#thomas crean
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fisarmonical · 1 year ago
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Thomas Crean (Irish: Tomás Ó Cuirín; c. 16 February 1877 – 27 July 1938) was an Irish seaman and Antarctic explorer who was awarded the Albert Medal for Lifesaving (AM).
Crean was a member of three major expeditions to Antarctica during the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration, including Robert Falcon Scott's 1911–1913 Terra Nova Expedition. This saw the race to reach the South Pole lost to Roald Amundsen and ended in the deaths of Scott and his party. During the expedition, Crean's 35-statute-mile (56 km) solo walk across the Ross Ice Shelf to save the life of Edward Evans led to him receiving the Albert Medal. (Source: Wikipedia)rs
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vamp-yro · 12 days ago
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y a ese qien lo invitóooooooo
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versión con colore frio
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eternal-echoes · 2 years ago
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cockroachesunite · 23 days ago
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Shackleton, Worsley & Crean after the crossing of South Georgia (1916)
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g-raynard · 7 months ago
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Irish seaman and Antarctic explorer Thomas Crean photographed in 1915 aboard the Endurance in Antarctica during the Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition of 1914–1917 led by Ernest Shackleton.
The Endurance was trapped in ice for 492 days and sank, so the 28-man crew had to use lifeboats to reach the uninhabited Elephant Island. Crean was one of 6 members of the crew to make the 800 miles (1300 km) journey from Elephant Island to South Georgia in the small-boat James Caird to seek rescue for the rest of the crew. Once they reached South Georgia after 17 days at sea, 3 of the men, including Tom Crean, trekked across the island to a whaling station on the north side of South Georgia. There they were able to organize rescue efforts for the 3 men left on the south of the island and the remaining crew on Elephant Island. The entire crew of the Endurance returned home without loss of life.
Credit: polar_history_in_colour on Instagram 
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A complete deconstruction: Louis Tomlinson is a terrible songwriter. Part II
In part one, I debunked this assertion that Louis' songwriting was "crucial" for 1D. That post, I know, was probably quite boring and full of statistics, but I think it was important to be able to go to the fun part now.
Now we get to prove that he's not a good songwriter in the slightest.
POINT 1. He can't play instruments
Louis Tomlinson has been in the music industry since 2010. He was in a band when he was a teenager and he auditioned for the X Factor twice before he got in (2008 and 2009).
Despite all of that, and the millions he's racked in and rubbing elbows with incredible musicians, he still cannot play an instrument proficiently.
I stopped paying attention to him when the band broke up, but I've actually been asking around and digging to see if I was wrong about this before sitting down to make this post. Turns out, I'm not.
For instance, he has never played an instrument in one of his albums, and he barely ever does his backing vocals. He doesn't do ANYTHING ELSE either.
These are the personnel credits for his first album. He didn't even play the tambourine in it. In fact, he only did background vocals in 1 song out of 12.
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For his second album nobody bothered to transcribe the personnel credit to its Wikipedia page, so I had to manually check song by song on Genius. You can skip this list as it's super long and nobody cares. I'm adding it because I find it super funny that SO many people are involved in his albums and he's, well, not. But his fans will tell you he's the songwriter of the century.
Vocals:
Louis Tomlinson — lead vocals (all tracks)
David Sneddon — backing vocals (12)
George Tizzard — backing vocals (2, 3, 5, 6, 9, 14, 16)
James Vincent McMorrow — backing vocals (1, 7, 13, 15)
Rick Parkhouse — backing vocals (2, 3, 5, 6, 9, 14, 16)
Robert Harvey — backing vocals (2)
Stephen Sesso — backing vocals (4)
Theo Hutchcraft — backing vocals (10, 11, 12)
Musicians:
Alex Thomas — drums (10, 11)
Carlo Caduff — drums (8)
Christopher Illingworth — piano (11)
Dan Crean — percussion (3, 4), drums (3, 4)
Fred Ball — percussion (1, 7, 13, 15), keyboards (1, 7, 13, 15)
George Tizzard — piano (2, 5, 6, 9, 14, 16), acoustic guitar (2, 5, 6, 9, 14, 16), keyboards (5, 6, 16)
James Birt — drums (2, 5, 6, 9, 14)
James Vincent McMorrow — guitar (1, 7, 13, 15), drums (1, 7, 13, 15), percussion (1, 7, 13, 15), keyboards (1, 7, 13, 15)
J Moon — bass (1, 13, 15), guitar (1, 13, 15), percussion (1, 13, 15), keyboards (1, 13, 15)
Joe Cross — guitar (10, 11, 12), bass (10, 11, 12)
John Foyle — synths (1, 7, 13, 15), bass (1, 13, 15), guitar (1, 7, 13, 15), drums (1, 7, 13, 15), percussion (1, 7, 13, 15), keyboards (1, 7, 13, 15), piano (15)
Liz Hanks — cello (10)
Mike Crossey — keyboards (3), bass (3, 4)
Nicolas Rebscher — guitar (8), keyboards (8), bass (8)
Paul Walsham — drums (12)
Rick Parkhouse — electric guitar (2, 5, 6, 9, 16), bass (5, 6), bass guitar (16)
Robert Harvey — electric guitar (2)
Stephen Murtagh — bass (9)
Stephen Sesso — acoustic guitar (3, 4), electric guitar (3, 4)
Tobie Tripp — strings (6)
END OF BORING BLOCK OF TEXT
Anyway, this time around he didn't even do backing vocals on 1 track. I'm not saying he should play the cello or the synth, or even bass. I'm not saying he should do every instrument like an absolute prodigy, but the LEAST a MUSICIAN can do if they're this incredible of a songwriter is participate in any capacity aside from lead vocals. At least on one track. One instrument. The fucking tambourine. SOMETHING.
I checked his other singles (the ones that aren't on either of his albums), and aside from (shared) backing vocals on Miss You, he also doesn't have any sort of credit in any of them. He has 34 recorded tracks total (12 in his first album, 16 + 2 bonus tracks in his second one, and 4 standalone singles) and aside from the lead vocals (duh) he only does backing vocals IN TWO. And NOTHING ELSE.
For comparison's sake, in his debut album Niall plays guitar in 9 out of 13 tracks, in his second album he does background vocals in 9 out of 16 tracks, plays guitar in 6 out of 16, and acoustic guitar in two additional ones, and in his third album he does background vocals in 9 out of 10 tracks, and plays harmonica and piano in track 6.
In his debut album, Harry does background vocals on every track, plays guitar on track 4, and the omnichord in tracks 1 and 4. In his second album he does background vocals on all tracks except 11, plays the dulcimer on track 10, and acoustic guitar on track 12. In his third album he does background vocals on all tracks, plays the glockenspiel on track 10, keyboards on track 11, and the tubular bells on track 4.
And Niall and Harry are not exceptional, top notch, creme de la creme songwriters. I'm comparing Louis to them because they were his peers, have the same background, and had the same opportunities to learn their craft for the same amount of time.
I could also compare him to Shawn Mendes, who plays guitar and keyboard in his own albums. Or even to someone like Olivia Rodrigo, who played the piano in her debut album. Billie Eilish played multiple instruments in her latest album. Taylor Swift has become quite lazy, but she used to play multiple instruments in her albums. Adele plays instruments on her albums as well. So does Lady Gaga. Someone like The Weeknd plays multiple instruments in his albums.
Not every popstar plays instruments, but those who don't 1. aren't regarded as great songwriters and/or 2. do other things, such as producing or stacking vocals. Like, Ariana Grande isn't a huge instrumentalist, but she does her own vocal engineering, for instance.
If he at least played a single instrument live, we could look past this, but he's been in the industry professionally for close to fourteen years and he has never, not once, performed a song while playing an instrument.
He toured the fucking world TWICE as a solo artist and never picked up a guitar for a single song.
The most we've seen of him with instruments is idly stroking a guitar for a couple of seconds twice that I can find (here and here) and then he once, in 2012, played 15 seconds of a song by The Fray on a keyboard.
He has posed with guitars a bunch
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And he has footage of himself looking forlornly into the horizon as he "plays" guitar, but that footage is muted while he talks about himself very seriously on top of it.
He also has an entire music video where he acts like he's playing piano on top of someone else playing it (Duck Blackwell), which would be all fine and good if he had actually ever even hinted at being good enough to play an entire song on the piano. Both Taylor Swift and Harry, for instance, have similar music videos (in Cardigan Aaron Dessner is playing piano, in Falling, Kid Harpoon is playing). But we know that Taylor and Harry both can actually play (and have both played piano or keyboard in their own albums as well, just other songs).
It's a Thing that he doesn't play instruments nor does melodies. His often writing team Liam, is on the record saying that he would do melodies while Louis did the lyrics while they were in 1D.
He said it first in 2017 in a fan Q&A:
Fan: When you were in One Direction, you and Louis were a really strong writing team. As you've transitioned into solo stuff, have you felt really strongly about working on music vs lyrics more? Liam: To be honest with you, I've never been much of a lyrics man. I kind of bungle along with the lyrics. I'll be honest with you, sometimes lyrics just feel like homework. So when I'm sitting down to write I'm more of a melodies man. I like to just escape a little bit. There's a lot of pictures of me asleep in the studio, it looks like. But I'm not asleep. That's just where I go to when I'm trying to think about what's gonna come next in the song (...). I'm kind of more of a melodies person, I'd say. Louis was always more for the lyrics
Then he said it again in 2023 in an interview with a Chilean media outlet (note how Louis doesn't even do the lyrics alone haha):
"Whenever I was in the studio with Louis, I'd kind of do the melodies and then Louis would kind of do the lyrics with Jamie (Scott), and I'd kind of zone out whenever there were words on the page."
Louis said it as well in an interview with Radio DeeJay in 2022.
"Personally, for me, it's always been easier to write lyrics than melody and music, but I think it's like, each to their own in that."
He also said this in 2022:
“Sometimes, it’ll depend on who you’re working with, sometimes you kinda lean on whatever their side is. For me, 9 times out of 10, I come into the room with minimum a concept, or a lyric, or a title or something I want to talk about. And again, my strength lies in lyric, I’m trying to get better…So we’ll have a concept, and then probably some, one of the lads I’m working with will pick out a guitar line, we’ll find a melody about that and try and match the title we started with to what were writing.”
I think we can thoroughly confirm that Louis is not proficient with instruments. Add to that that he even confirms himself (two years ago, so 12 years into his career), that he has an easier time writing lyrics than melodies and music and that he's not really that good at writing melodies. There's nothing wrong with it, everyone has their own strengths, but it's the combination of things that makes it sting.
He has never played an instrument in public, he has never played an instrument in one of his albums, he only did background vocals for 2 out of 34 songs, and he AND Liam both say his strength isn't melodies. He's even outright admitting that his co-writers often come up with his melodies.
Songs aren't just lyrics. The melody of a song is just as important (some would argue, more important). If he himself admits that he has issues with melodies and music, then you can't just decide that it doesn't matter and he's "an incredible songwriter" anyway. He's simply not. If you like his music, then what you like are the co-writers he chooses to work with.
POINT 2. He's not that involved in his own songwriting process
I'm not saying that he's not involved at all or that he never writes anything, but he's not the driving force behind it. He's not the main songwriter, the one who commands the room, the one who comes up with everything.
How do we know this? It's pretty simple.
For one, the amount of collaborators he has.
Walls had 34 songwriters in 12 tracks. THIRTY-FOUR. Huge block of text incoming (used for impact):
Sean Douglas
Jamie Harman
Stuart Chrichton
Cole Citrenbaum
James Newman
Stephen Wrabel
Bryn Christopher
Andrew Jackson
Duck Blackwell
Levi Lennox
Julian Bunetta
John Ryan
Amish Patel
Jim Lavigne
Danny Majic
John Mitchell
Justin Franks
Noel Gallagher
Dave Gibson
Jacob Manson
Iain James
Wayne Hector
Steve Robson
Matthew Burns
Jason Reeves
Ali Tamposi
Andrew Watt
Ed Drewett
Yei Gonzalez
Jamie Scott
Johan Carlsson
Joe Janiak
Valentina
Louis, obviously
Of course, not every songwriter was on every track, but you can't possibly have a vision if you're working with this many people for a single project. There was only one sample (Noel Gallagher on Walls), so it's not even a Beyoncé case, where she had many songwriters but it was because she was sampling a bunch of songs.
This many people on a single, very short, project simply means that there wasn't a unified vision and a unified leader. How can you possibly make an album sound cohesive if it was written by two entire soccer teams and their benches?
Faith In The Future was much more concise in terms of its collaborators with fourteen (seventeen if we count producers), which is not a small number, but it's more standard for a pop album. So props to him for narrowing it down, I suppose.
The problem here, and with Walls and all his other singles, is that there are a lot of cooks on every song and Louis doesn't seem to be the primary songwriter in any of them.
I don't want to be hypocritical, so first I'll address that Harry's debut album also had a lot of writers in each song, but there was a caveat there, Harry's first album was written in a retreat in Jamaica. All the songs had the same names because he just gave blanket credit to everyone present.
The main producer of that album was Jeff Bhasker, so he got writing credit on every song. Then Tyler Johnson was basically an assistant to Jeff, and he also got credit. Ryan Nasci and Alex Salibian were engineers who were helping with the mixing, and they also got writing credit on every song. With two exceptions, 1. Two Ghosts, which Harry had written when he was in 1D in 2014/2015. 2. Sweet Creature, which he wrote alone with Kid Harpoon. The rest of the 8 tracks on HS1 were written by the same six songwriters. The total number of songwriters + producers for HS1 is 9, including 2 former 1D songwriters who got credit for Two Ghosts.
Another caveat here, is that if you read my last post, you know we can tell the % of songwriting of each collaborator. Harry was the driving force behind every single HS1 song, Jeff, Tyler, and Mitch got minority credit, while Alex and Ryan got a small percentage.
For instance, with Sign of the Times (the lead single and most successful song of that album)
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Ryan Nasci + Alex Salibian = 9.5% Mitch Rowland + Tyler Johnson + Jeff Bhasker = 40.51% Harry Styles = 50%
Harry has primary credit on every single song on that album, FYI.
For Fine Line, the team was tighter. There are still 9 names total but the average number of co-writers goes down in half to 3.6 per song, because the core group is smaller (Harry, Tyler, Kid, and Mitch) and the add-ons are just there in one or two tracks. Harry also has primary credit on almost every single song (except Lights Up, where he has 40% credit and Tyler Johnson has 45%).
In some songs, such as She, he has 80% credit and the other 3 split the remaining 20%. This screenshot is old, Kid Harpoon has since signed to GMR so we can no longer split his and Harry's %, but that happened after the release of Fine Line, and luckily I'd saved these.
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For his third album, the team is now 7 (with Harry, Kid, and Tyler doing the bulk of the work), and the average songwriters per track is 3.07. Sadly, since Kid signed to GMR I can't get a breakdown of the % anymore.
One day I'll make a post about this because I think it's so telling, in terms of Harry as a musician, but I just wanted to get this out of the way. I HATE hypocrisy, and I'm not going to bash Louis for something if the person I support is doing the same. He's not. And I needed to show that.
So, for his first album, Louis had the 34 songwriters I mentioned above + 5 extra producers. Each song had an average of 4.25 songwriters.
For his second album, Louis had 14 songwriters + 3 extra producers. Each song had an average of 4 songwriters.
The average in and of itself isn't that bad. It's pretty standard for pop musicians. The thing is that the standard pop musician isn't constantly gloating about his songwriting prowess and doesn't have a fanbase that constantly boasts either.
If Louis had primary credit in his songs, even if he had a lot of collaborators, I couldn't really fault him for it. Alas, he does not.
As I said in the other post, Louis' PRO is PRS, which is British. Foreign PROs have to collect through an American one, usually ASCAP or BMI. It seems like Louis collects through BMI. Why? Well, because
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In songs where all the other songwriters are with BMI, BMI controls 100%, meaning, also Louis' part. We can't say what % each of them wrote, but we can infer that this means Louis is collecting royalties through BMI.
Anyway, there's nothing really all that interesting about the % of his writing credits. All songs have an equal distribution among all participants, except some notable ones (and I'll get to that in a sec). The fact that everyone gets the same % of credit on every song is... well, telling. It's impossible for every single collaborator to have contributed the same amount to every single song in every single case. That's just not what happens when you have a group of 34 or 14 people writing an album.
Louis made a point, particularly with his second album, of working with artists as opposed to professional songwriters:
“Through my own experience, sometimes, with a ‘professional’ songwriter (...) they write hits for a living, that’s their livelihood. So to ask them to go in the room and want to write an album track, sometimes those are difficult things to ask for. ‘Cos the back of their mind they’re thinking 'but if we shape this like a single, who knows?’ and all of a sudden, again you’re changing the song. Whereas with artists, they completely understand this is a 16 track album, track 11 is as important as track 1.”
What he calls a "professional songwriter" takes this job as a 9 to 5. That person will split % evenly and call it a day, unless there's some very specific reason to get more or less credit. But Louis was writing as a collaborative effort with a group of people who he calls artists. This wasn't a job for them, this was art.
They didn't all contribute the same, so why should they all get the same %?
It does save me time, because 99% of the songs look like this:
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If there's one songwriter from ASCAP among 4 songwriters, and he gets 25% and the other three divide the remaining 75%. Pretty straightforward, each get 25%. You're free to look it up yourself.
The notable exceptions are Only The Brave
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We know Louis is with BMI, and BMI only controls 5% of the song. So the other two songwriters split 95% of the writing credit (this isn't surprising because it's known that Louis hadn't actually written in this song. Seems like they threw him in a 5% for some reason).
And Just Hold On
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Steve Aoki has 25% and the other 75% is divided among four people (we don't know how, though, but it suggests that Louis has slightly less than Steve).
Anyway, I'm bringing this up because I'm trying to be as fair as possible. You can be very charitable and believe that Louis was the driving force behind every song and he just generously gave away equal writing credit for people who didn't do as much as him. But that's simply not true. He got equal credit when he didn't contribute to those songs equally.
You can actually look up what the people involved have said, and if you're honest with yourself, you will conclude that Louis was not the driving force behind his own music.
Louis said this about the process of writing his songs:
“9/10 melody will come first, but before any of that happens we normally talk about a general concept on what we want to get across, what we want it to sound and feel like. Then it kind of just happens naturally, really.”
So they come up with a concept, then go to the melody, then the song comes up from that. Cool.
Now, remember that quote I posted above? About how he has a hard time coming up with melodies and how he leans on whoever he's writing with?
“Sometimes, it’ll depend on who you’re working with, sometimes you kinda lean on whatever their side is. For me, 9 times out of 10, I come into the room with minimum a concept, or a lyric, or a title or something I want to talk about. And again, my strength lies in lyric, I’m trying to get better…So we’ll have a concept, and then probably some, one of the lads I'm working with will pick out a guitar line, we’ll find a melody about that and try and match the title we started with to what were writing.”
He gives them an abstract concept and whoever he's writing with comes up with the melody, and then they go from there. That's not an equally collaborative effort. "Whoever he's working with" is doing the bulk of the work while all he does is say "yes" and "no" and give vague concepts and ideas.
Let me be clear, this isn't bad. Most pop artists work this way. It's FINE. But those artists aren't considered proficient songwriters and are usually belittled for their small contributions, while Louis is out there talking himself up as a songwriter and his fans eat it up and attack his peers.
If you can't write music, or play instruments, if you don't come up with the melodies, and you get help to come up with the lyrics, how exactly are you "a great songwriter"?
The answer is that you're not.
But let's actually see what Louis has to say about his songwriting process. I looked up quotes to see if he has any insight that would point to him being more involved, having some technical (if base leve) knowledge, being knowledgeable about processes or any sort of musical element and I found absolutely nothing. I could be missing it — as I said, I stopped paying attention to him years ago. But I do think I'm a pretty good researcher, and still found nothing.
But since I'm very charitable, I decided to use two long-form sources where he specifically talks about his second album.
The following is a track by track breakdown of his second album he did on Twitter. It's basically just his tweets for every song. If you're already familiar with this you can skip it. I'll discus it in an abridged way anyway.
The Greatest: "[It] was written in London with [co-writers]. It was always written as a tour opener, but also made sense to start the album off with a bang."
Written All Over Your Face: "Love the guitar line that comes in towards the end. Rob Harvey working his magic."
Bigger Than Me: "[It] was really important for me making the record. It gave me the confidence early on in the process. Ambition [sic] chorus vocally but suits a big show and us singing it together."
Lucky Again: "This song started of [sic] with this like hypnotic guitar riff Jay Moon came up with and we built the song around that. Feels like a good driving song."
Face The Music: "Me and Dave Gibson wrote [it] together in LA. One of my favourites on the album! Love that opening lyric. Did so many great sessions with Dave!!"
Chicago: "[It] was written in LA with Dave. Love the lyric and the concept."
All This Time: "I've always loved [it]. Just feel like a feel good tune from the off. James had a great vision for this song."
Out Of My System: "[It] was such a moment in the studio. I was with Nico and Dave was on zoom. I wanted to write something that had a bit of danger to it and had the title. Nico straight away played the riff and we were off."
Headline: "I think [it] was the last song for the album. Red triangle lads smashed the production and the academic for writing it. Made some subtle changes but loved the song as is."
Saturdays: "It felt emotional writing recording and performing this song. There’s something about it. Love the trainers lyric as well! Joe cross absolutely smashed the production, love the way the song grows.
Silver Tongues: "Had such a great few days written with Dave Sneddon, Theo Hutchcraft and Joe Cross. [It] is defo one of my favourite on the album. Love everything about this song!"
She Is Beauty We Are World Class: "Written in the same few days as the last two songs. Dave turned up with this picture on his phone of the title ‘She is beauty we are world class’ it was taken in the toilet mirror of a train. Felt like a weird place for such a poetic sentiment"
Common People: "[It] is about Doncaster having a place on my album. Such a big part of who I am. Love the simplicity of the song and the lyric.
Holding On To Heartache: "[This] is a song I’ve always loved. I’m glad I found a place for it on the deluxe. The middle 8 takes it to another gear as well! That’s going to be a fucker to sing night after night haha!"
That's The Way Love Goes: "Also one of my favourites. Always loved dry your eyes by the streets and wanted to write a similar concept. Again love the strings at the end!"
Overall, he had one sort of technical comment to make, about Holding on To Heartache. "Middle 8" is when a song switches up/adds new elements. He's saying that the song had a switch-up and it took it to the next level.
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The rest of "songwriting notes" are:
I wrote [song] with [name of collaborator]
We wrote [song] while [activity] in [place]
[Collaborator] had a great idea and we built on that.
I love [part or sound of the song]!
The only commentary on what he wanted from sound is about That's The Way Love Goes. He liked a song by a band and he wanted to recreate it. Of course, he doesn't say what he liked about that song or that band and what he wanted to recreate. Is it the drums? The ambiance? The backing vocals? The reverb? Does he even know?
He never talks about coming up with ideas himself — it's always one of his collaborators coming up with something and then building up on that.
He also never mentions specific instruments or sounds that he likes. Reading these, I definitely he believe he was there when the songs were written. I believe he told his collaborators, in very vague terms, what he wanted the songs to sound like, and I believe he told them what he wanted the songs to be about. But so far, I have no reason to believe he had any of the knowledge necessary or took any of the necessary steps to achieve those sounds.
Of course, this could be just off the cuff commentary and not serious, so I can't take this as the only contributions and opinions he has on his album, can I?
Give me credit for how charitable I am... Let's give him one more chance. This time, going by his track by track video. He's going to discuss every single song and the album as a whole in detail. It's a one-on-one interview posted directly on his YouTube channel.
He starts off discussing how different his sound is from his last album and worrying about alienating fans, but he doesn't describe what's different or why. Why would it alienate fans? I don't understand why he's so vague. It just sounds like he has no idea what he's talking about.
About The Greatest:
"I think straight away, from the off, Fred Ball did a really — goes way beyond my musical comprehension — but really really clever kind of opener, really slaps you round the face."
That's all the songwriting commentary we get about this song. His collaborator did something he didn't really understand but it was sick. He's not starting off very promising...
About Written All Over Your Face:
“That’s a song where straight away I can picture Rob Harvey, he’s a brilliant lyricist but also brilliant with melody as well. He sang out that melody and from the off, once we had that lead part — I don’t want to say the song wrote itself, but it kind of really set the tone for the kind of style that we wanted to do.”
Someone else came up with the melody and the song "wrote itself". Well, he didn't want to say that it wrote itself, but he also didn't say what it did do, so I'm going to believe that it did write itself. It certainly doesn't sound like Louis wrote it.
About Bigger Than Me: Nothing. He just talks about what the song is about. No insight on its composition.
About Lucky Again: He repeats what he said on Twitter about the hypnotic melody someone else came up with setting the tone for the song. It's completely normal for an artist to bounce ideas off collaborators, but it's slightly worrying that every single time it's someone else's idea that he builds on. Are none of this ideas his own?
He then talks about post-production of the album, and I said to myself, "Oh, he's finally gonna give us some insight!" Nope.
He just said that it was hard because he was on tour, and he'd say yes to something and then he'd regret it, but being on tour affected the way he made decisions because he was being influenced by the shows.
And this actually grinds my fucking gears. What did he say yes to and why did he regret it? What part of the shows influenced the songs and how?
This man has now been a part of releasing SEVEN profesional studio albums. And he can't name a single specific production note he gave?
"I wanted this instrument here because of this reason." Or "because of the live shows, I realized I preferred a crescendo of the melody." Or even "I asked the background vocals to be this way because of this reason." LITERALLY ANYTHING. He can't articulate a single music-related thought. It's actually impressive (derogatory).
He expands on how he thinks he writes better in the UK (?????) and when he starts his writing sessions midday instead of early in the morning (????????) because he doesn't want it to feel like work (IT IS WORK!). None of this is technical songwriting stuff. Next he's gonna describe his BREAKFAST on songwriting days. HOW IS THIS RELEVANT TO A TRACK BY TRACK ANALYSIS??
These anecdotal details are great when surrounded with technical commentary. They're shallow and ridiculous when surrounded by literal empty space.
He waxes poetic about how cool the people he worked with are (which is great!) but he doesn't really get technical about why he likes working with them other than "attention to detail" and "really fucking cool." At this point it feels like he's writing an essay and he's trying to run the words.
He mentions being inspired by Arctic Monkeys... again.
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And The Snuts (one of his openers on tour). He mentions nothing specific about the sound of either of these bands, because that'd probably kill him on the spot. The only specificity we get is that he grew up close to Sheffield, where AM are from. In case you forgot he's a Northern Lad From The North.
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"And it wasn’t until I heard that DMA’s record and how Stuart Price had produced it and of course they’re using some of these modern, trendy, radio, whatever word you wanna use to describe it sounds. They do it in a really authentic way, it’s not in there just because it’s trendy, it’s in there because it serves the song."
"Modern, trendy, radio, whatever word you wanna use to describe it." I don't wanna use any words, Louis, you're the one nit!! Describe it?? have NO IDEA what he's even saying here. This was in 2022, what was dancey, modern, trendy, and radio in 2022? As it Was?? WHAT IS HE TALKING ABOUT??
I actually went and played some DMA's to try to understand what he's saying. Their most streamed song is a chill-out version of Believe (the Cher song), the only dancey, trendy, modern thing about that song is the inspiration. it's literally chillout pop. The second most streamed song sounds like old Coldplay + bossa n stone. There is nothing modern, dancey (does he mean EDM?) or trendy about any of this. I'm losing my mind. This man is musically illiterate.
About Face The Music:
"I am not the most sophisticated musical listener, I kinda like songs like this that have got that wall of sound that will give you that energy. Again, it’s easy to kind of imagine in the live context."
This is actually hilarious, because Louis is so musically illiterate, that he just used a real concept (Wall of Sound) to describe something that doesn't apply in the slightest. "Wall of Sound" is a concept by Phil Spector (who, incidentally, is a convinced murderer). It consists on duplicating or triplicating a certain sound and making it build up on itself to the point where the sounds are indistinguishable from each other. For instance, you play the piano, then you replicate that on a keyboard, then you replicate that on a synth, and you mix them together in such a way that you can't tell each instrument from the other, you just hear the result.
The most famous example of a Wall of Sound song is God Only Knows by the Beach Boys. It can be applied to any genre and sound, but because of the nature of how you mix it, it tends to have an almost orchestral sound and it works well in very grandiose songs that sound kind of ethereal. Another song that uses Wall Of Sound is Halo by Beyoncé or Set Fire To The Rain by Adele.
Face The Music does NOT do this in the slightest. You can very clearly hear each individual instrument (derogatory). Louis is using the very real and tangible musical concept of Wall Of Sound to describe this because the song is loud. He probably heard of the concept in passing and took the meaning of it in its face, a literal wall of sound, as in, loud (and this song isn't even that loud — he's a pussy).
This is why I say this man isn't a great songwriter. He's been in the industry for FOURTEEN YEARS. Can you imagine being a professional songwriter and going to the studio with someone who can't articulate a singular musical thought? And he's worth millions while you're struggling to pay rent?
He used this expression wrongly twice so far, btw. (After the interviewer says it's a festival song) "Yeah, yeah definitely but you still kind of got that sing along chorus but dressed up with enough of that wall of sound behind it."
About Chicago:
"Sometimes what I find challenging, is I can see the picture or I can hear the song or I can see the concerts in my head and sometimes it’s quite hard to articulate that cause you’ve got such a clear vision in your head and you just want someone else to be able to read your mind, go ‘Yeah that’s what Im talking about!"
You know what you could do to help you with this Louis? Study music theory. Read a book. Watch a documentary. Listen to literally any music. He can't articulate it because he knows nothing about music and can't play any instruments. I believe wholeheartedly that he has a vision for his albums. It's not that hard to conceptualize a sound in your head, if you're able to hear and have lived in this world for a couple of decades. But it's very, very hard to translate that into words if you don't know the first thing about music theory.
Other than this, he just discusses being vulnerable in his lyrics in Chicago. Cool, not really technically about songwriting, but whatever.
About All This Time:
"I think Fred did a brilliant job on this. And again this is something where I know what I like, but in terms of a production, it wasn’t as if I had loads of notes to give on this. It’s a little bit more me taking a risk, doing something slightly dancier."
I hadn't listened to this man's album, and good lord I wish I hadn't taken research for this so seriously. This has got to be one of the worst songs I've ever heard. But I was curious as to what he meant with "dancier." And I mean, I guessssss??? I don't think this song has any idea what it's supposed to be.
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Notice how he said he didn't have any notes to give? He just let the man do his thing? He shouldn't have. Perhaps notes would have killed it and ended its misery.
About Out Of My System:
"That was a song, again, where we started out with a guitar riff. I went into, I want to say, definitely Arctic Monkeys, maybe Teddy Picker, maybe Dancing Shoes, and I was listening to it on the way to that writing session. I went in and I said to the lads, Nico and Dave ‘I want to write something as punk as I can get away with’ and that’s when Nico straight away came up with that really kind of punchy riff. And that riff kind of sums up the song, really, that kind of danger and that kind of energy."
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I don't even know where to start.
Once again, he doesn't come up with a melody, he doesn't come up with a song. He goes to the studio, tells other (more talented) people "I want a song that sounds like this", the other (more talented) people come up with a riff, and that's how he builds the song. THIS IS YOUR GREAT SONGWRITER??? He's using his co-writers as ChatGPT in human form are you fucking kidding me?
The AUDACITY to compare Teddy Picker or Dancing Shoes to whatever it is he's trying to do actually offends me. Teddy Picker and Dancing Shoes are two technically flawless songs that sound tight and fresh 20 years later.
If you've never listened to Teddy Picker, I implore you to press play here.
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Now go and listen to Out Of My System. Don't get me wrong, OOM isn't nearly as criminally offensive as All This Time. The musicians playing it (not Louis) are competent enough and it doesn't sound bad. It also doesn't sound good. It's a 6/10 song. It sounds dated, like a 2000s Christian rock band doing a Limp Bizkit but if the lead singer had to leave and they let the son of the pastor take over for shits and giggles.
He's also SO BASIC. I love myself some Arctic Monkeys, but does he not know any other bands? If at least he picked songs that weren't incredibly cliché I could overlook his fascination with the most obvious choice he could reach for over and over. But no, he chooses a huge single and a cult classic. If anything, I think Out Of My System is more similar to Perhaps Vampires Is A Bit Strong But... (still kind of insulting to a quality song, but more appropriate). But I doubt Louis has ever listened to any song of theirs below 100M streams on Spotify. I already covered that this whole indie rock thing is all a front and he's a Top40 poppy boy at heart here.
About this song, he actually does give a morsel of technical commentary, saying he recorded the vocals right after a show to get a rougher edge. I mean, I don't think he needed to wait until after a show to get a rougher edge to his vocals. They're rough 24/7, but anyway. The one insight on something technical and it's about the one thing he obviously knows about, since the lead vocals are his one and only job in his albums.
Then he talks about touring, and about one of the million indie garage rock bands with multiple white boys that all sound the same that he has in his "festival." And then about his "festival." Then for some reason he gets on to talk about his bucket list and skydiving. And I'm here wondering WHEN IS HE GONNA START TALKING ABOUT SONGWRITING?
About Headline:
"Um, yeah this was the last song that we got on this record and I’m not gonna lie, it was like 85% finished when I heard it. Well, it was finished, um and there was just a few things across the lyric that were good, that were great but they just didn’t feel true to me so we kind of remolded it, reshaped it so it felt kind of relevant to this record."
So the song was done when he got it and he just touched a couple of lyrics. Color me surprised. His voice sounds like nails in a chalkboard on it. Worse than I've ever heard it. I can't believe he put this out to the world.
He says it kinda sounds like Blossom when they do their 80s sound. I mean, he's not completely off. I would say that the song sounds like a The 1975 or Bleachers reject if Matty Healy/Jack Antonoff had swallowed several sheets of sandpaper. I guess I'll give him props for knowing another indie English rock band aside from Arctic Monkeys and the ones that do his "festival"?
About Saturdays:
He talks endlessly about lyrics and Doncaster and........
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Anyway, then he says this:
"Again goes way above my musical comprehension when he mentioned at the time I’m like I don’t really know what you’re on about there but Joe, did Joe Cross do something brilliant with Saturdays and there is little to no bottom end until the drums come in which is about halfway through the song now, once you hear it and listen back you kind of miss it you’re like where is it and then when the drums hit in every single time it just feels like a slap around the face and that was one of those moments for me where just thankful to being for being around these brilliant musicians because that’s not a trick I could pull out your sleeve."
He thinks having the drums come in mid-song is revolutionary. BEYOND HIS MUSICAL COMPREHENSION. Bless his heart. The fact that he admits that this is something that he could never come up with himself simply blows my mind. He was 30 years old when he did this, btw. He sounds like a child who's setting foot in the studio for the first time ever.
He's gonna lose his mind when he finally hears In The Air Tonight for the first time.
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He then adds:
"I have a very, what’s the word? I’m not, you know in terms of when I speak about music there is no musical education there it’s all on feel so I rely on people like Joe to bring that incredible musicality to the production."
Really? I never could've guessed... Maybe you should tell your fans, as they have somehow convinced themselves you're the best songwriter to have graced this earth.
About Silver Tongues:
"Sonically I think it’s really clever because the first time people hear it you kind of get into a false sense of security where it comes in with the piano and it feels really emotional. It feels like you’re gonna go into a ballad and then straight away the production kicks in so that’s something again in the live show I think that’ll be a moment."
He's endlessly fascinated by the most basic musical concepts. It's kind of sad. Starting a song slow and upping the tempo is not "really clever," Louis. It's been done a million times. You literally "wrote" End Of The Day in 2015. Were you asleep the entire time? Huh??
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About She Is Beauty We Are World Class:
He repeats the story he told on Twitter. Then adds this:
"That was that was an interesting moment I think this is where we said, “let’s really try and go all in on the dance-ier sound of things” because I kind of allude to it on like All This Time but like it’s not quite as like trancey as this is. Almost has that kind of DMA’s lift with it with the instrumental that comes in on the post chorus."
I haven't listened to a ton of DMA's music, but the few tracks I did listen sounded nothing like this. It cracks me up that he doesn't have the lingo to describe music genres. We saw it painfully when he kept describing hip hop, rap, and trap as "urban" back in the day, but the fact that he keeps describing electronic music/EDM as "dancey" and "trancey" is super funny. Like, EDM does have the word "dance" in its name, but nobody calls it "dancey", Louis. You sound like an old man.
About Common People:
"I'm from Doncaster, and me friends, and me family, and Doncaster, and I'm just a lad from Doncaster."
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About Angels Fly:
The technical commentary is limited to "it has a big chorus." Moving on.
About Holding On To Heartache:
"It's a bit more pop. I think fans will like it." is the extent of his analysis. He's actually incapable of uttering a single technical sentence. It's incredible.
About Lucky Again:
He gives lots of credit to one of his collaborators (Vincent McMorrow), which is nice of him. Once again he cannot articulate what's so good about good ol' Vince. He's just "an absolute genius" and "constantly challenging different ideas." What those ideas are, we won't find out.
He then starts to talk about a concept, loses train of thought mid-sentence, and he says (and I quote) "We’ll just scrap that. I can’t remember what it was… fucking some line." Why wasn't this edited out? I truly cannot even begin to understand.
About That's The Way love Goes:
"Me mates, and Doncaster, and me mates..."
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He then again talks about having a Wall Of Sound, and at this point I'm getting extreme second-hand embarrassment because I can totally picture him describing loud songs like that in front of very well educated musicians, who in turn would have to contain their laughter and do their very best not to correct him.
And that's the end of it. I think I've given him enough opportunities to talk about songwriting. He doesn't know the first thing about it.
When I say I want him to talk about technical stuff or about the process. I mean stuff like this:
"'Fine Line' I wrote during a gap in the tour. It was January 2018 and I was at my friend Tom's house, who I work with, and we just started strumming this thing, and we started layering these vocals, and it turned into this 6-minute thing. (...) I wanted it to turn into something else at the end, I wanted like a big crescendo ending. While we were in Bath, Sammy [his engineer] started playing this little thing on the piano, and I tweaked it a little bit, and I was like 'That has to go at the end of Fine Line.'"
Harry for NPR in 2019
I don't need him to discuss this sort of thing as if he was a Juilliard professor. But just... some idea of the technical aspects of it. Like layering the vocals, wanting a crescendo. And HE did it, HE tweaked it, HE got the idea of adding it to Fine Line. It's a collaborative effort, for sure, but he's an integral part of it, because at the end of the day it's HIS song.
"That's just a voice note of my ex-girlfriend talking. I was playing guita and she took a phone call — and she was actually speaking in the key of the song."
Harry for Rolling Stone in 2019
Super simple and short, but it explains an artistic decision (adding Camille's voice at the end of Cherry), and why he made it, and how HE made it, how it was his idea and his decision, and why, musically, sonically, he chose to do it.
"It's a weird one. It started simple, but I wanted to have this big epic outro thing. And it just took shape as this thing where I thought, 'That's just like the music I want to make.' I love strings, I love horns, I love harmonies —so why don't we just put all of that in there."
Harry for Rolling Stone in 2019
More about Fine Line. Concise information about what he wants in music instead of "oh I have it in my head but I can't put it into words."
Harry: One of the songs on my record, She, we got James Gadson who played on all the early Bill Withers stuff. He's like 81. And he came and played on the record. We were like, putting down like a demo drum-thing, and we were like, "Oh, we love the sound of these drums." And they [the engineers] were like, "Oh, he's still alive." So we just got him to come play! Zane: Can I ask you what you got out of that session? When you actually got to experience a player who was inspiring the sound you were searching for, and you got to actually witness the player... Was it the feel...? Cause we can try to recapture all we want, but only one person can play like Gadson, right? Only one. Harry: Yeah. I think it's one of those things that, like. I mean, with all instruments, but with drums, and with live drums, you just can't get the feel from a machine. You can have it so it so it makes your chest drawl, but there's like a groove and a feel and a swing, that someone who's that seasoned, who has just played on anything and everything and is such a master...
Harry for Selects Beats 1, March 2020
DO YOU UNDERSTAND? A songwriter involved in his own music knows at least surface level technical stuff and can off the cuff talk about them in conversation, because he lives them. He's there as they happen. He makes the decisions and he understands what's going on. Even if they aren't a proficient drum player, they still have some level of understanding.
Same interview, talking about doing his own backing vocals:
"I do all the harmonies. I can go pretty high full voice, and then there's like a falsetto bit, and then if I'm doing really high harmonies, you wanna get like that Queen-y thing. I have like a squeal thing that's pretty up there, which you don't wanna do too often, but... I have a funny video of me recording some harmonies from the record. I'll send it to you. It's definitely squeal-y. I usually stack my own harmonies. I can't remember when I started doing it, but I try to get a crowd sound, so I just do each harmony in a different accent. And you end up with someone Scottish in there, like a French guy. And you go like London, Northerner, couple of Americans, and you end up with like an amazing crowd."
I'm using Harry as an example because he's an artist I pay a lot of attention to who has the same background and has been in the indistry for the same amount of time as Louis. They share the same resources to learn and educate themselves, perfect their own profession.
I don't think Harry is necessarily a prodigy, but he's an actual songwriter who's involved every step of the way.
And this is what I wanted to close with.
"I think that the first cut that changed it for me was the Steve Aoki song with Louis Tomlinson. I just wrote that with this amazing writer Eric Ross (...). We just wrote a bunch of stuff together, and we wrote that, and one day a couple of years after it was written I got a text, and it was like, 'Hey, Louis Tomlinson is cutting this.' And as a One Direction stan I lost my shit."
Sasha Sloan, co-writer of Just Hold On.
"Louis Tomlinson’s track ‘Silver Tounges’, from album ‘Faith In the Future’ recorded @80hertz | Engineered by @gj_atkins, recording to a Studer A80 1” tape machine (courtesy of @studio_magnetique) | Produced & written by @joejrcross"
Caption by the studio where Silver Tongues was recorded
"I was in with Andrew Jackson and Duck Blackwell, two of my collaborators, Louis wasn't there, my manager had a meeting with his management and they said 'Louis is looking for songs', the brief was like Oasis and I was like 'I don't think he should do Oasis so let's give him a pop ballad." Bryn explained that the trio didn't know much about Louis but were aware of Johannah's death and decided to channel that into the song. "It was a little bit weird, we don't know him, we don't know what he went through," he said before adding: "But we did it and we're bringing our own elements, we've all lost people so we were putting our own words into them. "We sent it to his team and he was like 'Oh my God, I've been waiting to write this song but I couldn't,' I heard that he'd been encouraged to 'write a song about my mum but I couldn't' he'd heard bits and was like 'This is it. This is what I was feeling. This is all that I wanted to do'. And so then he went, came in and wrote a bit more like the middle eight and yeah, then he released it."
Bryn Christopher, co-writer of Two Of us
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James Vincent McMorrow via instagram (he has archived all posts prior to the end of 2023, so this is gone now)
I'll be fair and include this quote by Theo Hutchcraft:
"I absolutely love these lads and being part of [Louis Tomlinson's] masterplan and creative vision has been a total joy. He deserves it all."
It does absolutely nothing to convince me that this "masterplan" and "creative vision" was anything other than him giving out vague notes that he couldn't otherwise describe.
This is what Harry's collaborators have to say about him:
"The other thing that happened with me not being there at first was that Harry got to lead the room. He didn’t have to sit there and constantly feel like he’s got to defer to me. Harry was the boss. And they all just bonded so hard and it just became the dream scenario, and everyone contributed in such a fantastic way. (...) I wanted it to be something that Harry really felt was his baby, making his creative mark. With me, if it comes from the artist, that’s the best thing. If it’s real, people are going to know it’s real. (...) I’m hopeful that we’re gonna do many more albums—this is just the beginning. But I thought it was really important to set the tone of, “We’re gonna do exactly what’s in your heart, Harry.” (...) And what a luxury to have Mitch and Ryan, where they could come up with an idea and it could just be tracked and sound like a record instantly. And that’s how “Sign of the Times” happened. Harry was playing it on the piano and we fleshed it out a little bit. Then he jumped on the mic, I played piano and we cut that whole record in three hours."
Jeff Bhasker, producer of HS1
"He had asked for a specific guitar, which I loved. He knew my music well enough to request a specific sound from a specific instrument. I got there and he said, 'Let's eat.' We ordered food, we sat, we talked, we laughed. (...) And then we went in and spent the day recording. When I watched Harry track his vocals, it was a singing lesson in its own way."
Ben Harper, who played guitar on Boyfriends.
"One of my favorite parts of the session was after the session, because as I was loading out all my gear Harry invited me to stick around because he wanted to finish the song right then and there. To get to watch Harry in his process was eye-opening, and I learned a lot. He orchestrated the vocal harmonies like a classical composer, spot on, note for note. He just stacked them perfectly in pitch, one better than the next, and it was really eye-opening to see somebody step on the mic and have the parts orchestrated in his head. I’ve never seen anything like it. actually."
More of Ben Harper
“Day one, we’re writing a song, and [Harry] came up with this piano part. And then I was like, ‘Oh, that could be faster. And you could do this chord, and we could do this.’ ” That evolved into “Late Night Talking,”
Kid Harpoon, producer of Fine Line and Harry's House
We recorded the song at Rob Stringer’s house in England. We moved all the furniture out and put a drum kit in the TV room. “As It Was” was done in that setup. Harry came in with a riff idea, and we ran with it. It’s a funny one because it happened so quickly that I don’t know if I’ll ever be able to recreate that magic again — it was just so good. Lyrically, what I love about Harry on this whole album, is that he has a lot to say but he can tease meaning. What’s going on in his life is intertwined in that song, and in that line, “Harry, you’re no good alone.” I love the way he built the lyrics across his whole record, so when I think about “As It Was” I think about the whole album, to be honest.
More from Kid Harpoon
I could go on...
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If Louis isn't interested in that sort of thing, that's fine. He doesn't have to be an involved songwriter. But then his fans should act accordingly. The Hags, specifically, who continue to pedal this idea that Harry is dumb, a puppet, who takes credit for his producers ideas, who can't explain the songwriting process. The projecting is off the charts. And it's why I needed to include this section about Harry.
There's actually a final part to this series, which is analyzing his lyrics. I thought I might be able to put it in this post, but it's already long enough, so I'm going to split it.
But bottom line, there isn't a single musical bone in Louis' body. He's not curious or interested in music, clearly. He got lucky he got put in a band because his looks fit what the producers of the X Factor were looking for. And he got lucky that his bandmates were charismatic, naturally talented, and also good-looking.
He could perfect his voice, he could learn instruments, he could study music. He could do something to improve. He's had the time, the money, and the resources for a very long time. The fact that in almost 15 years he hasn't, isn't just telling of his lack of natural talent, but also of his own lazy personality.
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menanddogs · 1 year ago
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Thomas Crean (Irish: Tomás Ó Cuirín; c. 16 February 1877 – 27 July 1938) was an Irish seaman and Antarctic explorer who was awarded the Albert Medal for Lifesaving (AM)
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ltwilliammowett · 1 year ago
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It is Ship's cat sunday and here is a pic of stowaway Perce Blackborow on Shackleton's Endurance with Mrs. Chippy, the ship's cat, before 1915
More about Chippy below
The tabby domestic cat had been brought on board by Harry McNish, the ship's carpenter known as "Chippy", and was given her name before it was discovered that she was a male. Mrs Chippy is described as a handsome, affectionate and good-natured cat. He proved to be a good catcher of mice and rats and was a favourite among the crew. The men were amused by the way Mrs Chippy seemed to enjoy strutting across the roofs of the kennels, always just out of reach of the rampaging dogs. What's more, the cat's climbing skills, even in the roughest seas, earned him respect. At the beginning of the voyage, on 13 September 1914, Mrs Chippy jumped through a porthole and fell into the sea. The officer on watch, Huberht Hudson (1886-1942), turned the ship around and had the cat brought back on board with the fishing net of biologist Robert Clark (1882-1950).
When the Endurance, which had already been trapped by pack ice in January 1915, could no longer withstand the pressure and sank at the end of October, Shackleton ordered all animals of no concrete use - three puppies, the sled dog Sirius, who could not be harnessed like the others, and Mrs Chippy - to be shot. In his book South, he later quoted his diary, saying that under the new circumstances they could not have afforded to feed "weaklings". The captain of the Endurance, Frank Worsley, defended Shackleton's decision in 1931 by pointing out that the cat would have been eaten by the dogs without the protection of the ship. In the case of Mrs Chippy and the puppies, it fell to Second Officer Thomas Crean to carry out the sentence.
Harry McNish never forgave the expedition leader. His resentment led to growing tensions between the two men, which one day culminated in an attempt by McNish to openly disobey orders. Although as a carpenter he undoubtedly played an important part in the successful rescue of the entire crew of the Endurance, he was one of the few who were not honoured with the Polar Medal for "disloyalty". He died in Wellington, New Zealand, in 1930 and was given a pauper's burial in the Karori Cemetery there. It was not until 1959 that the New Zealand Antarctic Society donated a gravestone to the veteran. In 2004, the society commissioned sculptor Chris Elliott to create a life-size bronze sculpture of Mrs Chippy, which has adorned McNish's grave ever since.
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robertfalconscott · 2 years ago
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My favorite pictures of Antarctic explorers giving each other haircuts!!
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Roald Amundsen cutting Emil Racoviță’s hair on the Belgica :3c the Amundsmile and Wacky Racy make this an instant classic. Love!!!
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Anton Omelchenko cutting Patrick Keohane’s hair on the Terra Nova expedition. Anton looks like a real professional here, I’d let him trim my bangs
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Endurance haircuts all around!!! On the left is Frank Wild cutting (presumed) Lionel Greenstreet’s hair, and on the right we have Thomas Orde-Lees giving Tom Crean a haircut! It must have been haircut day aboard Endurance, & there are plenty of cute details in this one, including Alexander Macklin patting Leonard Hussey’s freshly shaved head (to the left & in the back)
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Henry Rennick cutting Dennis Lillie’s hair on Terra Nova!!! Yes… this is my favorite. Rennick’s dramatic stance and Lillie with his little feet up on the railing…. Cute!!!!
The moral of the story being, of course, if you get a bunch of lads together on a boat bound for Antarctica, they’ll inevitably start cutting each others’ hair for fun. Dudes rock
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aautiemiller-rockcenter · 8 months ago
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NYCDA Nationals Senior Solo Awards
1st-2nd Scored Above 299 3rd-6th Scored Above 298 7th-15th Scored Above 297
Erik Barker - Larkin Dance Studio!
Izzy Howard - Westside Dance Project!
Charlie Head - Downtown Dance Factory
Kendall Moshay - TopFlight Dance
Ava Luna - Dance Academy North Jersey
Koda Nayback - Artflux Dance Lab
Caleb Abea - Larkin Dance Studio
Hannah Elzbet - Performing Dance Arts
Melanie Kalogritsas - Performing Dance Arts
Ayla Rodriguez - Artistic Fusion
Alyssa Carpeneto - Performing Dance Arts
Emerson Rogers - Artistry In Motion WA
Mia Edmonds - The Dallas Conservatory
Ava Crean - Mary Alice's Dance
Nathaniel Chua - NINE Dance Academy, Olivia Gannon - New Dimensions Dance
Raina Wu - Yoko's Dance
Ava Greenwaldt - Golden State Ballet
Zada Britton - Canadian Contemporary Theatre
Noelle Hogan - Brava Dance Center Juliet Judkins - Mid-Atlantic Center
Hayley Wilson - Renner Dance Company
Jaicey Thomas - Renner Dance Company
Luke Barrett - Dance Attack Los Gatos
Malcolm Takumi - CAP The Company
McKenzie Lambert - Renner Dance Company
Jackson Conley - Hoffmans School of Dance
Audrey Zhu - Embody Dance Company
Colin Gross - The Dallas Conservatory
Ella Beatty - Patti Eisenhauer Dance
Gracen? - Artists Revealed Dance
Presli James - North Austin Dance Artists
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all-action-all-picture · 1 year ago
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The Hornet No. 433, dated 25 December 1971. The Hornet Gallery of Courage - The Terrible Trek across the Ice-Fields cover, retelling the story of William Lashly (1867-1940) and Thomas Crean (1877-1938) saving the life of their colleague, Edward Evans (1880-1957), in 1912 on the second of Captain Scott's Antarctic expeditions. DC Thomson.
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fisarmonical · 1 year ago
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Thomas Crean (Irish: Tomás Ó Cuirín; c. 16 February 1877 – 27 July 1938) was an Irish seaman and Antarctic explorer who was awarded the Albert Medal for Lifesaving (AM).
Crean was a member of three major expeditions to Antarctica during the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration, including Robert Falcon Scott's 1911–1913 Terra Nova Expedition. This saw the race to reach the South Pole lost to Roald Amundsen and ended in the deaths of Scott and his party. During the expedition, Crean's 35-statute-mile (56 km) solo walk across the Ross Ice Shelf to save the life of Edward Evans led to him receiving the Albert Medal. (Source: Wikipedia)
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yelek-galleries · 2 years ago
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📂Necesito saber más de Thomas si no es mucha molestia,ahora tengo muchas preguntas del tipo "pero como-" 💀
JSJGGKKHLFJD no sé preocupe uvu, espero sus dudas puedan ser arregladas
Thomás 🥒
Es hijo menor de underlust sans y Frisk
Es gemelo de Ivy
Intp 5w6
Su canción favorita es little death de the neigtbourhood (pinche canción espectacular alv)
Tiene 16 años,el es bisexual pero tiene más gustó y preferencia por las mujeres
Su cumpleaños es el 18 de Abril (yepi muy pronto)
Tiene unos sentimientos encontrados por alguien, qué sinceramente el, concidera muy especial
Tuvo una relación con un único hombre cofcofAkiraCofCof pero no salió muy bien pará el pues como lo digo?... Akira iso algo sin su consentimiento que lleva a problemas legales muy legales
De ese problema qué tuvo con Akira solo sabe el,emmett y corentin (sus besties)
El va a la universidad,aunque no lo crean, fue el mejor de su clase desde el kinder,así que no vieron necesario hacerlo perder el tiempo,y lo pasaron a la universidad, fué difícil para el pues no sabía nada XD y para fregarla estudia medicina
El trabaja como stripper,pues en underlust es lo que más se paga y lo que más vendé (además del alcohol, las drogas y el n0por) ,este lo hacé pará pagar su universidad,pues además de ir a una universidad muy prestigiosa y buena es muy cara y no quiere hacer gastar a su padres,pues ellos ponen la mitad y el la otra parte,con la otra parte del dinero pagá la escuela de su hermana Ivy qué aún le toca mucho por saber y a su tiempo
Es una persona muy realista por lo que le pasó,pues su idea es que la humanidad es un mrda, y que todos te buscan para chingarte de alguna manera
Puede que tenda esa mentalidad de la humanidad, pero es una persona muy sincera y amable con los demás, además de ser muy amorosa y complaciente en cualquier cosa
Es una persona que da lo que resive,y qué también da sin recibir algo a cambio,solo la única satisfacción de que hizo algo bueno
Su hermana Ivy sospecha de lo que le pasó,sin embargo creé que fué alguien qué va al lugar donde trabaja y no EL HIJO DE SU MILREPUTAMADRE DE AKIRA
Va a terapia y le está funcionando 🎉
Tremendo lore se carga el chico
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happss · 2 years ago
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365 Frases motivadoras para todos los días del 2023
Todos necesitamos inspiración en algún momento de nuestra vida. Sin importar que creamos en el poder de las palabras motivacionales, todos hemos necesitado frases motivadoras.
Bien sea para alcanzar una meta, superar un momento difícil o tomar una decisión compleja, estas frases motivacionales te ayudarán para continuar con tu camino.
Es importante anotar que estas frases motivacionales funcionan siempre y cuando hagas algo al respecto.
Es decir, estas frases inspiradoras no sirven si lo único que haces es leerlas y continuar con tu vida como siempre, así que a medida que ya vayas leyéndolas, toma decisiones y actúa.
Frases motivadoras para cada día del 2023:
Sabemos que existen días en los cuales no te sientes animado, quizás no te quieras levantar de la cama, prefieras quedarte acostado, no ir a trabajar y dormir todo el día.
Estas frases motivadoras sirven para este tipo de días, para cuando se requiere un esfuerzo extra. Puedes tener la tranquilidad que todas las personas, exitosas o no, tienen este tipo de días, la única diferencia es cómo se asumen.
Así que para apoyarte en estos momentos, cuando estás buscando frases de aliento, motivación, inspiración, o como quieras llamarlo, hemos creado una recopilación de 365 frases motivacionales para inspirarte cada uno de los días del año.
Inclusive, lo tenemos dividido por meses, de esta manera te ubicarás más fácil y encontrarás las frases motivadoras para tu día.
Frases inspiradoras para enero 2023
Enero 1: “Estoy convencido de que por lo menos la mitad de lo que separa a los emprendedores exitosos de los que no lo son es mera perseverancia”: Steve Jobs
Enero 2: “La riqueza, después de todo, es algo relativo, ya que el que tiene poco y quiere menos es más rico que el que tiene más y quiere aún más”: Charles Caleb Colton
Enero 3: “No puedes salvar a las personas, puedes simplemente amarlas”: Anaïs Nin
Enero 4:  “El modo de dar una vez en el clavo, es dar cien veces en la herradura”: Coronel Sanders
Enero 5: “El que pierde dinero, pierde mucho; el que pierde un amigo; pierde aún más; el que pierde fe, lo pierde todo”: Eleanor Roosevelt
Enero 6: “Mantén una visión global mientras atiendes los detalles cotidianos”: Donald Trump
Enero 7: “Haz lo que puedas, con lo que tengas, donde estés”: Theodore Roosevelt
Enero 8: “No importa cuántas veces falles, sólo debes de estar en lo correcto una vez. Entonces todos te llamarán un éxito de la noche a la mañana y te dirán lo afortunado que eres”: Mark Cuban
Enero 9: “Nunca vayas por el camino trazado, porque conduce hacia donde otros ya han estado”: Alexander Graham Bell
Enero 10: “Si no te gusta tomar riesgos, debes salir corriendo del negocio”: Ray Kroc
Frases motivadoras cortas: “El éxito es 1% inspiración y 99% transpiración”: Thomas Edison
Enero 12: “Tu trabajo va a llenar gran parte de tu vida, la única manera de estar realmente satisfecho es hacer lo que creas es un gran trabajo y la única manera de hacerlo es amar lo que haces.
Si no lo has encontrado aún, sigue buscando. Como con todo lo que tiene que ver con el corazón, sabrás cuando lo hayas encontrado”: Steve Jobs
Enero 13: “Mantén siempre tus ojos abiertos, Siempre observando. Porque cualquier cosa que veas puede inspirarte”: Grace Coddington
Enero 14: “Las oportunidades no ocurren, se crean”: Chris Grosser
Enero 15: “Compra solo algo con lo que seas feliz si el mercado cierra 10 años”: Warren Buffett
Enero 16: “No puedes escapar de la responsabilidad de mañana evadiéndola hoy”: Abraham Lincoln
Enero 17: “El dinero no te hace feliz, pero relaja los nervios”: Sean O’Casey
Enero 18: «Realmente soy un soñador práctico; mis sueños no son bagatelas en el aire. Lo que yo quiero es convertir mis sueños en realidad»: Mahatma Gandi
Enero 19: “Hay muchas malas razones para empezar una empresa. Pero sólo hay una buena razón y creo que sabes cuál es: para cambiar el mundo”: Phil Libin
Enero 20:  “Siempre da más de que lo esperan de ti”: Larry Page
Frases motivadoras cortas: “Muévete rápido y rompe objetos. Si no estás rompiendo cosas, no te estás moviendo lo suficientemente rápido”: Mark Zuckerberg
Enero 22: “El futuro pertenece a quienes creen en la belleza de sus sueños”: Eleanor Roosevelt
Libros recomendados:

Enero 23: “Da tu primer paso con fe, no es necesario que veas toda la escalera completa, sólo da tu primer paso”: Martin Luther King
Enero 24: “El dinero cuesta mucho a menudo”: Ralph Waldo Emerson
Enero 25: “Un optimista ve una oportunidad en toda calamidad, un pesimista ve una calamidad en toda oportunidad”: Winston Churchill
Enero 26:“Nuestra gloria más grande no consiste en no haberse caído nunca, sino en haberse levantado después de cada caída”: Confucio
Enero 27: “La cosa más importante que debes hacer si estás dentro de un hoyo es dejar de cavar”: Warren Buffett
Enero 28: “Odio cómo piensa la gente con el “vaso medio vacío” cuando en realidad su vaso está casi lleno. Estoy agradecido cuando tengo una gota más en el vaso porque sé exactamente qué hacer con ella”: Gary Vaynerchuk
Enero 29: “Es duro fracasar, pero es todavía peor no haber intentado nunca triunfar”: Theodore Roosevelt
Enero 30: “La gente puede ser muy inteligente o tener habilidades que son aplicables, pero si no creen en ello, entonces no van a trabajar realmente duro”: Mark Zuckerberg
Enero 31: “Nuestra mayor debilidad es rendirse, la única manera de tener éxito es intentarlo siempre una vez más»: Thomas Edison
Frases motivadoras para febrero
Febrero 1: “Me he dado cuenta de que cuanto más trabajo, más suerte tengo”: Thomas Jefferson
Febrero 2: “Compra cuando todo el mundo este vendiendo y guarda dinero cuando todos los demás están comprando. No se trata de un slogan. Es la esencia de las inversiones exitosas”: J. Paul Getty
Febrero 3: “No hay sustituto para el trabajo duro”: Thomas Edison
Febrero 4: “La mayoría de la gente pierde las oportunidades porque se viste normal y parece trabajo”: Thomas Edison
Febrero 5: “Creo que es más fácil avanzar en sueños mega-ambiciosos”: Larry Page
Febrero 6: “Hay una regla para el empresario y es: hacer los productos con la mayor calidad posible al menor coste y pagando unos sueldos lo más altos posibles”: Henry Ford
Febrero 7: “Compartir las ideas sin procesarlas puede conducirnos al engaño de pensar que en realidad estamos haciendo algo, cuando en realidad no estamos haciendo nada”: Charles T. Lee
Febrero 8: “El hábito del ahorro es una educación; fomenta cada virtud, enseña autocontrol, cultiva el sentido del orden, entrena la previsión y amplia la mente”: T.T. Munger
Febrero 9: “No gastes tu tiempo golpeando una pared, esperando transformarla en una puerta”: Coco Chanel
Febrero 10: “Cómo tratas con el fracaso determina cómo consigues el éxito”: David Feherty
Febrero 11: “La experiencia me enseñó que las mejores inversiones son las que uno no hace”: Donald Trump
Frases de motivación: “Observa, escucha y aprende. No puedes saberlo todo. Todo el que piensa que lo sabe todo está destinado a la mediocridad”: Donald Trump
Febrero 13: “Intenta lo imposible para mejorar tu trabajo”: Brian Tracy
Febrero 14: “Si puedes soñarlo puedes hacerlo, recuerda que todo esto comenzó con un ratón»: Walt Disney
Febrero 15: “Solo hay dos formas de vivir tu vida. Una es pensar que nada es un milagro. La otra es pensar que todo es un milagro”: Albert Einstein
Febrero 16: “Si te asusta, podría ser una buena cosa por intentar”: Seth Godin
Febrero 17: «Definitivamente quería ganar mi libertad. Pero la principal motivación no fue hacer dinero, sino causar un impacto»: Sean Parker
Febrero 18: “La falta de dinero es la raíz de todo mal”: Mark Twain
Febrero 19: “Sólo se puede vivir una vez. Y no quiero perder ni un minuto de mi vida”: Richard Branson
Febrero 20: “El hombre se descubre cuando se mide contra un obstáculo”: Antoine de Saint Exupery
Febrero 21: “El fracaso es sólo la oportunidad de comenzar de nuevo de forma más inteligente”: Henry Ford
Febrero 22: «Un negocio absolutamente dedicado al servicio sólo tendrá una preocupación sobre las ganancias: serán demasiado grandes”: Henry Ford
Febrero 23: “A alguna gente no le gusta el cambio, pero necesitas abrazarlo si la alternativa es el desastre”: Elon Musk
Frases motivacionales cortas: “Haz lo que ama y el dinero llegará»: Marsha Sinetar
Febrero 25: “Para triunfar, primero debemos creer que podemos”: Nikos Kazantzakis
Febrero 26: “El éxito es un pésimo profesor. Seduce a la gente inteligente para que piense que no puede perder”: Bill Gates
Febrero 27: “Si caes siete veces, levántate ocho”: Nana Koribi Yaoki
Febrero 28: “Cuando tienes dinero, solo tú recuerdas quien eres. Pero cuando no tienes dinero, todo el mundo olvida quien eres. Así es la vida”: Bill Gates
Febrero 29: “El mejor modo de predecir el futuro es inventándolo”: Alan Key
Bonus: “Tanto si piensas que puedes, como si piensas que no puedes, estás en lo cierto”: Henry Ford
Frases motivadoras para marzo 2023
Marzo 1: “El éxito está conectado con la acción. La gente exitosa se mantiene en movimiento. Cometen errores pero nunca se dan por vencido”: Conrad Hilton
Marzo 2: “Si tuviéramos que hablar más que escuchar, tendríamos dos bocas y solamente una oreja”: Mark Twain
Marzo 3: “El riesgo más grande es no tomar ninguno. En un mundo que está cambiando tan rápido, la única estrategia que está garantizada a fracasar es no tomar riesgos”: Mark Zuckerberg
Marzo 4: “Hacer o no hacer. No sirve intentar, sólo hacer”: Yoda
Frases inspiradoras de Spike Milligan: “El dinero no puede comprar amigos, pero puedes conseguir una nueva clase de enemigos”
Marzo 6: “Tú serás exitoso porque la mayoría de personas son perezosas”: Shahir Zag
Marzo 7: “Haz algo que te asuste cada día”
Marzo 8: “No trates de ser original, sólo trata de ser bueno”: Paul Rand
Marzo 9: “Tú eres una persona de éxito cuando tienes algunas de las cosas que el dinero puede comprar y todas las cosas que el dinero no puede comprar”: Zig Ziglar
Marzo 10: «Solo existen dos días del año en el que no se puede hacer nada. Uno se llama ayer y otro mañana. Por lo tanto hoy es el día ideal para amar, crecer, hacer, y principalmente vivir»: Dalai Laima 
Marzo 11: “El miedo no existe en otro lugar excepto en la mente”: Dale Carnegie
Marzo 12: «Un cobarde es incapaz de mostrar amor; hacerlo está reservado para los valientes»: Mahatma Gandi
Marzo 13: “Hay hombres que luchan un día y son buenos. Hay otros que luchan un año y son mejores. Hay quienes luchan muchos años y son muy buenos. Pero los hay que luchan toda la vida. Esos son los imprescindibles”: Bertolt Brecht
Marzo 14: “El dinero no puede comprar vida”: Bob Marley
Marzo 15: “El dinero es una herramienta. Te llevará a donde desees, pero no te reemplazará como conductor”: Ayn Rand
Marzo 16: “El tiempo, la perseverancia y diez años de intentos eventualmente te hará ver como un éxito de la noche a la mañana”: Biz Stone
Frases motivacionales cortas: “El optimismo es la cualidad más asociada con el éxito y la felicidad”: Brian Tracy
Marzo 18: “Me tomó 20 años tener éxito de la noche a la mañana”: Woody Allen
Marzo 19: “Arriesgarte más de lo que los otros piensan es seguro. Soñar más de lo que los otros piensan es práctico”: Howard Schultz
Marzo 20: “Ganar dinero en si mismo no es difícil. Lo difícil es ganarlo haciendo algo a lo que merezca la pena dedicar la vida”: Carlos Ruiz Zafón
Marzo 21: “No te preocupes por el financiamiento si no lo necesitas. Hoy es más económico que nunca iniciar un negocio”: Noah Everett
Frases motivadoras cortas: “En las ideas es en donde reside nuestra fuerza y tanto mejor si las sostenemos con obstinación”: Enzo Ferrari
Marzo 23: “Ten en mente que tu propósito y tu plan para lograrlo puede ser modificado de vez en cuando… lo importante es que comprendas el significado de trabajar siempre con un objetivo en mente y con un plan bien estructurado”: Napoleon Hill
Marzo 24: “Si duplicas el número de experimentos que haces por año, vas a duplicar tu ingenio”: Jeff Bezos
Marzo 25: “Deja de perseguir el dinero y empieza a perseguir la pasión”: Tony Hsieh
Marzo 26: “La riqueza no consiste en tener grandes posesiones, sino en tener pocas necesidades”: Epíteto
Marzo 27: “Algunas veces se gana, algunas veces se aprende”: John Maxwell
Marzo 28: “Solo eres tan bueno como la gente que contratas”: Ray Kroc
La inteligencia es un don, la amabilidad es una elección: Jeff Bezos
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Marzo 30: “La simplicidad y el sentido común deberían ser la base de la planificación y la dirección estratégica”: Ingvar Kamprad
Marzo 31: “El éxito es aprender a ir de fracaso en fracaso sin desesperarse”: Winston Churchill
Frases motivadoras para reflexionar en abril
Abril 1: “Precio es lo que pagas, valor es lo que recibes”: Warren Buffett 
Abril 2: “Nunca gastes tu dinero antes de tenerlo”: Thomas Jefferson       
Abril 3: “Le debo mi éxito a haber escuchado con respeto a los mejores consejos, y luego desaparecer y hacer exactamente lo contrario”: G. K. Chesterton        
Frases motivadoras de Henry Ford: “Un negocio que no hace más que dinero es un negocio pobre”
Abril 5: “Cuando se innova, tienes que estar preparado para que la gente te diga que estas loco”: Larry Ellison 
Abril 6: “Aquellos que dicen que algo no puede hacerse, suelen ser interrumpidos por otros que lo están haciendo”: Joel A. Barker     
Abril 7: “Los que renuncian son más numerosos que los que fracasan”: Henry Ford 
Abril 8: “Mientras que el dinero no puede comprar felicidad, te permite elegir tu propia forma de desgracia”: Groucho Marx     
Abril 9: “El carácter no puede ser desarrollado en la facilidad y la tranquilidad. Sólo a través de la experiencia de prueba y error del sufrimiento puede el alma ser fortalecida, la ambición ser inspirada y alcanzado, finalmente, el éxito”: Helen Keller    
Abril 10: “La vida es peligrosa, no por los que hacen el mal, sino por los que se sientan a ver lo que pasa”: Albert Einstein    
Abril 11: “Las personas no son recordadas por el número de veces que fracasan, sino por el número de veces que tienen éxito”: Thomas Alva Edison   
Abril 12: “Cada persona forja su propio destino”: Carlos Slim    
Abril 13: “Puedes decirle cualquier cosa a la gente, pero la forma en la que lo dices determinara cómo reaccionarán”: John Rampton   
Abril 14: “Creo que es posible que la gente normal elija ser extraordinaria”: Elon Musk      
Abril 15: “El éxito es qué tan alto rebotas después de que tocaste fondo”: George Patton
Abril 16: “La competición te hace mejor, siempre, siempre te hace mejor, incluso si el competidor gana”: Carlos Slim    
Abril 17: “Adormecer el dolor por un rato te hará sentirlo luego con más intensidad”: Albus Dumbledore    
Abril 18: “Todo el progreso se lleva a cabo fuera de la zona de confort”: Michael John Bobak
Abril 19: “Vale más hacer la cosa más insignificante del mundo, que estar media hora sin hacer nada”: Goethe    
Abril 20: “Nunca agaches la cabeza, mira siempre bien alto ganes o pierdas”: Enzo Ferrari 
Abril 21: “Aquel que se cree que sabe todo está cerrándose puertas”: Donald Trump
Abril 22: “No he fracasado. He encontrado 10 mil formas que no funcionan”: Thomas Edison
Abril 23: “Los líderes sobresalientes salen de su camino para fomentar la autoestima de su personal. Si la gente cree en ellos mismos, es increíble lo que pueden conseguir”: Sam Walton
Abril 24: “Si no puedes volar, corre, si no puedes correr, camina, si no puedes caminar, gatea. Sin importar lo que hagas, sigue avanzado hacia adelante”: Martin Luther King Jr.        
Abril 25: “Regla número 1: nunca pierdas dinero. Regla número 2: nunca olvides la regla número 1”: Warren Buffett 
Frases motivadoras cortas de Pablo Piccasso: “Me gustaría vivir como un hombre pobre con mucho dinero”
Abril 27: “No es el hombre que tiene poco, sino el que ansía más el que es pobre”: Séneca 
Abril 28: “Lo que realmente da forma a nuestra vida es el significado que damos a las cosas”: Tony Robbins        
Abril 29: “La persistencia es muy importante. No debes renunciar al menos que te veas obligado a renunciar”: Elon Musk   
Abril 30: “Los amigos y las buenas maneras te llevarán donde el dinero no puede”: Margaret Walker 
Frases de la vida motivadoras para mayo
Mayo 1: “Si sólo trabajas en cosas que te gusten y te apasionen, no deberías tener un plan maestro para ver cómo resulta todo”: Mark Zuckerberg
Mayo 2: “No pienses que el dinero lo hace todo o acabarás haciéndolo todo por el dinero”: Voltaire
Mayo 3: “Cuando un sueño aparezca ¡agárralo!”: Larry Page
Mayo 4: “El fracaso es una gran oportunidad para empezar otra vez con más inteligencia”: Henry Ford
Mayo 5: “Para inventar, necesitas una buena imaginación y una pila de basura”: Thomas Edison
Mayo 6: “El dinero y el éxito no cambian a la gente; simplemente amplifican lo que ya hay”: Will Smith
Mayo 7: “Solo hay una clase en la comunidad que piensa más en el dinero que el rico, y es el pobre”: Oscar Wilde
Mayo 8: “Dentro de 20 años estarás más decepcionado por las cosas que no hiciste que por las que hiciste. Así que suelta amarras, navega lejos de puertos seguros, atrapa los vientos favorables en tus velas. Explora. Sueña”: Mark Twain
Mayo 9: «Nada es particularmente difícil si lo divides en pequeños trabajos»: Frases de Henry Ford
Mayo 10: “Un pequeño esfuerzo es el mejor sustituto de las excusas”: Donald Trump
Mayo 11: «Nunca se puede cruzar el océano hasta que se tenga el coraje de perder de vista la costa»: Cristobal Colón
Mayo 12: “La educación formal te dará para vivir; la autoeducación te dará una fortuna»: Jim Rohn
Mayo 13: “Toma 20 años crear una reputación y cinco minutos arruinarla. Si piensas de esa manera, harás las cosas diferente”: Warren Buffet
Mayo 14: “El dinero es un amo terrible pero un excelente siervo”: P.T. Barnum
Mayo 15: “Alguien se sienta hoy en la sombra de un árbol que plantó  hace mucho tiempo”: Warren Buffett
Mayo 16: “Nuestra mayor debilidad radica en renunciar. La forma más segura de tener éxito es siempre intentarlo una vez más”: Thomas Edison
Mayo 17: “Puede que el dinero no compre la felicidad, pero prefiero llorar en un jaguar que en un autobús”: Françoise Sagan
Mayo 18: “Celebra tu éxito. Encuentra algo de humor en tus fracasos”: Sam Walton
Mayo 19: “Una persona debe fijar sus objetivos cuanto antes y dedicar toda su energía y talento a ellos”: Walt Disney
Mayo 20: “No dejes que el miedo de perder sea mayor que la emoción de ganar”: Robert Kiyosaki
Mayo 21: “El dinero no puede comprar la felicidad, pero seguro que te conseguirá una mejor clase de recuerdos”: Ronald Reagan
Mayo 22: “El dinero no compra la felicidad, pero alivia el estrés»: Besa Kosova
Mayo 23: «Escoge un trabajo que te guste, y nunca tendrás que trabajar ni un solo día de tu vida»: Confucio
Mayo 24: “Nunca intento hacer dinero en el mercado de valores. Compro con la asunción de que podrían cerrar al día siguiente y reabrir en 10 años”: Warren Buffett
Mayo 25: “Solo aquellos que están dormidos no cometen errores”: Ingvar Kamprad
Mayo 26: “No todo lo que se puede contar cuenta y no todo lo que cuenta se puede contar”: Albert Einstein
Mayo 27: “La voluntad obstinada de perseguir una ambición propia es verdaderamente una fuerza que puede hacer superar obstáculos”: Enzo Ferrari
Mayo 28: “Nunca he soñado con el éxito. Siempre he trabajado para conseguirlo”: Estée Lauder
Frases motivadoras de la vida: “El tiempo es tu recurso más importante. Puedes hacer tanto en diez minutos. Diez minutos, una vez pasados, se fueron para siempre. Diez minutos no son solo una sexta parte de una hora. Divide tu vida en unidades de diez minutos y desperdicia las mínimas posibles en actividades sin sentido”: Ingvar Kamprad
Mayo 30: “Si realmente quieres hacer algo, encontrarás una manera. Si no, encontrarás una excusa”: Jim Rohn
Mayo 31: “No necesitas tener una empresa de 100 personas para desarrollar esa idea”: Larry Page
Frases motivacionales que te inspirarán en junio
Junio 1: «Siempre que te pregunten si puedes hacer un trabajo, contesta que sí y ponte enseguida a aprender cómo se hace»: Franklin D. Roosevelt
Junio 2: “Hay momentos en nuestras vidas en los que tenemos que reunir el valor para tomar ciertas decisiones que por alguna razón, van contra nuestro sentido común pero que han sido aconsejadas por sabias personas en las que confiamos.
Decidimos seguir adelante, a pesar de los riesgos y de ir contra el raciocinio, porque creemos que el camino que han escogido los demás es el correcto y lo mejor que se puede hacer”: Howard Schultz
Junio 3: “¿Mi más grande motivación? Seguir retándome a mí mismo. Veo la vida como una larga educación universitaria que nunca tuve- todos los días estoy aprendiendo algo nuevo”: Richard Branson
Junio 4: “Caemos para tener éxito”: Mary Kay Ash
Junio 5: “Ningún hombre debería recibir un dólar al menos que ese dólar haya sido ganado justamente”: Theodore Roosevelt
Junio 6: “Internet debe ser un medio de comunicación entre los pueblos que contribuya a la paz mundial y que el principal objetivo de la alta tecnología es mejorar el nivel de vida de las personas”: Larry Ellison
Junio 7: “Para la mayoría de las cosas importantes, el tiempo siempre es una lata. ¿Esperas un buen momento para renunciar a tu trabajo? Las estrellas nunca se alinearán y los semáforos nunca se pondrán en verde al mismo tiempo.
El universo no conspira en tu contra, pero tampoco se sale de su camino para acomodar las cosas. Las condiciones nunca son perfectas. “Algún día” es una enfermedad que llevará tus sueños a la tumba.
Las listas de pros y contras son igual de malas. Si es importante para ti y quieres hacerlo “eventualmente”, sólo hazlo y corrige el curso sobre la marcha”: Timothy Ferris
Junio 8: “No trates de convertirte en un hombre de éxito sino en un hombre de valores”: Albert Einstein
Junio 9: “El primer paso es establecer que algo es posible; entonces la probabilidad ocurrirá”: Elon Musk
Junio 10: “Puedes ser joven sin dinero, pero no puedes ser viejo sin el”: Tennessee Williams
Junio 11: “Demasiadas personas gastan el dinero que ganaron para comprar cosas que no quieren, para impresionar a gente que no les gusta”: Will Rogers
Hay una diferencia entre ser pobre y estar quebrado. Uno puede estar quebrado temporalmente, uno es pobre para toda la vida: Robert Kiyosaki
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Junio 13: “Cuando tengas 80 años, y en un momento tranquilo de reflexión, narrando sólo para ti la versión más personal de tu historia de vida, el relato que será más conciso y significativo será la serie de elecciones que hayas hecho. Al final, somos nuestras elecciones”: Jeff Bezos
Junio 14: “Nunca abandones un sueño por el tiempo que te puede tomar. De igual forma, el tiempo pasará”: Earl Nightingale
Frases inspiradoras cortas:“En la inversión, lo que es cómodo es raramente rentable”: Robert Arnott
Junio 16: “Cuando dejas de soñar dejas de vivir”: Malcolm Forbes
Junio 17: “Puedes estar decepcionado si fracasas, pero estás acabado si no lo intentas”: Beverly Sills
Junio 18: “Fracasar no es perder, es no haberlo intentado”: Xavier Gabriel
Junio 19: “Un campeón tiene miedo de perder. Los demás tienen miedo de ganar”: Billie Jean King
Junio 20: “Una persona que nunca cometió un error, nunca intentó algo nuevo”: Albert Einstein
Frases motivadoras cortas: “Cuando tenía dinero, todos me llamaban hermano”
Junio 22: “La forma en que los jefes tratan a los empleados es exactamente cómo los empleados tratarán a los clientes”: Sam Walton
Junio 23: “Esta bien tener dinero y las cosas que el dinero puede comprar, pero esta bien también comprobar de vez en cuando que no has perdido las cosas que el dinero no puede comprar”: George Lorimer
Junio 24: “Si no te avergüenza la primera versión de tu producto, lo lanzaste muy tarde”: Reid Hoffman
Junio 25: “La zona de confort es un lugar maravilloso, pero nada crece allí”: Anónimo
Junio 26: “Te convertirás en alguien tan pequeño como el deseo que te controle, y en algo tan grande como sea tu aspiración dominante”: James Allen
Frases motivadoras de Walt Disney: “Mickey Mouse apareció salió de mi mente en una libreta de dibujo, en un tren de Manhattan a Hollywood, en un momento en que la empresa de mi hermano Roy y mía estaba en el punto más bajo y el desastre parecía a la vuelta de la esquina”
Junio 28: “No tengo miedo de morir, tengo miedo de no intentarlo”: Jay Z
Junio 29: “Debes ganar control sobre tu dinero o la falta del mismo te controlará a ti”: Dave Ramsey
Junio 30: “No importa a cuantas personas ofendas, siempre que tu mensaje llegue a tus consumidores. Les digo a los que no quieren ofender a nadie: Vas a pasar tiempos muy, muy difíciles intentando obtener una publicidad con significado”: Phil Knight
Frases motivadoras para julio
Crédito: Gage Skidmore
Julio 1: “Hay un motor poderoso dentro de cada ser humano que, una vez liberado, puede hacer realidad cualquier visión, sueño o deseo”: Anthony Robbins
Julio 2: “El ingrediente más importante es levantarte y hacer algo. Es así de simple. Muchas personas tienen ideas, pero solo algunas deciden hacer algo respecto hoy.
No mañana. No la siguiente semana. Sino hoy. El verdadero emprendedor actúa en lugar de soñar”: Nolan Bushnell
Julio 3: “La confianza en sí mismo es el primer secreto del éxito”: Ralph Waldo Emerson
Julio 4: “El recordar que estaré muerto pronto es la herramienta más importante que he encontrado para ayudarme a tomar las grandes decisiones en la vida.
Porque casi todo —todas las expectativas externas, todo el orgullo, todo temor a la vergüenza o al fracaso— todas estas cosas simplemente desaparecen al enfrentar la muerte, dejando sólo lo que es verdaderamente importante.
Recordar que uno va a morir es la mejor manera que conozco para evitar la trampa de pensar que hay algo por perder. Ya se está indefenso. No hay razón alguna para no seguir los consejos del corazón”: Steve Jobs
Julio 5: “Debes hacer cosas que realmente sean importantes, pero también debes divertirte, porque sino, no tendrás éxito”: Larry Page
Julio 6: “Te contaré el secreto para hacerte rico en Wall Street. Se codicioso cuando otros sean miedosos y se temeroso cuando otros sean codiciosos”: Warren Buffett
Julio 7: “Cuando era joven, pensaba que el dinero era lo más importante en la vida. Ahora que soy mayor, sé que lo es”: Oscar Wilde
Julio 8: “Todos tus sueños pueden hacerse realidad si tienes el coraje de perseguirlos”: Walt Disney
Julio 9: “La felicidad no es la mera posesión de dinero; reside en la alegría del logro, en la emoción del esfuerzo creativo»: Franklin D. Roosevelt
Julio 10: “El emprendimiento no es ni ciencia ni arte, es una práctica”: Peter Drucker
Julio 11: “La grama es más verde donde la riegas con agua”: Neil Barringham
Julio 12: “Piensa en grande y no escuches a quienes te dicen que no puedes hacerlo. La vida es muy corta para pensar en pequeño»: Tim Ferris
Julio 13: “El crecimiento constante es el mejor mecanismo de supervivencia”: Amancio Ortega
Julio 14: “Nunca serás un perdedor hasta que dejes de intentarlo”: Mike Ditka
Julio 15: “Las grandes ideas se originan en los músculos”: Thomas Edison
Julio 16: “Construir una gran misión y un negocio van de la mano. Es verdad que la primera cosa que me entusiasma sobre lo que estamos haciendo es la misión, pero también creo, desde un principio, que hemos tenido un sano entendimiento de que tenemos que hacer ambos”: Mark Zuckerberg
Frases motivadoras de la vida: “Un verdadero perdedor es alguien que tiene tanto miedo a no ganar que no lo intenta”
Julio 18: “El tiempo es dinero”: Benjamin Franklin
Julio 19: “Si solo trabajas por dinero, nunca lo conseguirás, pero si amas lo que haces y siempre pones primero al cliente, el éxito será tuyo”: Ray Kroc
Julio 20: “La calidad de un líder se refleja en las normas que establece para si mismo”: Ray Kroc
Julio 21: “El riesgo viene de no saber lo que estás haciendo”: Warren Buffett
Julio 22: “Si buscas resultados distintos, no hagas siempre lo mismo”: Albert Einstein
Julio 23: «La travesía de mil millas comienza con un paso»: Lao-Tsé
El único límite a nuestros logros de mañana está en nuestras dudas de hoy: Franklin D. Roosevelt
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Frases motivacionales cortas:«Si quieres cambiar al mundo, cámbiate a ti mismo»: Mahatma Gandi
Julio 26: “Solo aquellos que se atreven a tener grandes fracasos terminan consiguiendo grandes éxitos”: Robert F. Kennedy
Julio 27: “Si quieres vivir una vida feliz, átala a una meta no a una persona u objeto”: Albert Einstein
Julio 28: “Por favor piensa en tu legado, porque lo estás escribiendo todos los días”: Gary Vaynerchuck
Frases motivadoras para reflexionar: “Toma en serio tus sueños”
Julio 30: “El objetivo principal de una empresa es ganar dinero. La función primordial del Gobierno es tomar una gran parte de ese dinero y darla a los demás”: Larry Ellison
Julio 31: “No es cuanto dinero ganas, sino cuando dinero ahorras, cuanto trabaja para ti y para cuantas generaciones tendrás”: Robert Kiyosaki
Agosto 1: “Hazlo con pasión, o no lo hagas”: Rosa Nouchette Carey
Frases motivadoras: “La medida real de tu riqueza es cuando vales si pierdes todo tu dinero”
Agosto 3: “Todo aquel que haya hecho algo importante en la vida, fue disciplinado”:Andrew Hendrixson
Agosto 4: “La vida es lo que ocurre mientras estamos ocupados haciendo planes”: John Lennon
Agosto 5: “Tenemos que tener una meta, un propósito en nuestras vidas. Si no sabes a donde estas apuntando, no tienes una meta”: Mary Kay Ash
Agosto 6: “Algunas personas sueñan con el éxito, mientras otras se despiertan y trabajan para lograrlo”: Anónimo
Agosto 7: “Las personas que están lo suficientemente locas como para pensar que pueden cambiar el mundo… son quienes lo cambian”: Steve Jobs
Agosto 8: “La tragedia en la vida no consiste en no alcanzar tus metas. La tragedia en la vida es no tener metas que alcanzar”: Benjamin E. Mays
Agosto 9: “La riqueza fluye de la energía y de las ideas”: William Feather
Agosto 10: “El fracaso más grande es nunca haberlo intentado”: Proverbio chino
Agosto 11: “Una inversión en conocimiento paga el mejor interés”: Benjamin Franklin
Agosto 12: “El pensamiento positivo te dejará hacer todo mejor que el negativo”: Zig Ziglar
Agosto 13: “Si vas a pensar de todas formas, piensa en grande”: Donald Trump
Agosto 14: “Una persona inteligente debería tener dinero en su cabeza, no en su corazón”: Jonathan Swift
Agosto 15: “En los momentos de crisis solo la imaginación es más importante que el conocimiento”: Robert Kiyosaki
Agosto 16: “No es lo que tu tienes, sino como usas lo que tienes lo que marca la diferencia”: Zig Ziglar
Agosto 17: “Sé un punto de referencia de calidad. Algunas personas no están acostumbradas a un ambiente donde la excelencia es aceptada”: Steve Jobs
Agosto 18: “Casi todo lo que realice será insignificante, pero es muy importante que lo haga”: Mahatma Gandhi
Agosto 19: “Nunca consideres el estudio como una obligación, sino como una oportunidad para penetrar en el bello y maravilloso mundo del saber”: Albert Einstein
Agosto 20: “Tu tiempo es limitado, así que no lo desperdicies viviendo la vida de alguien más.
No te dejes atrapar por el dogma, que es vivir con los resultados de los pensamientos de otras personas. No dejes que el ruido de las opiniones de otros ahogue tu voz interior.
Y lo más importante: ten el coraje de seguir a tu corazón e intuición. De algún modo ellos ya saben lo que realmente quieres ser. Todo lo demás es secundario”: Steve Jobs
Agosto 21: “Una buena idea es un 10% de implementación y de trabajo, el otro 90% es suerte”: Guy Kawasaki
Agosto 22: “El arte no esta en ganar dinero, sino en mantenerlo”: Anónimo
Agosto 23: “Está bien celebrar el éxito pero es más importante prestar atención a las lecciones del fracaso”: Bill Gates
Agosto 24: “Mi meta nunca fue sólo crear una empresa. Mucha gente malinterpreta eso, como si no me importaran las ganancias o el beneficio o cualquiera de esas cosas. Pero el no ser sólo otra empresa significa para mi construir algo que realmente genere un gran cambio”: Mark Zuckerberg
Agosto 25: “No importa qué tan lento vayas mientras no te detengas”: Confucio
Agosto 26: «El éxito no se logra sólo con cualidades especiales. Es sobre todo un trabajo de constancia, de método y de organización»: Víctor Hugo
Agosto 27: “No te averguenzes de tus fracasos, aprende de ellos y comienza de nuevo”: Richard Branson
Agosto 28: “Solo hay un jefe. El cliente. Y él puede despedir a cualquiera en la compañía, desde el presidente hasta el último empleado, simplemente gastándose su dinero en otra parte”: Sam Walton
Agosto 29: “Si estuviésemos motivados por el dinero, hubiésemos vendido Google y estaríamos en la playa”: Larry Page
Agosto 30: “Sueña en grande. Comienza en pequeño. Pero sobretodo, comienza”: Simon Sinek
Agosto 31: “He perdido más de nueve mil oportunidades en mi carrera. He perdido casi 300 juegos. Me han confiado 26 veces el tiro ganador y he fallado. He fracasado una y otra vez en mi vida y por eso he tenido éxito”: Michael Jordan
Frases motivacionales para septiembre
Septiembre 1: “No tengas miedo de renunciar a lo bueno, para perseguir lo grandioso”: Jhon D. Rockefeller
Frases motivacionales cortas:“Si tienes miedo de fallar, seguramente fallarás”: Kobe Bryant
Septiembre 3: “Recuerda, hoy es el mañana acerca del cual te preocupabas ayer”: Dale Carnegie
Septiembre 4: “Pensar es el trabajo más difícil que existe. Quizá esa sea la razón por la que haya tan pocas personas que lo practiquen”: Henry Ford
Septiembre 5: “¿Por que contentarnos con vivir a rastras cuando sentimos el anhelo de volar?”: Hellen Keller
Septiembre 6: “Ningún pesimista ha descubierto nunca el secreto de las estrellas, o navegado hacia una tierra sin descubrir, o abierto una nueva esperanza en el corazón humano”: Hellen Keller
Septiembre 7: “Puedes tener cualquier cosa de este mundo que quieras, si lo quieres lo suficiente como para pagar su precio”: Mary Kay Ash
Septiembre 8: “Mucha gente no cuida su dinero hasta que casi lo gastan y otros hacen lo mismo con su tiempo”: Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Septiembre 9: “El éxito no es la clave de la felicidad. La felicidad es la clave del éxito. Si amas lo que estas haciendo serás exitoso”: Albert Schweitzer
Frases motivadoras: “No puedes vivir 75 veces el mismo año y luego llamarlo vida”: Robin Sharma
Septiembre 11: “Tienes que saber lo que va a pasar si quieres seguir estando un paso por delante”: Phil Knight
Septiembre 12: “No te limites a ti mismo. Muchas personas se limitan a lo que piensan que pueden hacer. Puedes ir tan lejos como tu mente te permita. Puedes conseguir lo que creas, recuérdalo”: Mary Kay Ash
Septiembre 13: “La experiencia me ha enseñado unas cuantas cosas. Una es escuchar mi intuición, no importa como suene las cosas en un papel. La segunda es que por lo general eres mejor haciendo lo que sabes. Y la tercera es que tu mejor inversión puede ser aquella que no haces”: Donald Trump
Septiembre 14: «Lo que te hace crecer es la derrota, el error»: Pep Guardiola
Septiembre 15: “Hasta que no te valores a ti mismo no valoraras tu tiempo. Y hasta que no valores tu tiempo no harás nada con él”: M.Scott Peck
Septiembre 16: “No tiene nada de malo ser pequeño. Puedes hacer grandes cosas con un equipo así”: Jason Fried
Septiembre 17: “No tengo grandes ideas. A veces tengo pequeñas ideas que parecen funcionar”: Matt Mullenweg
Septiembre 18: “Cada vez que defines en lo que quieres creer, eres el primero en escucharlo. Es un mensaje a ti y a los demás sobre lo que piensas que es posible. No pongas un techo sobre ti mismo”: Oprah Winfrey
Septiembre 19: “Fracasa seguido para que puedas tener éxito pronto”: Tom Kelley
Septiembre 20: “Mis cosas favoritas de la vida no cuestan dinero. Esta claro que el recurso más preciado que tenemos es el tiempo”: Steve Jobs
Septiembre 21: “Sentir rabia es como tomar veneno y esperar que muera la otra persona”: Anónimo
Septiembre 22: “El dinero no es la única respuesta, pero marca una diferencia”: Barack Obama
Septiembre 23: “Es mejor fracasar siendo original que tener éxito imitando”: Herman Melville
Septiembre 24: “Mi ambición ha sido siempre hacer realizables los sueños”: Bill Gates
Septiembre 25: “El hombre que hace más de lo que se le paga, pronto ganará más de lo que hace”: Napoleon Hill
Septiembre 26: «Si puedes soñarlo, puedes lograrlo»: Zig Ziglar
Septiembre 27: “Los campeones se mantienen jugando hasta que lo hacen bien”: Billie Jean King
Septiembre 28: “Para que cualquier cosa suceda, primero hay que hacer algo”: Albert Einstein
Septiembre 29: “No puedo darte una fórmula segura para el éxito, pero puedo darte una fórmula segura para el fracaso: Intenta complacer a todos, todo el tiempo”: Herbert Bayard Swope
Frases motivadoras cortas de Benjamin Franklin: “Rico no es el que tiene riqueza, sino el que la disfruta”
Frases motivadoras para octubre
Octubre 1: “Es posible ganar más amigos en dos meses interesándonos por los demás que en dos años tratando que los demás se interesen por nosotros”: Dale Carnegie
Octubre 2: “En vez de pensar cuando serán tus próximas vacaciones deberías construir una vida de la cual no quieras escapar”: Seth Godin
Octubre 3: “Cuando hay una crisis, es cuando algunos están interesados en salir y nosotros estamos interesados en entrar”: Carlos Slim
Octubre 4: “Si no estás dispuesto a arriesgar lo inusual, tendrás que acostumbrarte a lo ordinario”: Jim Rohn
La riqueza es la habilidad para experimentar totalmente la vida: Henry David Thoreau
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Octubre 6: “Deja de esperar a que sea viernes, que sea verano, o que alguien te ame de por vida. La felicidad se alcanza cuando dejas de esperar y aprovechas al máximo el presente”: T. Harv Eker
Octubre 7: “Siempre intenté convertir cada desastre en una oportunidad”: John D. Rockefeller Jr.
Octubre 8: “El éxito no es el resultado de una combustión espontánea. Tú tienes que encenderte primero”: Fred Shero
Octubre 9: “Un hombre exitoso es aquel capaz de construir fundaciones firmes con los ladrillos que le tiraron otros”: David Brinkley
Octubre 10: “Hay dos tipos de personas que te van a decir que tú no puedes aportar una diferencia a este mundo: aquellos que tienen miedo de intentarlo y aquellos que tienen miedo que seas tú el que tenga éxito”: Ray Goforth
Frases motivadoras: “Si quieres que algo sea hecho, nombra un responsable. Si quieres que algo se demore eternamente, nombra una comisión”: Napoleón
Octubre 12: “Casi no fundo Google porque estaba preocupado por el riesgo y por dejar mi programa de Doctorado”: Larry Page
Octubre 13: “La creatividad es la inteligencia divirtiéndose”: Albert Einstein
Octubre 14: “Si el dinero es tu esperanza para la independencia, nunca la tendrás. Lo única seguridad real que un hombre tendrá en este mundo es una reserva de conocimiento, experiencia y habilidad”: Henry Ford
Octubre 15: “Hay gente que tiene dinero y hay gente que es rica”: Coco Chanel
Octubre 16: “Hay dos tipos de empresas: las que trabajan para tratar de cobrar más, y las que trabajan para cobrar menos. Nosotros seremos de la segunda clase”: Jeff Bezos
Octubre 17: “Eres responsable por los pensamientos que albergas en tu mente en cualquier momento. Tienes la capacidad de pensar lo que desees. Así que inclusive todas tus actitudes y comportamientos negativos y autodestructivos se han originado en la manera que has elegido pensar”: Wayne Dyer
Octubre 18: “El cambio no solamente es necesario en la vida, es la vida en sí misma”: Alvin Toffler
Octubre 19: “Cualquier cosa que quieras, la puedes alcanzar si vas a por ello”: Wayne Dyer
Frases motivacionales cortas: «Un líder es un negociador de esperanzas»: Napoleón
Octubre 21: “No duermas para descansar, duerme para soñar. Porque los sueños están para cumplirse”: Walt Disney
Octubre 22: “El mejor momento para plantar un árbol fue hace 20 años. El segundo mejor momento es ahora”: Proverbio chino
Octubre 23: “Un negocio es simplemente una idea para mejorar la vida de otras personas”: Richard Branson
Octubre 24: “No es el empleador el que paga el salario. Los empleadores solo manejan el dinero. Es el cliente el que paga el salario”: Henry Ford
Octubre 25: «Mantente alejado de aquellas personas que tratan de menospreciar tus ambiciones. Las personas pequeñas siempre lo hacen, pero los verdaderamente grandes hacen sentirte que tú también puedes ser grande»: Mark Twain
Octubre 26: “Sé el cambio que quieres ver en el mundo”: Mahatma Gandhi
Octubre 27: “Si no valoras tu tiempo, tampoco lo harán otros. Deja de regalar tu tiempo y talento. Valora lo que sabes y comienza a cobrar por ello”: Kim Garst
Octubre 28: “En el mundo moderno de los negocios, es inútil ser un pensador creativo y original a menos que también vendas lo que creas”: David Ogilvy
Octubre 29: “Destruyo mis enemigos cuando los convierto en mis amigos”: Abraham Lincoln
Octubre 30: “La circulación de confianza es mejor que la circulación de dinero”: James Madison
Octubre 31: “He sido bendecido de encontrar gente más inteligente que yo; ellos me ayudan a ejecutar la visión que tengo”: Russell Simmons
Frases motivadoras para noviembre 2023
Frases motivacionales cortas: “No estaba lloviendo cuando Noé construyó su arca”: Howard Ruff
Noviembre 2: “Solo puedes realizarte completamente en algo que amas. Que tu meta no sea ganar dinero. En su lugar, persigue cosas que ames hacer y hazlas tan bien que la gente no pueda quitar sus ojos de ti”: Maya Angelou
Noviembre 3: “En las batallas te das cuenta que los planes son inservibles, pero hacer planes indispensable”: Dwight E. Eisenhower
Noviembre 4: “Ningún hombre será el mejor si no tiene fuego en la sangre”: Enzo Ferrari
Noviembre 5: “Uno de los grandes errores que comete la gente es tratar de forzar su interés. Tú no eliges tus pasiones; tus pasiones te eligen a ti”: Jeff Bezos
Noviembre 6: “No, no soy rico. Soy un hombre pobre con dinero, lo que no es lo mismo”: Gabriel García Márquez
Noviembre 7: “Si vives para tenerlo todo, lo que tienes nunca es suficiente”: Vicki Robin
Noviembre 8: “Si no sueñas, no vas a lograr nada”: Richard Branson
Noviembre 9: “Es fácil tener principios cuando eres rico. Lo más importante es tener principios cuando eres pobre”: Ray Kroc
Noviembre 10: “Si estas en los negocios, necesitas entender el ambiente. Necesitas tener una visión del futuro y necesitas conocer el pasado”: Carlos Slim
Noviembre 11: “Exígete mucho a ti mismo y espera poco de los demás, así te ahorrarás disgustos”: Confucio
Noviembre 12: “Cualquiera que no este cometiendo errores es que no está intentándolo lo suficiente”: Wess Roberts
Noviembre 13: “No te disculpes por tener altos estándares. Las personas que realmente quieren estar en tu vida alcanzarán este nivel”: Ziad K. Abdelnour
Noviembre 14: “Es difícil derrotar a una persona que nunca se rinde”: Babe Ruth
Noviembre 15: “Tú sabes que estás en el camino del éxito si estás dispuesto a hacer tu trabajo aun cuando no te paguen”: Oprah Winfrey
Noviembre 16: «El 80% del éxito se basa simplemente en insistir»: Woody Allen
Noviembre 17: “El valor de la vida puede ser medido por las veces en las que tu alma ha estado muy agitada”: Soichiro Honda
Noviembre 18: “No basta con hacer productos buenos. Tienes que hacer que la gente se entere de lo que estás haciendo”: Phil Knight
Noviembre 19: “El dinero normalmente se atrae, no se persigue”: Jim Rohn
Noviembre 20: “Solo triunfa en el mundo quien se levanta y busca a las circunstancias y las crea si no las encuentra”: George Bernard Shaw
Frases motivacionales cortas: “El valiente puede no vivir para siempre, pero el cautelosa no vive en absoluto”: Richard Branson
Noviembre 22: “Solo trabajo con los mejores, no se trata de las mejores hojas de vida sino de la actitud correcta”: Donald Trump
Noviembre 23: “Las altas expectativas son la clave de todo”: Sam Walton
Noviembre 24: “Cuando todo parezca ir en tu contra, recuerda que el avión despega contra el viento”: Henry Ford
Noviembre 25: “El que tiene mucho no es rico, sino el que da mucho”: Erich Fromm
Noviembre 26: “No hay secretos para el éxito. Este se alcanza preparándose, trabajando arduamente y aprendiendo del fracaso”: Colin Powell
Noviembre 27: “Si el plan no funciona, cámbialo, pero nunca cambies tu objetivo”: Anónimo
Noviembre 28: “Lo imposible es el fantasma de los tímidos y el refugio de los cobardes”: Napoleón
Noviembre 29: “Las ideas son fáciles, implementarlas es lo difícil”: Guy Kawasaki
Noviembre 30: “Presta atención al feedback negativo y solicítalo, particularmente de los amigos. Difícilmente alguien hace eso y es de mucha ayuda”: Elon Musk
Frases motivacionales para diciembre
Diciembre 1: “El fracaso derrota a los perdedores e inspira a los ganadores”: Robert Kiyosaki
Diciembre 2: “Los medios quieren éxitos de la noche a la mañana. Ignóralos. Ignora también a los inversionistas que quieren tácticas probadas y resultados instantáneos y previsibles. Escucha en cambio a tus clientes, a tu propia visión y haz algo que dure mucho tiempo”: Seth Godin
Diciembre 3: “Un emprendedor ve oportunidades allá donde otros solo ven problemas”: Michael Gerber
Frases motivadoras cortas de Jeff Bezos: “Es necesario anticipar un cierto grado de fracaso”
Diciembre 5: “La vida no es justa, acostúmbrate a ello”: Bill Gates
Diciembre 6: “El dinero es algo que entiendo vagamente y pienso en él sólo cuando no lo tengo para financiar mis proyectos”: Walt Disney
Diciembre 7: “Son muchas las manos y los corazones que contribuyen al éxito de una persona”: Henry Ford
Diciembre 8: “Respeta las reglas del juego, pero sé feroz”: Phil Knight
Diciembre 9: “El único lugar donde el éxito viene antes que el trabajo es en el diccionario”: Vidal Sassoon
Diciembre 10: “La forma de empezar es dejar de hablar y empezar a hacerlo”: Walt Disney
Diciembre 11: “El camino hacia el éxito y el camino hacia el fracaso son muy parecidos. Solo los diferencia el final”: Colin Davis
Diciembre 12: «El secreto de la felicidad no es hacer siempre lo que se quiere sino querer siempre lo que se hace»: Tolstoi
Frases motivadoras cortas:“El peor problema de contaminación que encaramos hoy en día es la negatividad”: Mary Kay Ash
Diciembre 14: “No hay camino a la felicidad. La felicidad es el camino”: Thich Nhat Hanh
Diciembre 15: “La imaginación es el principio de la creación. Imaginamos lo que queremos, creamos un profundo deseo por aquello que imaginamos y finalmente, creamos aquello que hemos deseado”: George Bernard Shaw
Diciembre 16: “Si uno avanza confiadamente en la dirección de sus sueños y deseos para llevar la vida que ha imaginado, se encontrará con un éxito inesperado”: Henry David Thoreau
Diciembre 17: “No nos atrevemos a muchas cosas porque son difíciles, pero son difíciles porque no nos atrevemos a hacerlas”: Lucio Anneo Séneca
Diciembre 18: “Todo aquello que puedas o sueñes hacer, comiénzalo. La audacia contiene en si misma genio, poder y magia”: Goethe
Diciembre 19: “Cada vez que pides prestado dinero, estas robando dinero a tu futuro”: Nathan W. Morris
Diciembre 20: “El éxito llega normalmente a quienes están demasiado ocupados para buscarlo”: Henry David Thoreau
Diciembre 21: “Nunca me he tenido por ingeniero o inventor, solamente me considero un promotor y agitador de ideas”: Enzo Ferrari
Diciembre 22: “El guerrero exitoso es un hombre común, con un foco similar al de un laser”: Bruce Lee
Diciembre 23: “El precio del éxito es trabajar duro y la determinación de que, sin importar si perdiste o ganaste, diste lo mejor de ti mismo en el proyecto”: Vince Lombardi
Diciembre 24: “No es sobre las ideas. Sino sobre hacer que éstas se vuelvan realidad”: Scott Belsky
Diciembre 25: “Lo más curioso acerca del juego de la vida es que cuando nos rehusamos a conformarnos con segundos lugares y decidimos salir tras lo mejor de lo mejor, generalmente lo obtenemos”: Somerset Maugham
Diciembre 26: “El secreto para contratar a los mejores es este: busca personas que quieran cambiar el mundo”: Marc Benioff
Diciembre 27: “Tus clientes más infelices son tu fuente de aprendizaje más grande”: Bill Gates
Diciembre 28: “El placer en el trabajo lleva a la perfección de la obra”: Aristóteles
Diciembre 29: “Muchos de nuestros sueños parecen al principio imposibles, luego pueden parecer improbables, y luego, cuando nos comprometemos firmemente, se vuelven inevitables”: Christopher Reeve
Diciembre 30: “Si no sabes qué hacer con tu vida, haz algo que salve vidas. El mundo está lleno de gente con necesidades, sé parte de su vida y llena esa necesidad”: Sanjeev Saxena
Diciembre 31: “Crece con disciplina. Balancea tu intuición con rigor. Innova alrededor del núcleo. No aceptes el status quo. Encuentra nuevas formas de ver. Nunca esperes la bala de plata. Ensucia tus manos. Escucha con empatía y comunica con transparencia”: Howard Schultz
Frases motivacionales para vivir cada día mejor
En conclusión estas 365 frases motivadoras buscan inspirarte cada uno de los días del año. No importa si abres este artículo en marzo, diciembre o julio, aquí encontrarás alguna de las muchísimas frases motivoras para inspirarte y regalarte un mejor día.
*Estas frases motivacionales se basan en varios artículos y contenido de internet donde se encontraron las frases de cada personaje. Muchas son adaptaciones pero el crédito corresponde al autor de cada una de las frases motivadoras.
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korrektheiten · 1 month ago
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Der gute Hirte gibt sein Leben hin für die Schafe
katholisches.info: Von Pater Thomas Crean* Der 29. Dezember war eines der großen Feste der Weihnachtsoktav, nach dem heiligen Stephanus, dem heiligen Johannes dem Evangelisten und den Heiligen Unschuldigen Kinder. Es ist das Fest des heiligen Thomas Becket, der auch als heiliger Thomas von Canterbury bekannt ist. Dieses Fest ist so wichtig, daß es hierzulande, in London, ... http://dlvr.it/THG9jX
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camposmarisma · 3 months ago
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"Reflejos de las Marismas" es una propuesta arquitectónica que busca fusionarse con el paisaje natural de las marismas de Isla Cristina, ofreciendo una experiencia única que combina un museo y un mirador. El diseño se inspira en la fluidez del agua y los reflejos característicos de este entorno, lo que se refleja en las formas circulares y suaves de la estructura. La idea principal es crear un espacio que no solo sea funcional, sino también un homenaje a la belleza natural y a la conexión entre el ser humano y la naturaleza.
La propuesta utiliza materiales cuidadosamente seleccionados, como el acero corten, conocido por su durabilidad y su capacidad de integrarse visualmente al entorno con su tono oxidado. El bambú y la madera de eucalipto aportan calidez y sostenibilidad al diseño, mientras que el vidrio permite aprovechar la luz natural y crear una relación visual constante con las marismas. Cada elección de material refleja un compromiso con el entorno y la búsqueda de un equilibrio entre estética y funcionalidad.
El diseño en planta revela un trazado circular que conecta las distintas áreas del proyecto. Las vistas desde el mirador y las distintas zonas del museo están diseñadas para ofrecer una experiencia inmersiva, destacando la belleza y la serenidad del paisaje. Las líneas simples y los espacios abiertos crean una atmósfera que invita a la reflexión y al disfrute.
El proyecto toma inspiración de obras arquitectónicas como las del Giancarlo Zema Design Group, donde el diseño circular y la integración con el agua son protagonistas, y de arquitectos como Thomas Bercy, Calvin Chen y Dan Loe, cuyas propuestas destacan por la armonía entre la arquitectura y la naturaleza.
"Reflejos de las Marismas" no es solo un espacio arquitectónico, sino una invitación a conectar con el entorno, a contemplar y a valorar este paisaje natural. Un lugar pensado para integrarse en la marisma, respetarla y reflejar su esencia en cada detalle.
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