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Part 13: "In Search Of Heroes Book 1" What is your definition of heroism? by Ralph Zuranski

Click Here to see the Gary Halbert Memorial and Farewell Party Videos, Robert Channing’s amazing MIND Reading show at the James Malinchak College Speaking Success Seminar, Conferon Seminar and Joe Vitale Seminar, heroes’ interviews videos and the “Think and Grow Rich” Super-learning videos.

Mike Filsaime: A hero to me is a mentor, a person that has unconditional love for the people that they are working with. I don’t see heroes necessarily in terms of Babe Ruth. Those are icons.

I don’t want to tell people to change the way that we can talk in this country. You can have sports heroes but the true heroes need to be the fathers and uncles and the teachers.

Those are the heroes of this world and people like you with what you are doing with young kids. I think a hero, has to do with some type of adult figure working with a young child.

Paulie Sabol: My definition of heroism is the person who takes the hero’s journey. This is the journey that will include going to Chapel Perilous. You are going to face some of the darkest parts of yourself and the darkest parts of the rest of the world. You are going to encounter naysayers.

You are going to encounter jealous people. They are going to try and sabotage. Sometimes the messages you’ve internalized are going to come in and sabotage. If you want my sense of the ideal experience of heroism, I would encourage you to read the book Percival.

You will understand this message that gets me so excited, this idea that you were born to journey, you were born to discover something magical about yourself. That is what heroism is, taking the journey often means giving up some stuff along the way. It also means finding mentors, travel companions, your pals, and even an occasional betrayal.

However, in all of these mystic stories of the hero’s journey, the result in the end throughout history has really been godhood, being raised up to the highest places and into the mysteries.

I’m not meaning to suggest that anyone become God or doesn’t, that’s not what I’m talking about but what I can say is this – the best books in the world are filled with examples of heroes and have-nots, examples and warnings.
My wish for you, right now, is to be listed amongst the examples and the heroes.

Donna Fox: I think a hero is someone who does something that is amazing. Whether that be the tiniest little thing, if it is amazing to me then they are my hero. I try to see the hero in everyone, like see the Buda in everyone. It’s very similar.

Everybody has something about them that sparkles, something about them that is incredible, and it’s just finding that gem, that little diamond inside everyone. Everybody is a hero.

So that’s my definition of heroism: it’s everyone.

Tom Beal: Whew, heroism. I think my definition of heroism is someone who is doing the best they can and has a goal and is committed to being better tomorrow than they are today. I feel like that’s a hero.

Kind of like the definition of a goal like Earl Nightingale said, “The pursuit of a worthy goal or ideal”. So anyone who’s in high school and going to class and doing their homework is a success because they are pursuing that worthy ideal or goal.

As long as anybody is committed to being better tomorrow than they are today, in my mind that’s a hero.




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