Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Motivation.
Influential Women Magazine: Where Visionary Women Turn Impact Into Legacy
Introduction: Redefining Influence in a Modern World Influence in today’s world is no longer limited to visibility, authority, or recognition alone. Modern influence is measured by the depth of impact, the authenticity of leadership, and the ability to inspire change that lasts beyond individual success.
By influentialwomenmagazine5 days ago in Motivation
When Being in Hot Water Is Not Bad
Many times during our lives, we find ourselves in hot water. Sometimes it is because of our own wrong choices, and sometimes we get in hot water because of no fault of our own. What should we do when we find ourselves in hot water, no matter whose fault it is?
By Margaret Minnicks6 days ago in Motivation
The Paper Trail to Freedom: Robert Churchwell and the Quiet War Inside the Mailroom
The old true story of Robert Churchwell and Black postal workers during the Civil Rights era who risked their jobs and lives to document mail tampering and voter suppression in the Deep So
By Frank Massey 6 days ago in Motivation
6 Tiny Habits That Work Even on Bad Days
I discovered these habits on the worst day of my life. It was a gray Tuesday morning when my world collapsed in stages. First, the email: my position was being eliminated. Then, the phone call: my grandmother, who raised me, had hours left. By noon, I was sitting in a hospital parking lot, jobless and about to say goodbye to the only person who'd ever believed in me unconditionally.
By Fazal Hadi6 days ago in Motivation
Dreams, Struggles, and Breakthroughs
The dream showed up uninvited at 2 a.m. on a Thursday. I was wiping down tables at Rico's Diner, the same tables I'd been cleaning for seven years, when I caught my reflection in the window. Thirty-four years old, smelling like french fries and burnt coffee, with a notebook of unpublished stories shoved in my locker and a life that looked nothing like what I'd imagined at twenty-two.
By Fazal Hadi6 days ago in Motivation
Dream Big. Work Bigger. AI-Generated.
Dreaming big has always been celebrated. From childhood, we are encouraged to imagine limitless futures, to picture ourselves succeeding beyond ordinary boundaries. Dreams give us direction, hope, and a sense of purpose. But dreams alone are fragile. Without action, they remain ideas—beautiful, inspiring, and incomplete. That is where the second half of the phrase matters most: Work Bigger. “Dream Big. Work Bigger.” is not just a motivational slogan. It is a mindset that acknowledges a hard truth many people avoid: extraordinary dreams demand extraordinary effort. The size of your dream sets the destination, but the size of your work determines whether you ever arrive. The Power of Dreaming Big Dreaming big is an act of courage. It requires you to think beyond your current circumstances, resources, or limitations. Big dreams often feel uncomfortable because they challenge the identity you currently hold. When you dream big, you are admitting that you want more—more growth, more impact, more meaning. Big dreams also create clarity. They help you define what truly matters to you rather than what is merely convenient or expected. A bold vision acts like a compass, guiding decisions both large and small. When your goals are clear, distractions lose some of their power. You begin to ask better questions: Does this move me closer to my dream, or further away from it? However, dreaming big has its risks. Big dreams can intimidate, not only others but also yourself. They can invite doubt, fear of failure, and the temptation to stay comfortable. This is why many people quietly shrink their dreams over time. They convince themselves to aim lower, not because they lack potential, but because they underestimate the effort required to aim higher. Why Working Bigger Matters More Hard work is often misunderstood. It is not simply about working longer hours or exhausting yourself. Working bigger means working with intention, discipline, and consistency over a long period of time. It is about aligning your daily actions with your long-term vision, even when motivation fades. Working bigger requires patience. Results rarely appear quickly, especially when the goal is meaningful. The effort you put in today may not show visible rewards tomorrow, or even next month. This delayed gratification is where many people give up. They mistake slow progress for failure and stop just before momentum builds. It also requires humility. Working bigger means accepting that you do not know everything and that growth often involves learning through mistakes. Feedback, setbacks, and moments of doubt are not signs that you are on the wrong path. Often, they are evidence that you are stretching beyond what is familiar. Most importantly, working bigger requires consistency. Talent may open doors, but consistency keeps them open. Small actions, repeated daily, accumulate into powerful results. Writing one page every day eventually becomes a book. Practicing a skill regularly transforms ability into mastery. Working bigger is less about dramatic bursts of effort and more about showing up, again and again. The Gap Between Vision and Reality Many people live in the gap between what they want and what they are willing to do. They admire success stories without acknowledging the years of unseen effort behind them. Social media often amplifies this misunderstanding by highlighting outcomes rather than processes. The truth is less glamorous but far more empowering. Success is usually built quietly. It is created in early mornings, late nights, and moments when no one is watching. It is shaped by choices that feel ordinary at the time but prove extraordinary in hindsight. Bridging the gap between vision and reality means being honest with yourself. Are your daily habits aligned with your dreams? Do your actions reflect the future you say you want? This honesty can be uncomfortable, but it is also freeing. It gives you control. Once you recognize the gap, you can start closing it, step by step. Redefining Failure and Progress Working bigger also means redefining how you view failure. Failure is not the opposite of success; it is part of the process. Every attempt teaches you something—about your strategy, your mindset, or your limits. When you work bigger, failure becomes data, not a verdict. Progress is rarely linear. There will be periods of rapid growth and long stretches where nothing seems to change. During those quiet phases, the temptation to quit is strongest. But often, those are the moments when the foundation is being built. Growth happens beneath the surface before it becomes visible. Learning to appreciate progress, even when it is subtle, helps sustain momentum. Progress might look like improved discipline, clearer thinking, or greater resilience. These internal shifts often come before external success, and they are just as important. Living the Mindset Daily “Dream Big. Work Bigger.” becomes powerful when it is lived daily, not just repeated. It shows up in how you manage your time, how you respond to setbacks, and how seriously you take your own goals. It means choosing long-term growth over short-term comfort and commitment over convenience. This mindset does not demand perfection. It asks for effort, honesty, and persistence. There will be days when you fall short, when energy is low, and when doubt is loud. Working bigger does not mean never struggling; it means continuing despite the struggle. In the end, big dreams are not fulfilled by chance. They are earned through consistent action, thoughtful effort, and the willingness to keep going when the outcome is uncertain. When your work grows to match your dreams, something powerful happens. The future you once imagined slowly becomes the life you are building. Dream big, because your potential deserves space. But work bigger, because dreams only come alive through action.
By Saboor Brohi 6 days ago in Motivation
I Stayed Quiet So Long, I Forgot My Real Voice
I didn’t decide to go silent one day. There was no clear moment, no dramatic turning point where I chose quiet over sound. It happened slowly—so slowly that I didn’t notice when my voice stopped sounding like mine.
By Imran Ali Shah6 days ago in Motivation
My Body Wasn't Lazy; It Was Fighting a Different Battle. Content Warning.
I have always wanted to lose weight and have the perfect body. It wasn’t always an obsession, though. In my childhood and teenage years, I was a chubby girl, but that never truly bothered me. Back then, acne was my biggest enemy. Having rough skin in high school felt far more painful than carrying extra weight. There were also a lot of chubby girls in my high school, so my weight wasn't a big issue. There is comfort in numbers, after all.
By Noma Nsukwini 6 days ago in Motivation
Making a Fool of Myself this New Year
I know I am an okay singer. I often don't hit the high notes right and I take breaths in awkward spots. I need someone who sings on tune next to me to be on tune in a choir. And I lose my note when my husband starts singing in his bass voice. I just sing whatever comes to mind and hum words I don't know--mostly chorus lines. I sang in different school and church choirs while I was a teen and young adult. I always sang "My Favorite Things" when I tried out for musicals. I didn't quite have it memorized.
By Eileen Davis6 days ago in Motivation








