A Quote by Myles Munroe

True success is what you have done compared to what you could have done. — © Myles Munroe
True success is what you have done compared to what you could have done.
Success is not what you have done compared to what others have done. Success is what you have done compared to what you were supposed to do.
Success isn't what you've done compared to others. Success is what you've done compared to what you were made to do.
If you don't feel a true passion through work, you can't do it. It's not possible for me. I've never done TV. I've never done commercials. I've never done anything for money. I can't do it. I wish I could. It would be easier.
I don't think you ever feel a success really because everything could always be done better than you've done it.
I bobbed and weaved through my career. And in hindsight, though I'd like to say it was a plan - it was not - the bobbing and the weaving gave me a broad base from which to become an executive who could say, 'OK, I've done this, and I've done this, and I've done this.' And nobody could BS me, because I'd done most of it.
It is a most mortifying reflection for a man to consider what he has done, compared to what he might have done.
Even in the best times, managing science has been compared to herding cats; it is not done well, but one is surprised to find it done at all.
Hell begins the day that God grants you the vision to see all that you could have done, should have done, and would have done, but did not do.
I've been the movie business for over 50 years, and I've done everything imaginable that could be done or ever was done by anybody.
I'm very, very thirsty for knowledge. Just because I'm good at something and have found success doesn't mean I'm done. I'm not even close to being done. I don't know if I ever will be done learning.
I know I've done good work. I've been very serious about my writing, and I've done the best that I could. But I don't feel that I've done more than I should have. In fact, I've done less than I should have.
I've done all kinds of cool things as an actor - I've jumped out of helicopters and done some daring stunts and played baseball in a professional stadium, but none of it means anything compared to being somebody’s daddy.
It has always been my thought that the most important single ingredient to success in athletics or life is discipline. I have many times felt that this word is the most ill-defined in all of our language. My definition isas follows: 1. Do what has to be done; 2. When it has to be done; 3. As well as it can be done; and 4. Do it it that way all the time.
Working with Steven Spielberg, how bad could it be? But "1941" was one of those excessively big movies where every action scene was done and re-done and re-done again. It was so overproduced and overly expensive. And it wasn't terribly funny.
I've done what I could as a painter and that seems to me to be sufficient. I don't want to be compared to the great masters of the past, and my painting is open to criticism; that's enough.
With most movies I've done before, I've done a lot of preparation. I've known about them long before [shooting], and I've prepped and changed my body and done research, and all the things you could imagine.
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