![]() They are signs of being alive and attempting great things.”– Scott Alexander from ScottRobertAlexander. A reminder to be alert for opportunities, make time to meet and hang around other rhinos, and develop my audacity skills. ![]() Like I needed help being a rhino! But even rhinos need a fresh word of affirmation every now and then. My daughter and daughter-in-law broke out in laughter when they saw me take this book from my carry-on bag. Fight over-caution with rhino audacity and enthusiasm because the worst possible condition to be in life is cool. He stresses the importance of having a rhinoceros faith in God, a rhinoceros love for our Maker, and quotes 1 Corinthians 2:9. But what about sorrow? What about death and tragedy? Spending our lives in a closet is not an option, though very appealing. Using our rhinoceros imagination, we can lower our heads, point our horns at any problem, charge full steam ahead, and tear it to pieces. The other section I found intriguing was on rhino problems. Where else are you going to find help like that at such a price? After all, if he is your partner, he deserves at least 10% of the take, doesn’t he? If he isn’t your partner, sign him on as soon as possible. Give 10% of all the money you make back to God. One of the most intriguing sections was the author’s challenge to be a rhino in work and in finances. He continues, “ Every success book is based on the Bible, only worded differently.” In the chapter entitled “How To Be The World’s Happiest Rhinoceros” the author writes READ THE BIBLE. (pg 70) Then when your week is up, explode out of that mud hole and charge! (pg 33)Īt least twice a year, take off for one week and go lie in a mud hole. (pg 23) Rhinos are happy when they are charging at their goals. (pg 20) TV is not for rhinos…too much of a negative influence. We become the product of three things: the people we associate with, the books we read, and the media we listen to. (pg 13) Live each minute as though you had to pay $10 for it. Rhinoceroses have a natural zeal for living. These are a few of the places I underlined in this little gem, or understood enough to take away: I can relate to a rhinoceros…my maiden name is “Bull.” Charging toward opportunities is what I do…it’s in my dna. Today he speaks around the world encouraging those who wish to make life an adventure. Scott Alexander wrote this little ditty when he was 23 years old back in 1980. Read it and go rhino That’s all there is between you and everything you’ve ever wanted to do or become in your life. I didn’t have the focus to take on a novel, so this book of less than 100 pages was perfect. Tomorrow morning, you could wake up as a full-grown rhinoceros and: Scott Alexander has discovered the REAL secret of success: becoming a rhinoceros. I was getting ready to take a trip and wanted to bring a book on the plane. Charge, put all of your weight and all of your strength into it and charge forward. Don’t be like a lazy cow going back to the same old pasture, be like a rhinoceros and go out and charge. Wake up with a purpose of what to do that day. The only other perissodactyls on earth today are horses, zebras, and donkeys (all belonging to genus Equus), and the strange, pig-like mammals known as tapirs. Rhinoceroses are characterized by their large sizes, quadrupedal postures, and single or double horns on the ends of their snouts-the name rhinoceros is Greek for "nose horn." These horns probably evolved as a sexually selected characteristic-that is, males with bigger, more prominent horns were more successful with females during mating season.Ever gotten your hands on a little book that if you could, you would buy it in bulk and hand out a copy to everyone you know? This is one of those books. Get out of bed in the morning like a rhinoceros, not a sloth. Rhinoceroses are perissodactyls, or odd-toed ungulates, a family of mammals characterized by their herbivorous diets, relatively simple stomachs, and an odd number of toes on their feet (one or three). Habitat: Subharan Africa, Southeast Asia, Indian subcontinentĬonservation Status: Three species are Critically Endangered (Javan, Sumatran, black), one is Vulnerable (Indian), one is Near Threatened (white) Description ![]() Size: 4–15 feet tall, 7–15 feet long, depending on species sondaicos, Dicerorhinus sumatrensisĬommon Name: White, Black, Indian, Javan, Sumatran Scientific Name: Five species are Ceratotherium simum, Diceros bicornis, Rhinoceros unicornis, R.
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