Famous People Who Will Inspire You To Never Give Up
- Stephen King
He lived in a trailer with his wife.They both worked multiple jobs to support their family.They were so poor.They had to borrow cloths for their wedding because it was too expensive.He received so many rejection letters.He recalls ," By the time i was 14,the nail in my wall would no longer support the weight of the rejection slips impaled upon it. I replaced the nail with a spike and kept on writing."The difficult thing was that he received 60 rejection before selling his first story. King received so many rejection letters for his works that he developed a system for collecting them. In his book On Writing, he recalls: “By the time I was 14...the nail in my wall would no longer support the weight of the rejection slips impaled upon it. I replaced the nail with a spike and kept on writing.” He received 60 rejections before selling his first short story, "The Glass Floor," for $35. Even his now best-selling book, Carrie, wasn’t a hit at first. After dozens of rejections, he finally sold it for a meager advance to Doubleday Publishing, where the hardback sold only 13,000 copies. Soon after, though, Signet Books signed on for the paperback rights for $200,000 of which went to King. Success achieved!
2.Jim Carrey
When Carrey was 14 years old, his father lost his job.That was the rough times for his family.After that they moved into a VW van on a relative’s lawn, and the young comedian,who was dedicated to his craft that he mailed his resume to The Carroll Burnett. At the age of 10 he took an 8 hours per day factory job.
At the age of 15, Carrey performed his comedy routine onstage for the first time. but he was undeterred. The next year, at 16, he quit school to focus on comedy full time. He moved to LA shortly after, where he would park on Mulholland Drive every night and visualize his success. One of these nights he wrote himself a check for $10,000,000 for “Acting Services Rendered,” which he dated for Thanksgiving 1995. Just before that date, he hit his payday with Dumb and Dumber. He put the deteriorated check, which he’d kept in his wallet the whole time, in his fathuer’s casket.
3.Colonel Sanders
Colonel Harland Sanders was fired from a variety of jobs throughout his career before he first started cooking chicken in his roadside Shell Service Station in 1930, when he was 40 years old, during the Great Depression. His gas station didn’t actually have a restaurant, so he served diners in his attached personal living quarters.Over the next 10 years, he perfected his “Secret Recipe” and pressure fryer cooking method for his famous fried chicken and moved onto bigger locations. His chicken was even praised in the media by food critic Duncan Hines (yes, that Duncan Hines). However, as the interstate came through the Kentucky town where the Colonel’s restaurant was located in the 1950s. it took away important road traffic, and the Colonel was forced to close his business and retire, essentially broke. Worried about how he was going to survive off his meager $105 monthly pension check, he set out to find restaurants who would franchise his secret recipe—he wanted a nickel for each piece of chicken sold. He drove around, sleeping in his car, and was rejected more than 1,000 times before finally finding his first partner.
you know what guys ? these examples indicates to never give up.