Arthur is a chauffeur who is intellectually gifted. Jonathan is
no less bright than Arthur, equally hard-working, and a
billionaire. So why is Jonathan in the back seat of the limousine
and Arthur in the front? What explains the difference between
success and failure? And what does it mean to you and your
children?
Joachim de Posada, a world-renowned motivational speaker, found
the answer in a landmark Stanford University study of children who
were able to delay gratification-in the form of a marshmallow
they'd been given to eat-with the promise that they'd be rewarded
with an additional marshmallow if they resisted eating the first
for fifteen minutes. Ten years later, the children who held out had
grown up to be significantly more successful than those who had
eaten their marshmallow immediately.
Posada saw that the key difference between success and failure
is not merely hard work or superior intelligence, but the ability
to delay gratification. "Marshmallow resisters" achieve high levels
of success while others eat all their marshmallows at once, so to
speak-accumulating debt and dissatisfaction despite their
occupations or incomes. But it doesn't have to be that way. Using a
simple parable and real-life examples (including basketball great
Larry Bird and major league baseball catcher Jorge Posada,
Joachim's cousin), this life-changing book shows readers how the
moves made today can pay off big tomorrow-if they just don't eat
the marshmallow...yet
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