1) He never finished university.
Growing
up a teenage in Hong Kong, Bruce would get into fights. After a
particularly bloody one involving a trip to the police station, Bruce’s
family decided to send him back to America where he was born.
In
1964, at the end of his junior year, Bruce decided to drop out of
university to head the Seattle branch of his Jun Fan Gung Fu Institute,
and dedicate himself to expanding his martial arts schools, joining the
ranks of people like Steve Jobs and Bill Gates, people who never
finished university and became massive successes later on in life.
Not
to say that Bruce was an idiot! In fact, he had been a philosophy major
before he left the University of Washington. And not to say you
shouldn’t go to university either! But Bruce never let the lack of a
degree stop him from achieving his heart’s desires.
2) He almost never practiced martial arts again.
In
1970, with The Green Hornet series in which he co-starred in cancelled
and finances tight, Bruce failed to warm up properly during one of his
weight-training routines and severly injured his back.
The doctors told him to rest in bed, and to forget kung fu: he would never kick again.
To
someone whom once said that everything he learned, he learned from
martial art, this would be a devastating blow. With financial worries
bearing down on him, Bruce could only lay flat on his bed for the next
three months, and for another three months be confined indoors.
But
even then, he refused to let this stop him. If he couldn’t work out his
body, he could work out his mind. In those six months he wrote
furiously, penning down his own thoughts and methods of the martial arts
which he so loved. In
six months’ time, he had written eight, two-inch volumes of notes. And
in all that time, with evidence to the contrary, he refused to believe
that he wouldn’t heal; he was an avid believer that our thoughts create
our reality. After those six months he started working out again, moderately at first, and resumed teaching afterwards. And
even though his back would remain a source of pain throughout his
entire life, you wouldn’t think it to see the man blazing faster in his
movies than any able-bodied person.
3) His greatest achievement came from a less than perfect victory.
Bruce
Lee’s greatest contribution to the martial arts world was his
philosophy and martial system ofJeet Kune Do. But he didn’t make up this
martial art from thin air.
In
fact, the catalyst that gave birth to one of the most efficient martial
arts in the world came from a less than efficient fight.
In
the 1960s, Bruce Lee was challenged for daring to reveal the secrets of
Chinese martial arts to non-Chinese. He won the fight, but found
himself unusually winded afterwards, and was disturbed in thinking back
that even though he could have ended it in one, the fight had taken
three minutes instead.
Before
that time, Bruce had been content with modifying the traditional
martial art of Wing Chun. But because of that less-than-perfect
experience, he pursued more sophisticated training methods and
rigourously dissected the martial arts for the very best that he could
find, and in time his own profound and deadly expression of the martial
arts was born.
4) He had his opportunities stolen from him.
Did
Bruce have it easy from the get-go, especially with someone that had
such astounding skills you’d think Hollywood would have been banging
down his door to sign him on?
Hardly.
After
the cancellation of The Green Hornet series, Bruce couldn’t find much
more television work. In 1969, a movie project called The Silent Flute,
which he had put in massive effort and pinned high hopes on, fell
through.
With
his back still hurting, and financial disaster on the horizon, his wife
Linda had to work, while Bruce stayed at home to watch the kids and
rest his back.
During
that time, Warner Brothers contacted him with what looked like a
glimmer of hope; they wanted his help to develop a TV series based on
the martial arts. He was deeply involved and gave them numerous
ideas…many of which were used in the ensuring TV series Kung Fu,
starring not Bruce Lee, but David Carradine.
Later on, Warner Brothers admitted that despite his heavy involvement, they had never even considered him for the role.
Ironically,
this was the final straw that pushed Bruce to accept an offer by a Hong
Kong film producer named Raymond Chow to make the movie that would
propel him into superstardom; The Big Boss.
Bruce
turned setback into success, when he met Raymond for the very first
time Bruce told him; ‘You just wait, I’m going to be the biggest Chinese
star in the world.’
5) He practiced incessantly.
What
do you think was the price of his eye-popping feats and unbeatable
athletism? Exercising two times a week and a bottle of beer in front of
the TV after?
Bruce
Lee trained religiously every single day, there are training records
that suggest he practiced kicks…upward to a thousand times a day!
6) He was an avid reader.
He
had a vast library of books and loved scouring the bookshops for more.
He not only had a appetite for books on martial arts, but he also
devoured books on the personal growth writers of his day, pioneers like
Napoleon Hill, Norman Vincent Peale and Clement Stone.
He
believed in personal development so much so he once penned down this
prophetic personal affirmation in 1969, 2 years before his first hit
movie The Big Boss:
I,
Bruce Lee, will be the highest paid Oriental superstar in the United
States. In return, I will give the most exciting performances and render
the best quality in the capacity of an actor. Starting in 1970, I will
achieve world fame and from then onward till the end of 1989 I will have
in my possession $10,000,000. Then I will live the way I please and
achieve inner harmony and happiness.
So What Was The Key To Bruce Lee’s Amazing Success?
At
the beginning of this article, I asked you the question: what if you
already had the same potential for greatness as Bruce Lee (in anything,
not just martial arts) locked within you, how would you unlock it?
Who better to answer you than Bruce Lee himself?
Dedication,
absolute dedication, is what keeps one ahead-a sort of indomitable
obsessive dedication and the realization that there is no end or limit
to this because life is simply an ever-growing process, an ever-renewing
process.
Thank you, Bruce.
To end; let me share with you my all-time favorite Bruce Lee quote that says it all:
Ever
since I was a child I have had this instinctive urge for expansion and
growth. To me, the function of and duty of a quality human is the
sincere and honest development of one’s potential.
I
have come to discover through earnest personal experience and dedicated
learning that ultimately the greatest help is self-help-doing one’s
best, dedicating one’s self wholeheartedly to a given task, which
happens to have no end but is an on-going process.

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