Life Without Limits

Life Without Limits

Personal Growth is a massive business in the United States.  In fact American adults spend over $15 Billion per year trying to replace limiting beliefs and self-doubt and build self-confidence and self-esteem and to live their lives to its fullest.

Everyone wants to be successful—and teenagers are no exception.

Though many teens are urged to get good grades, many feel lost when it comes to setting powerful goals and creating the life they really want.  Life Without Limits will help your teenager determine what they really want their life to look like and develop the courage to make it really happen.

With the Life Without Limits Program, it doesn’t matter if your teenagers goal is to become a better student or athlete, start a business, or simply find guidance and direction, the lessons and activities in this program always work, if they are willing to take the action.

A Life Without Limits will show you and your teenager how to:

•    Change the outcome of any event by changing their response to it
•    Build confidence and self-esteem to become unstoppable
•    Set goals that will energize their life and shape their future
•    Break through fear to accomplish what they really want
•    Reject rejection and persevere until they succeed
•    Exceed expectations and achieve outstanding results

With the right tools, anyone can be successful. This program will give your teenager the courage and the heart to get started and get ahead.

A powerful message to adults:

Notes on an Unhurried Journey

By Professor T. Ripaldi

When we adults think of children there is a simple truth, which we ignore:  childhood is not preparation for life, childhood is life.  A child isn’t getting ready to live, a child is living.  The child is constantly confronted with the nagging question “What are you going to be?”  Courageous would be the youngster who, looking the adult squarely in the face, would say “I’m not going to be anything, I already am.”  We adults would be shocked by such an insolent remark for we have forgotten, if indeed we ever knew, that a child is an active participant and contributing member of society from the time he is born.  Childhood isn’t a time when he is molded into a human who will then live; he is a human who is living life.  No child will miss the zest and joy of living unless these are denied him by adults who have convinced themselves that childhood is a period of preparation.

How much heartache we would save ourselves if we would recognize the child as a partner with adults in the process of living, rather than always viewing him as an apprentice.  How much we would teach each other…adults with the experience and children with the freshness.  How full both our lives could be.  A little child may not lead us, but at least we ought to discuss with him for, after all, life is his or her journey, too.


COMING SOON…