Your Bootstraps.
How to Pull Your Self up by Your Bootstraps, When You Have No Boots

Author: Winston T. Hatch
language: en
Publisher: Xlibris Corporation
Release Date: 2019-11-13
As I am writing this I realize some of the stories are a little fare out, might be difficult to believer, but I assure you they are all true, and I lived them. I used only first names to protect both the guilty, and innocent. I also vaguely de-scribed locations, and companies for the same reasons. I’m about to reach my 86th birthday, have been retired for over 20 years, and I doubt if anyone men-tioned is still alive. I started this book at the encouragement, and support of my Daughter to preserve the life of us old timers, who grew up in a world far different from what we have now. The amount of news, and information I am exposed to in one day now is about equal to what I was exposed to in a year when I was 8 years old, and World War 2 started. My story is not unique, it is only one of many, some far more interesting, and they’re disappearing rapidly as we pass on. I encourage these old timers to write them down or record them. But be prepared for as you write your life stories your going to almost relive them, your going to have time to think about them, when at the time you didn’t. Your views, and values may have change with time, and are now different. As I look back over my life I have had many successes, and failures. Your failures you remember, they hang around your neck forever, and influ-ence your life without you being aware of it. Your successes you soon forget, and assume that’s the way life’s supposed to be. The only successes I can take pride in is those of my Children, both of them have been immensely successful-ly, they both have traveled, and worked throughout the world. I and my Wife Pat have been blessed. I hope you enjoyed my life.
"Yes We Can"

As President Barack Obama outlined his promise for change during the presidential campaign, he made effective use of proverbs and proverbial phrases, and invented many quotable epithets that have all the makings of future proverbs. This book examines how Obama's natural and authentic reliance on traditional metaphors enhances his impressive rhetoric, rather than reducing it to mere sound bites. Proverbs, with their often colorful metaphors, add expressiveness and emotion to his communications, giving people the opportunity to follow his pragmatic or philosophical arguments through common language. No matter the subject, Obama's prose contains metaphorical language that makes his rhetoric and oratory universally accessible. This book contains detailed analyses of the proverbial rhetoric in Obama's books Dreams from My Father (1995) and The Audacity of Hope (2006). A section looks at his proverbial language in 229 speeches, news conferences, interviews, and radio addresses, and the final section presents in-depth studies of his seven most significant addresses. It includes a comprehensive contextualized index of 1714 proverbial texts found within the writings and speeches from Obama's political beginnings to his memorable inaugural address.