Everything that you truly want you already possess within you. You have an abundance of love, compassion, confidence, strength ability, creativity, self-respect and success. You do not have to acquire it, you do not have to search for it but what you have to do is remove the internal barriers and walls that are preventing you from accessing all the wonder that is contained inside of you. You have to let go of self-doubt, you have to let go of Fear. You have to let go of insults and negative comments from other people. You have to let go of a negative self-image. You have to let go of rejection. You have to let go of anger. When you break through these walls you will find all that you are searching for. All that you need is not “out there” it is already residing “in there” in you. I know this is not an easy task I still have many walls that I need to take down, some of which I have put up myself. But life if nothing else is a work in progress, the aim is to keep working at it. Each brick we take down reveals more and more of what we are looking for. Keep at it and never give up because you already have all that you will ever need. Have a great and confident day. Lots of love and positivity my Warriors.
A black swan event is an incident that occurs randomly and unexpectedly and has wide-spread ramifications. The event is usually followed with reflection and a flawed rationalization that it was inevitable. The phrase illustrates the frailty of inductive reasoning and the danger of making sweeping generalizations from limited observations. The term came from the idea that if a man saw a thousand swans and they were all white, he might logically conclude that all swans are white. The flaw in his logic is that even when the premises are true, the conclusion can still be false. In other words, just because the man has never seen a black swan, it does not mean they do not exist. As Dutch explorers discovered in 1697, black swans are simply outliers -- rare birds, unknown to Europeans until Willem de Vlamingh and his crew visited Australia. Statistician Nassim Nicholas Taleb uses the phrase black swan as a metaphor for how humans deal with unpredictable events in his 2007...
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