Mr. Edison was dedicated to all things he did, once he started on the light, he didn’t stop until he had it in his hands. He persevered through failure. He accepted it, he learned from it, and he burgeoned into a more adequate position on the matter. Without his persistence the light bulb would have been put off for years to come possible. His alacrity got the job done. He didn’t copy anything he put in the work for his credit, he invented the light bulb. Common sense is the next piece of the puzzle. Being deliberate in your actions, depleting your hard work without progress is not smart. Thomas Edison wasn’t omniscient but he thought through his actions. He was a pragmatist; he didn’t beat a dead horse. His endeavors were within his grasp, he had tenacity, whatever it took to get it done he got. Two relevant quotes for Edison: “Many of life's failures are people who did not realize how close they were to success when they gave up.”; “I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't …show more content…
We are capable doing so many things you would say it’s unreasonable if it was on paper in front of you. Our only flaws that limit us are how easy it is to give up. If you work too hard and it impacts you, negatively you are doing something wrong. Work smarter, hitting the grind as hard you can without common sense is sure to fail. If you worked on a goal smartly and intensively and it was plausible you will achieve it. If I want to make millions and that is my sole goal I can guarantee if I never give up and I’m always on top being smart, not giving up and working hard I will win. The same applies to