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Office of Fleet Management

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Frontier Communications

 


 

Rick Saldan is a compelling and absorbing motivational speaker and magician.  I have been to five of his Motivational Magic presentations and it is amazing how he keeps our college audiences on the edge of their seats. A highly entertaining performer with great comedy flair. Rich content to increase students' productivity, peak performance and motivation. If you need an outstanding motivational speaker for colleges, Rick is definitely one of the world's greatest speakers and magicians!


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Montclair State University

 


 

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Credit Suisse First Boston

 


 

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Hawaii Five-O, NCIS, Cold Case, Law & Order and The Mentalist.

 


 

Rick Saldan is a wonderful combination of master magician, comic improviser and first class speaker. The audience loved his program, which was music to our ears. If you love celebrity motivational speakers such as Tom Hopkins, Dale Carnegie and Zig Ziglar, then you'll love Rick!

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Burtley Productions, Inc.

 


Rick Saldan is an incredibly talented performer and motivational speaker with great insight. He shares many powerful motivational messages that will enhance your life for the better!

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Inspiration Times Magazine

 

 

Using Excuses to Avoid Fun
Author: Ted Schredd

Excuses stop you from having more fun, more love and more good times in your life. That’s the only thing they do. We’re presented with unlimited opportunities to do, see and experience life. Go here, go there, go everywhere. The problem is we just can’t do everything so we say no to plenty of potential joy.

Here are the most popular fun-avoiding excuses:

Excuse Number One: I’m too old for that. You are never too old to enjoy anything; you will just enjoy different things. Besides, when exactly does “too old” take place? At twenty, thirty, forty, fifty, sixty, seventy? There are seventy-year-old triathletes, skydivers, skiers, university students and mountain climbers. Look, there are senior citizens kicking ass all over the planet. Don’t let your ass be on the receiving end of those kicks. You are only too old when you’re dead.

Excuse Number Two: My health is no good so I’m unable to participate. Well, tell that to cancer survivor Lance Armstrong after he won the Tour de France. Tell that to Rick Hansen, who pushed his wheelchair around the world. If you stop living because of your perceived restrictions, you are the only loser. Fun people say regardless of what ails me I am going to give it a go. They don’t believe physical ailments or disabilities will hold them back.

Excuse Number Three: I’ve never tried . . . walking on hot coals, Argentinian tango, speaking Norwegian, riding a camel or acting on stage and I don’t want to look stupid trying something I’ve never done before. Every minute of every day, somebody, somewhere is doing something they’ve never done before, just once. Oddly enough, it’s the only way to try something new.

Excuse Number Four: I already tried that and I didn’t enjoy myself. When you were a child learning to walk, did you quit because it didn’t work out the first few times you tried it? Or do you still crawl everywhere you travel? If you’ve given something a good effort and you still hate it, dust yourself off and move on to the next challenge.

Excuse Number Five: I don’t have the time. Everybody has the same amount of time. It’s just how people use it. If you say you have no time for fun, then you just haven’t made fun a priority.

Excuse Number Six: It costs too much. There are plenty of activities that cost next to nothing: a picnic at the park, a walk by a lake, a romp at the playground or even a romp in the sack. If you really have your heart set on an expensive activity, all you have to do is ask what will it take for this to happen? Could you get a part-time job, trade some service you can perform with someone else, borrow the equipment, buy the equipment second-hand? Fun people don’t shut down a possibility because it’s too expensive. Instead of saying “no” they just ask “how?”

Excuse Number Seven: I won’t know anybody. You don’t know anybody, so you stay home, which helps you to solidify your belief that you don’t know anybody. Fun practitioners are excited to meet new people. Maybe they can add to their list of playmates. The only way you get to know people is to get to know people.

Excuse Number Eight: It’s too dangerous. Its probably ten times more dangerous crossing the street or driving to work than most adventure activities ever could be. If you do a little research, get some instruction and get the proper safety equipment – you’ll be fine.

Excuse nine through twenty-six: Life is supposed to be a struggle. That’s childish. My dog wouldn’t approve. I have to do it the old way. I’m too intelligent and mature to be having fun. My head is too big. But the animals will get me. You need special training for that. They don’t sell pork there. I can’t play with them because they’re a different religion. I would but I’m just too fat. I’m too scared. I smell. The weather is always bad. If only I had a million dollars, then I could have some fun. I don’t have the right clothes. I might hurt myself. Someone might laugh at me. Or whatever other excuse works for you.

Excuses seem perfectly valid in the eyes of those who create them, but in reality they’re ridiculous. When you use excuses, you repel the very fun people and situations that can bring you happiness. If you truly believe you’re too old, what do you think will happen? You’re just going to get older and older. If you’ve decided you don’t want to feel stupid trying a new activity, then why bother trying it in the first place, right?

Eventually your excuses will solidify into beliefs and, unfortunately, changing your beliefs is a little more challenging. Best to nip this situation in the bud before the excuses harden into beliefs. So how the heck does one stop this chronic excuse thing?

Begin by admitting the truth-you are responsible for the level of fun in your life. Everything that is around you-your house, your lovers, your job and your circumstances-is a direct result of you and the way you think. So many people look outside themselves to blame or excuse themselves from their reality, but it takes courage for people to accept responsibility.

Avoiding responsibility by making excuses takes away your personal power and leaves you open to further anxieties. Blaming somebody or some entity will NEVER solve the problem. Blame the world, blame the government, blame the farmers, blame the little goat at the zoo-it’s all their fault. Anything, any statement to deflect the real root of the problem. To think that other people or the government are responsible for fixing your life is silly. It only prolongs the inevitable fact that only you can make your life great, fun and delicious.

The great leaders in history were always able to take responsibility. Unfortunately, there have not been that many great leaders. Most leaders these days just deny and deflect responsibility. They use a political sleight of hand to retain their power and put the focus somewhere else. It was the Republicans, the Democrats, the economy, the weather, the local government, the FBI, the police, the whites, the blacks and on and on. We have very few responsible role models in our political system. It seems as if the only people in our society who think they don’t need to take responsibility are the politicians and the celebrities.

Our culture rewards lack of responsibility. Do you remember the case of the “I drank hot coffee and I’m suing McDonald’s”? Somebody went to McDonald’s, ordered a coffee, drank it and found it was too hot. So they decided to sue McDonald’s. Isn’t coffee supposed to be hot?

Here’s another example. A woman sued Universal Studios because, she said, the theme park Halloween Horror Nights Haunted House was too scary for her and caused her emotional distress. In a different pitiful example of responsibility avoidance, the family of a man who drowned on a fishing trip sued the Weather Channel for ten million dollars claiming that the man was tricked by the station’s storm-free forecast. At Disneyland, a man drove into his fiancée on the bumper car ride. The injured woman then sued Disneyland and her own fiancée. OK, just one more. Some people have a party. Guests come over and drink. The hosts offer a free cab ride but the drunken visitor refuses. Mr. Party Pants decides to drive, crashes his car, blames the hosts and sues.

Yes, there are plenty of situations where companies or individuals need to be punished for unacceptable behavior. But the coffee is too hot? The Halloween night is too scary? The weather forecast is wrong? The bumper cars are too bumpery? Oh my God, that’s terrible. You must get a lawyer and sue. The lawyers and litigants in these frivolous lawsuits should be given a slap upside the head and a stupid ticket. I don’t understand why they haven’t tried to sue God for making the cliffs too cliffy and the tornadoes too twisty. The media helps out by highlighting these stories of ridiculous litigation. Their barrage of “blame experts” can find fault with anyone and anything. We being the information sponges that we are believe them word for word. Then it sets off a frenzy of copycat litigation. If they can sue over hot coffee, what could I sue for? When people are truly responsible, they can’t admit it for fear of being sued. If we can’t take responsibility for drinking coffee that’s too hot for us, then how can we ever take responsibility for our own happiness?

You have the choice to take responsibility for your life. You are wherever you are in this moment in your life because you brought yourself there. Evaluate your job, your friends, your lovers or lack of, where you have been and where you are going. You created it all. Good or bad, you are responsible. Then imagine where you would like to go. Then think of all the excuses you have used in the past. Taking responsibility allows you the freedom to grow. No excuse can ever justify you not discovering, exploring, adventuring, laughing and enjoying your life. There are more than enough roadblocks to happiness in your life. Why ensure that it won’t happen with the habitual use of excuses?







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Author Ted Schredd has been a fun researcher for the past fifteen years. Ted wrote "Gramma Knows the F Word"- How adults can discover more fun in their life - to inspire people to enjoy their lives. Available at www.amazon.com - Please come and visit www.discoverfun.com

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