The Magic Word

Jan 16
00:36

2005

Craig Osenbaugh

Craig Osenbaugh

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This magic word has helped ... no, more like millions of people achieve success in one form or another ... history. It makes sense, once you know the ... Edison's name would not

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This magic word has helped thousands,The Magic Word Articles no, more like millions of
people achieve success in one form or another throughout history.
It makes sense, once you know the word.

Thomas Edison's name would not be written in the history books
had he not embraced this word in its physical form. Napolean Hill
would not have blessed us all with his great book "Think and Grow
Rich" had he not embraced this word in its physical form.

You want to know the word? Then read on because if I just tell
you the word it won't have the same effect. If you skip to the
bottom of this article to find out the word, it will not have the
same effect so for your sake, read on.

The word itself is not magic, the magic is what happens when a
person embraces this word in its phyisical form. How do I do
that you ask? First you have to know the word. But for now, back
to Edison.

I use Edison as an example because, well, because he's Thomas
Edison. The great inventor who brought us the Phonograph,
Kinetoscope, Kinetophone and of course the incandescent light
bulb among many other inventions.

I think the fact that he held 1,093 patents helps people lose
sight of the magic word that made him great. You see, while
Edison was a genius, while he was a man with great creativity
and foresight, he could not just magically invent these items.
It took a little something extra... a little magic word to help
him out.

In fact before he could even get the light bulb to work he
realized he needed to invent seven other elements to support it.
Those were:

1) the parallel circuit,
2) a durable light bulb,
3) an improved dynamo,
4) the underground conductor network,
5) the devices for maintaining constant voltage,
6) safety fuses and insulating materials, and
7) light sockets with on-off switches.

Did that stop him? No. Do you know the magic word yet? It is
reported that Edison had around 10,000 failed attempts at creating
a workable incandescent light bulb but did that stop him? No.
Would it have stopped you? That's the question that I think most
people don't stop to ask themselves when reading about Edison. Now
do you know the magic word? If not you can find out simply by
clicking here: http://gotpips.com/articles/magic_word