How to make your dream come true...!

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WHEN YOU HAVE DREAM THEN MAKE YOUR DREAM COME TRUE, WITHOUT DREAM CANT REACH THE SUCCESS.

EVERY ONE HAS THERE DREAM BUT FEW WILL FULLFILL THE DREAMS.

WHEN YOU HAVE DREAM TO REACH THE TOP OF SUCCESS THEN YOU NEED TO KNOW HOW MUCH ONE NEED TO

WORK HARD FOR REACHING THE DESTINY...

FEW EXAMPLES HOW TO MAKE YOUR DREAM COME TRUE...


Replies (8)

https://www.anujpuri.com/1214066381685_Kapil-1983-cricket-world-cup%5B1%5D.JPG

 

https://resources.sportingo.com/gallery/Getty-Images/Cricket/Kapil-Dev_275x189.jpg

https://www.timescontent.com/tss/photos/preview/9006/Victorious%201983%20World%20Cup%20Indian%20cricket%20team.jpg

 

 

INDIA DREAM OF WORLD CUP AND WE WON IN 1983, ITS WAS GREAT ACHIEVEMENT BY KAPIL AND TEAM..STILL WE CANT FORGET THIS GREAT SUCCESS WHICH GO TO INDIA..


HATS OF TO THEM..

 

 

 

 

 

 

nice one sir   - -- - --- --

HEY 16 YEAR OLD GUY HAD DREAM TO ENTER CRICKET WORLD TO MAKE A HISTORY..

HE ENTERED TO CRICKET  WORLD AND GONE THROUGH LOT OF STRUGGLE, STILL HE PLAYED AND NOW HE BECAME TOP WORLD NO 1 BATSMAN OF INDIAN CRICKET TEAM.

ITS NONE OTHER THEN OUR

MR.SACHIN TENDULKAR.

Sachin Tendulkar Pictures


Sachin's Profile

Born in Mumbai (formerly Bombay) into a middle class family, Tendulkar was named after his family's favorite music director Sachin Dev Burman. He went to Sharadashram Vidyamandir School where he started his cricketing career. When in school he was involved in a mammoth 664 run partnership in a Harris Shield game with friend and International team mate Vinod Kambli, and in 1988/89 scored 100 not out in his first first-class match, for Bombay against Gujarat. Aged 15 years 232 days, he was by some distance the youngest player to score a century on debut.
He played his first international match against Pakistan in Karachi facing up to the likes of Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis. He scored just 15 runs and was bowled by Waqar Younis, who also made his debut in that match. It was an innings very different from how the rest of his career went. He followed it up with his maiden Test fifty a few days later at Faisalabad. However he could not get a century in that series. His One-day International (ODI) debut on December 18 was equally disappointing where he was dismissed without scoring a run again by Waqar Younis. The series was followed by a non-descriptt tour of New Zealand in which he fell for 88 in a Test match, thus missing the chance to be the youngest player to score a Test hundred. In the tour of England in 1990 he scored his maiden Test century but the other scores were not remarkable. It was in the 1991/1992 tour of Australia that he made his mark as a remarkable batsman. He has been man of the match 11 times in Test matches and Man of the Series twice, both times in the Border-Gavaskar Trophy against Australia.
His maiden ODI century came on September 9, 1994 against Australia in Sri Lanka at Colombo.
He was named by Wisden as one of the Cricketers of the Year 1997 which was the first calendar year in which he scored a 1000 Test runs. He repeated the feat in 1999, 2001 and 2002.

He seems to play his best cricket against the best teams, however he has been criticized for not leading India to more Test match victories away from home. However, for a good part of his career, the Indian team was not very competitive and he was the only redeeming quality about it. There were times where he has brought India to the verge of victory only to be let down by his teammates.
Sachin's batting in ODIs really took off after he was invited to open the innings at Auckland against New Zealand in 1994[1] after he had played nearly 70 matches. At the Auckland ODI Tendulkar slammed the ball all around the stadium with a firepower that was not seen in cricket in those days. He went on to make 82 runs in 49 balls. Tendulkar's considerably better performance as an opener dawned upon everyone else. He was to stay as India's opener for long time after that. His first hundred came later that year against Australia in Colombo. He now scores a century every six innings that he plays.
Tendulkar has a shrewd cricketing brain and has a good arm from the outfield. Sachin's record as captain, however, has not been as outstanding as his batting performance. His contribution to the game and his role in attracting a following to the game goes beyond his record. His game is characterized by style, aggression and often dazzling brilliance. Sachin has earned respect from fans and cricketers around the world due to his down-to-earth nature which he maintains despite being treated as a national icon and a demi-god of sorts.
Tendulkar had an excellent fitness record but in 1999 he suffered a career-threatening back injury. This was followed by another fitness problem. Tendulkar had to miss out on two tournaments in as he was recovering from tennis elbow. He was struggling to be fit for the home Test series against Australia. However, he overcame the injury, and displayed proof of it in fine fashion scoring a double hundred against Bangladesh.

 

https://www.sachin-tendulkar.cricket.deepthi.com/sachin-profile.html

Business Gurus

These businessmen and the companies they founded are today known around the world, but as these stories show, their beginnings weren't always smooth.

  1. Henry Ford: While Ford is today known for his innovative assembly line and American-made cars, he wasn't an instant success. In fact, his early businesses failed and left him broke five time before he founded the successful Ford Motor Company.

  2. R. H. Macy: Most people are familiar with this large department store chain, but Macy didn't always have it easy. Macy started seven failed business before finally hitting big with his store in New York City.

  3. F. W. Woolworth: Some may not know this name today, but Woolworth was once one of the biggest names in department stores in the U.S. Before starting his own business, young Woolworth worked at a dry goods store and was not allowed to wait on customers because his boss said he lacked the sense needed to do so.

  4. Soichiro Honda: The billion-dollar business that is Honda began with a series of failures and fortunate turns of luck. Honda was turned down by Toyota Motor Corporation for a job after interviewing for a job as an engineer, leaving him jobless for quite some time. He started making scooters of his own at home, and spurred on by his neighbors, finally started his own business.

  5. Akio Morita: You may not have heard of Morita but you've undoubtedly heard of his company, Sony. Sony's first product was a rice cooker that unfortunately didn't cook rice so much as burn it, selling less than 100 units. This first setback didn't stop Morita and his partners as they pushed forward to create a multi-billion dollar company.

  6. Bill Gates: Gates didn't seem like a shoe-in for success after dropping out of Harvard and starting a failed first business with Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen called Traf-O-Data. While this early idea didn't work, Gates' later work did, creating the global empire that is Microsoft.

  7. Harland David Sanders: Perhaps better known as Colonel Sanders of Kentucky Fried Chicken fame, Sanders had a hard time selling his chicken at first. In fact, his famous secret chicken recipe was rejected 1,009 times before a restaurant accepted it.

  8. Walt Disney: Today Disney rakes in billions from merchandise, movies and theme parks around the world, but Walt Disney himself had a bit of a rough start. He was fired by a newspaper editor because, "he lacked imagination and had no good ideas." After that, Disney started a number of businesses that didn't last too long and ended with bankruptcy and failure. He kept plugging along, however, and eventually found a recipe for success that worked.

Scientists and Thinkers

These people are often regarded as some of the greatest minds of our century, but they often had to face great obstacles, the ridicule of their peers and the animosity of society.

  1. Albert Einstein: Most of us take Einstein's name as synonymous with genius, but he didn't always show such promise. Einstein did not speak until he was four and did not read until he was seven, causing his teachers and parents to think he was mentally handicapped, slow and anti-social. Eventually, he was expelled from school and was refused admittance to the Zurich Polytechnic School. It might have taken him a bit longer, but most people would agree that he caught on pretty well in the end, winning the Nobel Prize and changing the face of modern physics.

  2. Charles Darwin: In his early years, Darwin gave up on having a medical career and was often chastised by his father for being lazy and too dreamy. Darwin himself wrote, "I was considered by all my masters and my father, a very ordinary boy, rather below the common standard of intellect." Perhaps they judged too soon, as Darwin today is well-known for his scientific studies.

  3. Robert Goddard: Goddard today is hailed for his research and experimentation with liquid-fueled rockets, but during his lifetime his ideas were often rejected and mocked by his scientific peers who thought they were outrageous and impossible. Today rockets and space travel don't seem far-fetched at all, due largely in part to the work of this scientist who worked against the feelings of the time.

  4. Isaac Newton: Newton was undoubtedly a genius when it came to math, but he had some failings early on. He never did particularly well in school and when put in charge of running the family farm, he failed miserably, so poorly in fact that an uncle took charge and sent him off to Cambridge where he finally blossomed into the scholar we know today.

  5. Socrates: Despite leaving no written records behind, Socrates is regarded as one of the greatest philosophers of the Classical era. Because of his new ideas, in his own time he was called "an immoral corrupter of youth" and was sentenced to death. Socrates didn't let this stop him and kept right on, teaching up until he was forced to poison himself.

  6. Robert Sternberg: This big name in psychology received a C in his first college introductory psychology class with his teacher telling him that, "there was already a famous Sternberg in psychology and it was obvious there would not be another." Sternberg showed him, however, graduating from Stanford with exceptional distinction in psychology, summa cum laude, and Phi Beta Kappa and eventually becoming the President of the American Psychological Association.

Originally posted by : RADHEKRISHNA0001

nice one sir

very well said ...sir

https://www.onlinecollege.org/2010/02/16/50-famously-successful-people-who-failed-at-first/

 

 

EVERY ONE HAS DREAM TO BECOME SOMETHING BUT ONLY FEW WILL MAKE THERE DREAM FULLFILL..

WE SHOULD KNOW HOW THEY WORKED HARD FOR MAKING DREAM COME TRUE.

EVERY ONE HAS THERE OWN DREAM, EVEN I HAVE DREAM TO BE TOP SUCCESSFUL PERSON OF THE WORLD. ONLY DREAM WILL NOT HELP TO REACH THERE, SHOULD KNOW HOW MUCH WE NEED TO WORK HARD TO FULLFILL OUR DREAM..


SO DREAM IS 1 STEP, REST IN YOUR HAND HOW REACH SUCCESS AND MAKING DREA TRUE..

NO SHORTCUT FOR SUCCESS JUST WORK HARD AND NEVER LOOSE YOUR HOPES..NEVER SAY I QUIT, IF YOU SAY THAN YOUR DREAM WILL GET SHATTERED..


DREAM AND HAVE SUCCESSFULL LIFE...


BEST OF LUCK



CCI Pro

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