The Law of Diminishing Intent states:
The longer you wait to do something you should do now, the greater the odds that you will never actually do it. It argues that the further away we get from our original spark, idea, or energy surrounding a goal or plan, the less likely we are to achieve it. Actually, forget about achieving it – as we wait longer and longer, the odds continue to decrease that we will even do anything.
“We intend to take action when an idea strikes us. We intend to do something when the emotion is high. But if we don’t translate that intent into action fairly soon, the urgency starts to dimmish. A month from now, the passion is cold. A year from now, it can’t be found.”
-Jim Rohn
“If you are not doing something with your life, it doesn’t matter how long it is.”
-Unknown
“Knowledge is the only instrument of production that is not subject to diminishing returns.”
-John Maurice Clark
“The measure of success is not the number of people who serve you, but the number of people you serve.”
-Unknown
“I consider the success of my day based on the seeds I sow, not the harvest I reap.”
-Robert Louis Stevenson
“After sowing there is a period of time when it looks like nothing is happening. All the growth is below the surface.”
-Nabi Saleh
“Plans are only good intentions unless they immediately are turned into hard work.”
-Peter Drucker
“Limitations live only in our minds, but if we use our imaginations, our possibilities become limitless.”
-Jamie Paolinette
“Someday is a disease that will take your dreams to the grave with you.”
-Unknown
…every accomplishment starts with the decision to try.