Tony Robbins Quotes.

Trade your expectations for appreciation and the world changes instantly.
Life is a gift, and it offers us the privilege, opportunity, and responsibility to give something back by becoming more.
The secret of success is learning how to use pain and pleasure instead of having pain and pleasure use you. If you do that, you’re in control of your life. If you don’t, life controls you.
The only limit to your impact is your imagination and commitment.
One reason so few of us achieve what we truly want is that we never direct our focus; we never concentrate our power. Most people dabble their way through life, never deciding to master anything in particular.
The meeting of preparation with opportunity generates the offspring we call luck.
If you want to be successful, find someone who has achieved the results you want and copy what they do and you’ll achieve the same results.
To effectively communicate, we must realize that we are all different in the way we perceive the world and use this understanding as a guide to our communication with others.
If you talk about it, it’s a dream, if you envision it, it’s possible, but if you schedule it, it’s real.
Want to learn to eat a lot? Here it is: Eat a little. That way, you will be around long enough to eat a lot.
Most people have no idea of the giant capacity we can immediately command when we focus all of our resources on mastering a single area of our lives.
In life you need either inspiration or desperation.
Change is never a matter of ability, it’s always a matter of motivation.
You see, it’s never the environment; it’s never the events of our lives, but the meaning we attach to the events – how we interpret them – that shapes who we are today and who we’ll become tomorrow.
No matter how many mistakes you make or how slow you progress, you are still way ahead of everyone who isn’t trying.
Repetition is the mother of skill.
What we can or cannot do, what we consider possible or impossible, is rarely a function of our true capability. It is more likely a function of our beliefs about who we are.