WHY DO POSITIVE
THINKERS WIN?
PREVIEW THE BOOK BELOW

Hi,
Ken Bossone here.
In my book you'll
discover the secret three-word motto and finally learn how to
improve your life and always meet your goals!
You can review the index and a sample chapter
from the book below:
Index
|
Chapter
1
|
The
Positive Thinker Sees the
Invisible...
|
page 1
|
|
Chapter
2
|
Dare To
Risk
|
page 21
|
|
Chapter
3
|
The
Price the Positive Thinker Is Willing To
Pay
|
page 34
|
|
Chapter
4
|
You Do
Not Have To Be A Victim Of Your
Circumstances
|
page 53
|
|
Chapter
5
|
Be
Persistent As A Squirrel
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page 63
|
|
Chapter
6
|
Positive
Thinkers Are Happy and Have A Great Sense of
Humor
|
page 76
|
|
Chapter
7
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Don't Be
Satisfied With Average
|
page
101
|
|
Chapter
8
|
I
Complained Because I Had No Shoes, Until I Met
a Man With No Feet
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page
114
|
|
Chapter
9
|
The
Great Come Backs
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page
136
|
|
Chapter
10
|
Ordinary
People Can Become
Extraordinary
|
page
152
|
|
Chapter
11
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Don't
Itch For Something Your Are Not Willing To
Scratch For
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page
176
|
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Chapter
12
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Your
Faith in Yourself Is Your Real
Attitude
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page
190
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Chapter
13
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Who Is
The Best?
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page
205
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Chapter
14
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Are
Women Better Positive Thinkers Than
Men?
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page
219
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Chapter
15
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Positive
Thinking, Nutrition, and Faith Improve Your
Health
|
page
242
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|
Chapter
16
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Mind
Over Matter
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page
270
|
|
Chapter
17
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The
Positive Thinker Puts It All
Together
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page
289
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You'll read about members
like Mark McGwire, Dr. Joyce Brothers, Zig Ziglar and Lance
Armstrong and how they achieved success by changing their
thoughts.
There are club members you
may not have heard of, but have inspiring stories of how they
succeed every day in life and how you can too.
For example, in Chapter 1,
I tell about how Larry McPhail, daring manager of the
Cincinatti Reds actually launched night baseball, against all
advice and recommendations. This positive thinker made it
possible for millions of people to attend baseball games after
work and the rest is history.
I also share the wisdom
and encouragement handed down from many positive thinkers
like T.S. Elliot who said ""Only those who risk going too
far can possibly find out how far one can go."
Dr. Norman Vincent Peale,
the father of the positive thinking movement. In Chapter
2 he is quoted as saying "Problems constitute a sign of life;
the more problems you have the more alive you are."
And he's right. If
everything in life was without problems, what challenges would
we have? If there are no challenges, it's because there
is no opportunity.
To help you learn how to
overcome your challenges, I also left room for writing
important thoughts that occur as you read the book and what
challenges you are experiencing. By documenting the
challenge, you can begin to work on the solution.
My 14th Chapter is one of
my favorites because it begs the age old question about the
difference between the way men and women think. You'll
find a preview below.

Get the book and the club membership for just
$47.99! You can become master of your own destiny. Get
included in the ranks of such notables as Mark McGwire,
the late Dr. Norman Vincent Peale, and Oprah, just a few of
our Positive Thinkers Club members!
What Does Membership Mean?
1. NO Club Meetings! There is no work to
becoming a member of the Positive Thinkers Club.
2. It's more of a statement you make that you
intend to live a positive life, and have the credentials to
prove it!
3. You get the regular bi-weekly newsletter
with inspirational stories, humor to lighten your day and
tips for successful and positive living.
4. Membership comes with a hand signed copy by
the author of "Why Do Positive Thinkers Win",
membership card, certificate suitable for framing listing
YOU along with well known celebrities and positive thinkers
plus the bonus digital book 'How To Be Happy and Change The
World'.
Get Your Book And Become An
Elite Member Of The Positive Thinkers Club
Now!
I hope you will take the
opportunity to read my book for yourself and find out how you
can change your life by changing your thinking. It's
waiting for you as part of the membership in the World Positive
Thinkers Club.
If you'd rather just buy the book, that's ok
too! Either way, you'll get the tools and strategies you
need to achieve a more positive, healthy and happy life.
Or Just Buy The
Book!
Get The Book Here for just $24.95!
Positive
Regards,
Ken Bossone
Author
'Why Do Positive Thinkers
Win'
Sample Portion of Chapter
14
-Are Women Better Positive Thinkers Than Men?-
“The world and all things in it are valuable; but the most
valuable of all is a virtuous woman.” -Mohammed-
During my research for this book I discovered many interesting
facts that surprised and delighted me. At first I had a hard
time believing these definitive pieces of information, but as I
continued to research, and look back on personal experiences it
started to make sense. Of course when I was much younger it
would not have made sense, but my research has been as a more
mature and more pragmatic person.
I was raised in an era where the women stayed home and took
care of the home and family. My grandmother always stayed home,
as most women did. She would be up early to make breakfast for
the men in her family and then after they went off to work, she
did the housework. She then prepared supper, as almost
everything in that day and age was homemade and therefore took
a while to prepare and cook. To this day I can visualize her
slaving over a hot stove in the summertime, with beads of
perspiration pouring down her lovely face. During a brief
recess, she would sit and crochet beautiful chair arm guards or
a tablecloth. She was so methodical and skillful, and as I
think of her now, she was mostly stoic. She always had supper
ready for the family on time and she and only she would clean
up, unless my Uncle Frank was there to help. How insignificant
I used to think her chores were. But now as I think about it,
my grandmother and all women were and are the glue that keeps
the family strong and bonded.
Women, as sensible men have happily discovered, are and have
always been more than housekeepers and cooks. They are and have
always been the shining lamp that brightens a home or place of
business. Women are the oil that keeps the machinery running.
And in a majority of cases these beautiful Positive Thinkers
are the machinery itself. They have been taken advantage of,
and thank God they now have a bigger say pertaining to policies
in not only business, but government as well. Women have come a
long way in this country since President Grover Cleveland in
1905 emphatically stated, “Sensible and intelligent women do
not want to vote.”
I do not want to expound on the inequities women have faced
throughout history, because for the most part they have more
than made up for them. There are still cases, however, like the
taliban, (cap purposely left out), in Afghanistan, where women
were and are still treated as lower class citizens. We could do
several chapters on that subject, but this chapter is to
expound on the successes and the way women have made a
difference and helped shape history. More than anything, I
prefer to stay focused on the positive, because that is what
this book is supposed to be about.
I personally, in my years of researching for this book, have
come to the conclusion that women are God's beautiful gift to
men, and we should do all we can to appreciate that gift. Now
that statement might ruffle a few feathers on both sides, but I
am entitled to my opinion too. My plan here is not to keep the
fires of controversy burning, but rather report the facts as I
happily discovered them. I have formed my personal opinion as
to who is the better Positive Thinker, but I will let you
figure that out. Let me add though, that in my opinion after
all my research, women have overcome more barriers than men
ever dreamed of facing.
I personally love to pamper my lady and treat her as a Princess
on occasion. I have been known to bring my lady breakfast in
bed and treat her to half hour-long back and foot rubs. For me,
she is a beautiful creature to behold and I love to tease women
and harmlessly flirt with them. After all, I am a Libra!
While my wife and I were not destined to stay together, I feel
that she is a very competent lady. We did not get along very
well, because unfortunately our opinions and personalities
clashed, and she thought pampering was silly, but to this day I
will defend the fact, that she is, in my opinion, the best
nurse ever born. She is the most devoted person to a profession
I have ever met. I say that even though I have not seen her for
over seven years. But, I know she would not change. She is a
gracious hostess as well and always believed her children
deserved the best. She is a perfectionist, and in her
profession that is extremely important, because she works in
life and death situations. One little mistake can cost a life.
She is typical of women Positive Thinkers. They know what they
want and believe in themselves.
Women played a very important part in the Civil war, not as
combatants, but as spies and nurses. Let me go one step
further. During the American Civil War, the Surgeon General of
the Union Army was a very talented, resourceful, well-respected
doctor. It was discovered to the absolute amazement of
everybody concerned that the Surgeon General turned out to be a
woman, during “his” autopsy.
The following was stated about the following pertaining to the
civil war: “In some of the more recent studies of the subject
it has been strongly suggested that the prime reason for the
defeat of the Confederacy was a decline in, or loss of, the
will to fight. There is certain merit in the point, though the
more remarkable fact, considering the course of the conflict,
is that the will to fight remained so strong so long.”
“For that, the women of the confederacy were in large measure
responsible. Not every woman could be classed as a “heroine of
Dixie,” but it was commonly observed at the time by friend and
foe alike, and has repeatedly noted since, that among the women
of the South that the spirit of resistance flamed highest. The
harder part of war is the woman’s part.”
“Though their Southern patriotism was intense, for the women
devotion to the family came first-always--and none of them
would knowingly and willingly have chosen a course of war that
reversed this order of devotion. At the very start-just after
the Act of Secession was passed-a woman of South Carolina
stated, “What do I care for patriotism? My husband is my
country. What is my country to me if he be killed?” “As they
faced the grim reality of a long and bitter struggle, this came
more and more the secret or avowed question of their deeply
troubled hearts.”
During the Civil War, Southern and Northern women acted as very
competent spies. Many put their lives on the line and some were
captured. Several of these brave women on the side of the
Confederates were the charming Belle Boyd, and the dangerous,
Rose O’Neal Greenhow. For the Union, there was the brilliant
Emma E. Edmonds, who successfully passed herself off as a black
man. The course of the war was changed many times due to the
bravery of these intrepid women.
Every war has its share of women heroes. We can talk about Joan
of Arc, and Florence Nightingale. The list goes on and on.
Throughout history there have been many other women besides
those during our Civil War, who have saved their nation from
disaster or being annihilated. One of these women saved her
nation during the time of Xerxes, who ruled from 486-465 BC
over 127 provinces, stretching from India to Cush. This is a
thrilling story of how Esther saved the Jewish nation when she
put her life on the line and ignored the royal decree. Even
though she was Queen, she could not appear in the presence of
the King without his invitation, yet in order to save her
people she appeared before the King and said, “If my life be
taken so be it.” The King was stunned by her daring and agreed
to listen to her plea. Esther was intelligent enough not to
blurt out what the problem was, but rather invited the King,
and Haman, the possible future destroyer of her race, to a
banquet the next night. She knew she needed to relax the King
and the evil Haman first. The next day the King and Haman went
to dine with Esther, and the King told Esther that he would
grant her request even if it meant giving her half the kingdom.
Even though Esther now “had” Haman, she still acted with
cunning and diplomacy. As a Positive Thinker, Esther knew she
still had to keep herself and the King relaxed before she told
him of the plot to kill her and her people. She also knew she
had to heighten the drama by not telling the King on his first
visit, so she begged him to come with Haman a second time and
she would then make her plea. This naturally aroused the Kings'
curiosity to greater heights and put Haman completely off
guard. [I hope I never tangle with an Esther]. The next night
the King and Haman arrived to a sumptuous feast and after small
talk, Esther then told the King of Haman's plot. The Jewish
nation was saved and the villain Haman went to the gallows,
which ironically was erected by Haman for Esther’s uncle
Mordecai.
I make no apologies for bringing the Bible into this book.
There are millions of Bible believers in this wonderful world,
who can, through historical and scientific evidence, prove the
validity of these stories. There are other great stories about
Biblical women who saved their nations or performed other
heroic or unselfish acts, like the widow, Ruth, who refused to
let her elderly mother-in-law, Naomi, fend for herself. Her
mother-in-law begged Ruth and Orpah not to go with her to her
hometown to support her, but to take care of themselves. Ruth
refused to allow her mother-in-law to fend for herself, and
because of that unselfish act she later became the wife of
Boaz, a wealthy and honorable man.
Ruth was indicative of devotion to another person, and there
are many more stories showing devotion to a cause or a friend
or relative. One in particular is a wife’s devotion to her
husband’s memory. For fifty-seven years Elizabeth worked
tirelessly to clear her husband’s reputation after he lost his
life.
After he died he left her in debt to the tune of thirteen
thousand dollars, because of his poor decisions in the stock
market. Elizabeth was left with several hundred dollars after
the smoke cleared, and she was forced to move to New York to
take a job as a secretary. During her life with her husband she
was the driving force during his sterling career, and while he
wanted to quit the Army and become a businessman, she kept him
on course. Even though she faced hardships (that none of us can
even imagine) while living as an Army wife, she stayed with him
and never complained.
After the fiasco someone had to be the scapegoat and along with
the top Army brass even President Grant accused her husband of
causing the slaughter. But Elizabeth became a writer and
tirelessly worked to clear her husband’s reputation, until
finally after dozens of years President Taft and she unveiled a
statue of her husband sitting on a horse, which stands to this
day in Michigan. This wonderful lady died a few days before her
ninety-first birthday, and even in death she proved her
devotion. On her gravestone it is written, “Wife of George
Armstrong Custer.”
Who was the first real woman hero of the Twentieth Century?
There are many diverse opinions. Amelia Earhart was born on
July 24, 1897, in Atchison, Kansas. During the Great War, she
worked unselfishly as a nurse in Canada and then as a social
worker in Boston. In 1928 she became the first woman to fly
across the Atlantic as a passenger. Amelia opened the door for
women by flying solo across the Atlantic in May of 1932, and in
1935 she completed a solo flight from Hawaii to California. She
was in the forefront of opening commercial aviation for women.
Because of her efforts, airplane passenger companies hired
women as stewardesses to show men how safe it was to fly. After
all, if a woman was not afraid to fly, why should a man be
afraid?
One of the great mysteries of the 1900’s is: what ever became
of Amelia? In 1937, Amelia and her copilot, Commander Fred J.
Noonan, took off from Miami for a flight around the world in a
twin-engine Lockheed. Search teams from the US Navy and Army
searched in vain for her missing plane, which disappeared in
the South Pacific. Was she really a spy for the US government,
hired to spy on the Japanese war preparations? Was she shot
down and killed by the Japanese? Perhaps we will never know
what happened to this brave trailblazer. You might be
interested in reading her husbands biography of her titled,
Soaring Wings, published in 1939.
Throughout this book you have read about the great Babe Ruth,
and I decided this chapter was a good place to write about his
seventeen-year-old, one hundred thirty-pound nemesis, named
Mitchell. One of the greatest promoters in baseball, Joe Engel,
was the president of the Chattanooga Lookouts, and he decided
in 1931, that it was time for Mitchell to help him pull off his
greatest publicity stunt, by having Mitchell pitch in an
exhibition game against the Powerful New York Yankees. The game
took place on April 2, 1931 and Clyde Barfoot started the game
for the Lookouts. The first two batters got hits off him and
the manager of the lookouts, Bert Niehoff, called time and
brought Mitchell in to face the feared Babe Ruth. Babe tipped
his hat to Mitchell and reminded Mitchell that there was a
batter on first base. Babe swung at the first pitch with his
usual enthusiasm and the ball landed in the catcher’s glove.
The next two pitches were balls and the next pitch sailed by
Babe’s swinging bat again. The umpire, Brick Owens, called
strike three on the next pitch, and as the crowd roared Babe
gave an angry look to Brick and sulked to the dugout after
kicking the dirt and tossing his bat in anger. The next batter,
“The Iron Horse,” Lou Gehrig, stepped up to the plate and faced
the same fate.
The Yankees went on to win the game 14-4, but the news from
that day was historical as seventeen-year-old Mitchell was
shown in movie houses all over the country striking out Ruth
and Gehrig. Oh, one small detail I forgot to mention. Mitchell
was none other than Jackie Mitchell, the first woman to sign a
professional baseball contract. Unfortunately, the commissioner
of baseball, Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, voided her contract
banning all women from competing in baseball.
Cosmonaut, Valentina V. Tereshkova, of the former Soviet Union
was the first woman in space from June 16-19, 1963, and so
another barrier was broken by women. When American, Sally Ride,
at age 32 entered space in June 18-24, 1983, she made history
by becoming America’s first woman astronaut-repeating the feat
in 1984.
Throughout history, whenever there was a war, the pictures we
saw on the newspapers and magazines were the faces of men, like
Roosevelt, Eisenhower, Patton, Truman, MacArthur, Omar Bradley,
Marshall, Nimitz, Halsey, Churchill, Westmoreland, George Bush,
George W. Bush, Schwartzcoff, Franks, and many other Generals
and leaders. My personal feeling is that alongside those great
men’s pictures should be pictures of their wives, because
behind every great man it has been proven time and time again
stands a great woman.
In time of war there are never enough men to get the job done.
And some of the jobs are better suited to women, who were
simply better at the job in the first place. But women have
always been held back in the Armed Forces, because the
prevailing feeling in the services was women were only
qualified to do certain jobs, and they did not deserve to be
promoted too often. And so women were left out at time of
promotion. Then two Positive Thinking dynamos, Mary Hallaren,
and Jeanne Holm, came along. Mary was a junior high school
teacher at the time of the Pearl Harbor attack. She had no
doubt (after all her brothers had enlisted) that her duty was
to her country too. This five foot tall dynamo was a
hitchhiker, traveling through Canada, Mexico, Europe and China.
Mary’s confidence and determination was a major factor in her
rapid rise through the ranks, until she was finally promoted to
full Colonel, taking over the new branch, named appropriately,
the Women’s Army Corps (WAC’s). Women struggled in a male
dominated military force, and Mary was a promoter for women’s
rights for a bigger role in the military. Because of Mary’s
efforts, women were eventually integrated into all the branches
of the Military. Right before her ninetieth birthday this
trailblazing, positive thinker was inducted into the National
Women’s Hall of Fame.
Jeanne Holm was living in Oregon and working as a radio
technician for the US Forest Service. Jeanne also felt a need
to help her country; started out as a truck driver in her WAC
career, and eventually was promoted to Captain. She completed
her tour of duty and attended college on the GI Bill, but still
was not sure what her career should be. That all changed, as
she received a letter from the Defense Department asking her if
she would consider duty in the Women’s Armed Services after the
implementation of the integration act. There was no thinking it
over for Jeanne, as she jumped in her car, without much money
to her name. She slept in her car as she drove from one end of
the country to the other. Jeanne was the first woman to attend
the Air Force Command and Staff College. She was a crusader for
women with children in the Air Force, who were forced to be
discharged, and she convinced the powers to be that the Air
force could not make a determination on a woman’s ability to
raise her children. In 1971, Jeanne was promoted to Brigadier
General, and two years later received her second star. Even
after retiring in 1975, Jeanne was asked by President Ford to
instruct the Justice department on issues that discriminated
against women. And finally, Jeanne was instrumental in changing
the attitudes and behaviors on sexual harassment. A former
woman truck driver took on a man’s world and came out a star
with two additional stars on each shoulder. Jeanne and Mary
knew the three-word motto.
-Chapter continued in book-
Yes, send me a copy along with my membership
in the Positive Thinkers Club
About the Author
Ken Bossone is president of the World
Positive Thinkers Club, which includes over 500 celebrities of
the sports and business world. Members include Jesse
Epps-President of National Union of American Families, Donovan
McNabb, Bill Belichick, Brian Westbrook, Andy Reid, Tom Brady,
Lance Armstrong, Barry Bonds, Mrs. Ruth Stafford Peale, and the
late Dr. Norman Vincent Peale, and the late Margaret Gorman
(the first Miss America). Cal Ripkin, Jr. is also a card
carrying member. President Bush, Lance Armstrong, Bill
Belichick, Mrs. Peale, Andy Reid and Gordon B. Hinckley were
sent a copy of his book, ‘Why Do Positive Thinkers Win.’
The club was started by Ken in 1995 and there are no dues at
present. Plans are to eventually use funds to help hungry
children in the United States. Several doctors have
expressed an interest in helping.
Ken is a published author, has written a series of positive
input children’s books, as well as articles for Executive
Excellence and Personal Excellence magazines. He is also
a financial and business advisor with a flair for creating and
evaluating business plans. He was named one of the three
top athletes in Junior high school and in his senior year at
Conestoga in Berwyn, Pa. was scouted by the Pittsburgh
Pirates. Ken eventually wound up in the Army, serving
time in Korea where he earned the black belt in Karate.
During his tenure in the Army he was named Outstanding Soldier
of the Guard every time he pulled guard duty as well as earning
letters of commendation and was named Soldier of the Month.
After the Army he started his career in sales and has won
awards such as top producer of the month; most sales produced
for a new agent and salesman of the year. He was a
director of sales; one of the youngest regional sales
supervisors in the insurance business, and was a training
director, traveling around the Unites States conducting sales
seminars. Part time Ken owned his own Karate dojo and
taught self defense to police departments in the Main
Line-Philadelphia, Pa. area, college students, YWCA, YMCA
students, as well as conducting adult night school
classes. He also has given talks on positive thinking to
women’s, optimist, and lions clubs, as well as other
organizations.
For the past ten years he has put his career on hold to
research and write why people don’t reach goals and to discover
and share the real secret of those who do. During his
research and ten year journey he discovered the three-word
motto of all winners, which he happily promulgates in this
astounding, totally enjoyable book. It was not all fun
and games, as Ken paid the ultimate price, by facing his own
unbelievable personal tragedies and hardships, (which you will
read about) but never once lost his positive attitude.
This book is like none other before, and a true self help book
has reached the book stands. Don’t read this book if you
don’t like to get involved by doing a little work to achieve
the assets listed on the back cover of the book. “If you
want to leave footprints in the sands of time, you must wear
work boots.”
“As we get older we discover
that we have two hands, one to help
ourselves and one to help
others.”
Audrey
Hepburn, Award Winning Actress
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