A Quote by Thomas A. Edison

Success is the product of the severest kind of mental and physical application. — © Thomas A. Edison
Success is the product of the severest kind of mental and physical application.
The product itself should be it's own best salesman. Not the product alone, but the product plus a mental impression, and atmosphere, which you place around it
The 3 key components for success are as follows: Psychological Preparedness Physical Conditioning Mental Toughness
Virgil and Horace [were] the severest writers of the severest age.
A country is as strong, really, as its citizens. And I think that mental and physical health - mental and physical vigor - go hand in hand.
The key to success is to keep growing in all areas of life - mental, emotional, spiritual, as well as physical.
The mental never influences the physical. It is always the physical that modifies the mental, and when we think that the mind is diseased, it is always an illusion.
Even if someone knew the entire physical history of the world, and every mental event were identical with a physical, it would notfollow that he could predict or explain a single mental event (so described, of course).
This is an an abundant universe. Grasp your birthright. Success is a massive abundance of physical, mental, emotional and spiritual health.
I think a big part of success in football is mental, not physical. How you are inside your head matters more.
The first requisite of success is the ability to apply your physical and mental energies to one problem without growing weary.
The first requisite for success is the ability to apply your physical and mental energies to one problem incessantly without growing weary.
What Is Meditation? It is not musing, not daydreaming; but as ye find you bodies made up of the physical, mental and spiritual, it is the attuning of the mental body and the physical body to its spiritual source.
Everything, living or not, is constituted from elements having a nature that is both physical and nonphysical - that is, capable of combining into mental wholes. So this reductive account can also be described as a form of panpsychism: all the elements of the physical world are also mental.
When you're younger, you ride with 90% physical and 10% mental. But if you could learn how to use 90% mental and 10% physical you'd be better off.
A physical shortcoming could produce a kind of mental excess. The process, it seemed, was reversible. Mental excess could produce, for its own purposes, the voluntary blindness and deafness of deliberate solitude, the artificial impotence of asceticism.
I'm not really comfortable unless there's some kind of risk - either physical or mental.
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