the Daily Quote - Positive Daily Inspiration and Motivational Quote of the Day

Andrew McGivern - Motivational Quotes and Daily Inspiration | Quote of the Day

Tune in daily to get a short dose of daily inspiration to kick start your day in a positive way. the Daily Quote brings you inspirational quotes to help motivate and inspire your day with positivity. Listen to the show for positive quotes from Albert Einstein, Maya Angelo, Seth Godin, Tony Robbins, Winston Churchill, Martin Luther King Jr, John Lennon, William Shakespeare, Lao Tzu, Confucius and more... Every single day you will hear a motivational quote to fire up your day.

  1. Unknown Author - “The secret to having it all is knowing you already do.”

    10 HR AGO

    Unknown Author - “The secret to having it all is knowing you already do.”

    Welcome to the Daily Quote, the podcast designed to kickstart your day in a positive way. I'm your host Andrew McGivern and this episode is brought to you by the Great News podcast. Why should you listen? Because good news should be heard. Available where all Great Podcasts are found and I've also left a link in the show notes. Today’s quote comes from an unknown author, representing the kind of ancient wisdom that travels across centuries without a name attached to it. The quote is: “The secret to having it all is knowing you already do.” This hits on a radical idea: the mechanism of fulfillment isn't "out there" in our circumstances, but "in here," in how you choose to feel right now. Most of us spend our lives "waiting for the right moment" or the right level of readiness to feel satisfied, telling ourselves that happiness begins only when the situation improves or when we have more money or more confidence. But as we've explored before, "the quality of our life equals the quality of our emotions," and we often have far more control over those emotions than we typically exercise. If you are constantly "wishing" for your life to be different, you are spending the same mental and emotional energy that could be used for appreciating your current reality. Wishing is not free; it costs you the very energy that could move your life forward. Knowing you "already have it all" is about changing your relationship to your current reality, learning to "surf" the waves of your life rather than trying to stop them.It’s a single shift in how you choose to feel. When you decide that you already have what you need, you stop "unconsciously engineering your own defeat" by focusing only on what is missing So, here’s the question: What is one thing in your life right now that you have been dismissing as "not enough," but that actually proves you "already have it all"? You don’t have to wait ten years for this perspective; it is available to you right now if you’re willing to reach for it. That's going to do it for today. I'm Andrew McGivern signing off for now. But I'll be back tomorrow, same pod time, same pod station with another Daily Quote

    3 min
  2. Elbert Hubbard - “The greatest mistake you can make in life is to be continually fearing that you will make one.”

    1 DAY AGO

    Elbert Hubbard - “The greatest mistake you can make in life is to be continually fearing that you will make one.”

    Welcome to the Daily Quote, the podcast designed to kickstart your day in a positive way. I'm your host Andrew McGivern and this episode is brought to you by the Great News podcast. Why should you listen? Because good news should be heard. It is available where all Great Podcasts are found, and I've also left a link in the show notes. Today’s quote comes from Elbert Hubbard, who famously wrote: “The greatest mistake you can make in life is to be continually fearing that you will make one.” This hits on a truth we’ve explored many times here on this podcast: the idea that **fear of failure is often more damaging than failure itself**. When you are constantly afraid of making a mistake, you aren't just being cautious; you are unconsciously engineering a way not to win. Think about how many times you’ve stayed in the "planning" or "researching" phase because the idea of getting it wrong felt too risky. We tell ourselves we’re preparing, but as Pablo Picasso noted, "action is the foundational key to all success". If your foundation is built on fear instead of action, nothing of substance can be built. Mistakes are not detours from your growth, they are the growth. Working through a mistake gives you a depth and resilience that you simply cannot manufacture by staying safe. You don't need a perfect plan to move forward; you just need to stop sabotaging yourself before you’ve even begun. If you're feeling stuck today because you’re worried about the "what-ifs," remember that the direction is more important than the pace. You don’t have to leap into the unknown with total confidence. Tiptoe if you must, but take a step. So, here’s the question: What have you been avoiding lately because you’re afraid of making a mistake? What if you decided that the "mistake" is actually the fuel you need for your next victory?. That's going to do it for today. I'm Andrew McGivern signing off for now. But I'll be back tomorrow, same pod time, same pod station with another Daily Quote.

    3 min
  3. Zig Ziglar - "Anything worth doing is worth doing poorly — until you can learn to do it well."

    2 DAYS AGO

    Zig Ziglar - "Anything worth doing is worth doing poorly — until you can learn to do it well."

    Welcome to the Daily Quote, the podcast designed to kickstart your day in a positive way. I'm your host Andrew McGivern and this episode is brought to you by the Great News podcast. Becuase good news should be heard. Link is in the show notes. Today's quote sounds wrong at first. It is designed to. It comes from Zig Ziglar, one of the most celebrated motivational speakers and authors of the 20th century, a man who dedicated his life to helping people close the gap between where they are and where they want to be. And he deliberately flipped one of the oldest sayings in the English language on its head: "Anything worth doing is worth doing poorly — until you can learn to do it well." You've heard the original: Anything worth doing is worth doing well. It sounds like wisdom. It sounds like standards. And buried inside it, quiet and dangerous, is one of the most effective excuses for never starting anything. Because if it's only worth doing when you can do it well, then you have to be good before you begin. And nobody is good before they begin. So the thing stays undone. The business stays unstarted. The book stays unwritten. The conversation stays unhad. The new skill stays unpracticed. And the gap between where you are and where you want to be stays exactly the same, while you wait to be ready. Ziglar understood this trap better than almost anyone. The enemy of beginning isn't laziness. It's perfectionism. It's the internal voice that says not yet, that tells you to wait until the conditions are right, the skills are sharp, the plan is airtight. And because those conditions never quite arrive, not yet becomes never. His reframe is both simple and revolutionary. Of course the first attempt will be poor. Of course the early work will be rough. Of course the beginner's version of anything will be inferior to the expert's version. That's not a reason not to start. That's what starting is. Doing it poorly is the first step on the path to doing it well. You cannot skip it. You can only get through it. The second half of the quote is where the whole thing comes alive: until you can learn to do it well. Ziglar wasn't giving permission to stay mediocre. He was giving permission to begin and trusting that if something is worth doing, the doing of it, even poorly, will teach you what you need to know to do it better. Progress doesn't wait for perfection. It builds through imperfect repetition. The first episode of this podcast was poor by any objective measure. The audio wasn't perfect, the delivery was rough, the structure was still finding itself. If I'd waited until I could do it well, I'd never have started at all. Every episode since has been built on top of that imperfect first one. Not because I planned it that way but because Ziglar is right. Doing it poorly, consistently, is how you eventually get to doing it well. So here's the question: What are you waiting to be good at before you'll allow yourself to begin?Because if it's worth doing — it's worth doing poorly. Right now. Today. With the skills you currently have and the knowledge you don't yet possess.Start. Do it badly. Learn. Do it less badly. Repeat. That's not a shortcut around the work. That's exactly how the work gets done. That's it for today. I'm Andrew McGivern — I'll see you in the next one with another Daily Quote.

    5 min
  4. Brené Brown - "Vulnerability sounds like truth and feels like courage. Truth and courage aren't always comfortable, but they're never weakness."

    3 DAYS AGO

    Brené Brown - "Vulnerability sounds like truth and feels like courage. Truth and courage aren't always comfortable, but they're never weakness."

    Welcome to the Daily Quote, the podcast designed to kickstart your day in a positive way. I'm your host Andrew McGivern and this episode is brought to you by the Great News podcast... because we could all use some good news. Link is in the show notes. Today's quote comes from Brené Brown, research professor, bestselling author, and the woman whose two decades of work on vulnerability, shame, and courage have inspired millions of people to show up more honestly in their lives, their relationships, and their work. From her book Daring Greatly, she wrote: "Vulnerability sounds like truth and feels like courage. Truth and courage aren't always comfortable, but they're never weakness." Here's the objection you may be having when hearing this quote: vulnerability is weakness. Showing your uncertainty, admitting your fear, letting people see the unfinished and imperfect parts of you feels dangerous. It feels like handing someone a weapon. And so we close up and hide to protect ourselves. We project confidence we don't feel. We hide the struggle. We act strong instead of being strong. Brown spent twenty years in research collecting data on this exact pattern and what she found completely upended the conventional wisdom. Vulnerability creates deeper, more authentic connections because truth sets people free, and courage brings out the best in us while inspiring others to do the same. Think about what Brown is actually saying. Vulnerability sounds like truth, meaning it requires you to speak honestly, even when honesty is hard. And it feels like courage, meaning the discomfort you feel when you're being vulnerable isn't a warning sign. It's confirmation that you're doing something brave. Brown found that people who live and love with their whole hearts and who attribute their professional success, their deepest relationships, and their proudest moments to their willingness to be vulnerable, share one thing in common. The courage to be imperfect. Living life not absent of fear. Not the absent of doubt. Just the willingness to show up anyway, honestly, as they actually are. Because the final line of the quote says - they're never weakness. The armour you've been wearing to protect yourself from vulnerability isn't protecting you from weakness. It's protecting you from connection, growth, and the kind of courage that actually changes things. So here's the question: Where in your life are you currently choosing this self manufactured armour over the truth? Performing strength instead of showing up honestly? Because Brown's research is clear, the vulnerability you're avoiding isn't weakness. It's the doorway to everything worth having. The connection, the courage, the life that actually feels real. Truth and courage aren't always comfortable. But they're never weakness. That's it for today. I'm Andrew McGivern — I'll see you in the next one with another Daily Quote.

    4 min
  5. Simone Weil - "Attention is the rarest and purest form of generosity."

    4 DAYS AGO

    Simone Weil - "Attention is the rarest and purest form of generosity."

    Welcome to the Daily Quote, I'm your host Andrew McGivern and this episode is brought to you by the Great News podcast... because we could all use some good news. Link is in the show notes. Today's quote comes from Simone Weil — French philosopher, mystic, and resistance activist who died at just 34, yet left behind a body of writing that has profoundly shaped contemporary thought on attention, suffering, and what it means to truly see another human being. In a letter written in 1942, she wrote: "Attention is the rarest and purest form of generosity." Eight words. And they reframe what it means to be generous in a way that no amount of money ever could. When most of us think about generosity, we think about giving time, resources, money, help. And those things matter. But Weil is pointing at something that sits beneath all of them. Something that costs nothing materially and yet is somehow the hardest thing to give. Your full, undivided, genuine attention. For Weil, to attend well to another person meant making their welfare and wellbeing central to your concerns and granting them what she called the strange compliment of being real. Not real in a vague sense, but real in the way you experience yourself as real, a full human being worthy of being truly seen. Think about how rare that actually is. How many conversations have you had recently where you were fully present, not composing your response while the other person was still speaking, not half-watching your phone, not already thinking about what comes next? Even before smartphones existed, Weil recognized that giving genuine attention to another person was an extraordinary act and in today's attention economy, where our focus is harvested as a commodity, it has become rarer still. That's why Weil calls it the purest form of generosity. You can give money without caring. You can give time without being present. But attention, real attention, cannot be faked. It requires you to set yourself aside and make another person the centre of your focus. Completely. Without distraction. And in doing so, you give them something no amount of money can purchase: the experience of being truly seen. I think about the people in my life who have made me feel most valued and almost without exception, what they gave me wasn't advice, or resources, or grand gestures. It was attention. The quality of their presence. The sense that in that moment, I was the most important thing in their world. And I think about the conversations I've half-given myself to where I was physically present but mentally elsewhere. Those moments, I didn't give anything real at all. And so I suppose this is a lesson that I'm still learning: showing up without your attention isn't really showing up. So here's the question: When did you last give someone your complete, undivided, genuine attention with no phone, no distraction, no part of your mind already somewhere else? Because that's the gift Weil is describing. It doesn't require wealth or status or even time in great quantities. It just requires presence. Real presence. In a world that is endlessly competing for your attention... choose deliberately who gets it. And when you give it, give it completely. That's the rarest and purest form of generosity there is. That's it for today. I'm Andrew McGivern and I'll see you in the next one with another Daily Quote.

    5 min
  6. Epictetus - "We suffer not from the events in our lives but from our judgements about them."

    5 DAYS AGO

    Epictetus - "We suffer not from the events in our lives but from our judgements about them."

    Welcome to the Daily Quote, I'm your host Andrew McGivern and this episode is brought to you by the Great News podcast... because we could all use some good news. Link is in the show notes. Today we have two quotes separated by a century, from two men who could not have occupied more different positions in the world. Yet they arrived at exactly the same profound truth.Our main quote of the day comes from Epictetus (eh-pik-TEE-tus), born a slave in ancient Rome, who studied philosophy in chains, earned his freedom, and went on to found one of the most respected schools of Stoic thought in history. He said: "We suffer not from the events in our lives but from our judgements about them." And then, a century later, the Emperor Marcus Aurelius, ruler of the most powerful empire on earth, who acknowledged Epictetus as the central influence on his own thinking, wrote in his Meditations: "If you are distressed by anything external, the pain is not due to the thing itself but to your estimate of it, and this you have the power to revoke at any moment." A slave and an emperor. The same truth.Think about what that convergence means. One man had nothing. No freedom, no possessions, no power over his own circumstances. The other had everything. Armies, an empire, absolute authority. And both arrived, independently, at the same conclusion: the source of suffering is not what happens to us. It is what we tell ourselves about what happens to us. Coming from these two men, it's a hard-won philosophical truth tested at both extremes of human experience.Here's what they're pointing at. Two people can face the identical event: a job lost, a failed relationship, a plan that falls apart. And they can have completely different experiences of it. Not because the event was different, but because their judgement of the event was different. One calls it a catastrophe. The other calls it a redirection. Same event. Entirely different suffering. For Epictetus, this was the cornerstone of all Stoic philosophy, that while external events are determined by circumstances beyond our control, we always retain the power to choose how we respond to them. Good and evil live not in what happens, but in how we judge what happens. And Marcus Aurelius adds the most liberating word of all, revoke. You have the power to revoke your judgement at any moment. The suffering isn't locked in. The story you're telling yourself about the event... you can change that story. Right now. In this moment. What Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius are offering isn't toxic positivity. It's not pretend the bad thing didn't happen. It's something far more powerful: the recognition that the meaning of what happens to you is never fixed. It belongs to you. And you can change it. So here's the question: What are you currently suffering from that might be more about your judgement of the event than the event itself? Because if a man who ruled an empire and a man born in chains both agree that the suffering is not locked in. The judgement is yours. And you have the power to revoke it at any moment. That's it for today. I'm Andrew McGivern — I'll see you in the next one with another Daily Quote.

    4 min
  7. Unkown Author - "There is a difference between a life that is full and a life that is crowded. Knowing the difference is a form of wisdom."

    6 DAYS AGO

    Unkown Author - "There is a difference between a life that is full and a life that is crowded. Knowing the difference is a form of wisdom."

    Welcome to the Daily Quote, I'm your host Andrew McGivern and this episode is brought to you by the Great News podcast. Why? Because good news should be heard. Listen where all fine podcasts are found - for your convenience the link is in the show notes. Today's quote comes from an unknown author — but it captures something that Oliver Burkeman, journalist and author of the bestselling book Four Thousand Weeks: Time Management for Mortals, spent an entire book trying to help people understand. The quote is this: "There is a difference between a life that is full and a life that is crowded. Knowing the difference is a form of wisdom." Two words. Full and crowded. They sound almost identical. And yet they describe completely opposite experiences of being alive. A crowded life is packed with obligations, commitments, notifications, to-do lists that never shrink, inboxes that never empty, and the relentless sense that you're always behind. It's busy in the way that a traffic jam is busy, a lot of movement, very little progress, and an undercurrent of low-grade exhaustion that never quite goes away. A full life is something else entirely. It's rich with meaning, connection, depth, and the quiet satisfaction of spending your time on things that actually matter to you. It may contain fewer things than a crowded life. But every thing in it has weight and purpose. Burkeman's central argument is that productivity is a trap, becoming more efficient just makes you more rushed, and trying to clear the decks simply makes them fill up again faster. The day will never arrive when you finally have everything under control. Even if you have the best Notion template. That's the crowded life in a single paragraph. And most of us are living it, convinced that if we could just get on top of things, fullness would follow. But Burkeman shows that it never does. Because the harder you struggle to fit everything in, the more of your time you end up spending on the least meaningful things. The shift from crowded to full requires something most productivity advice never mentions: the willingness to say no. To accept that every decision to use a portion of time on anything represents the sacrifice of all the other ways you could have spent that time. In economics this is called opportunity cost. And when you understand that opportunity cost is a real cost you can more easily decide without reservation, on what matters most to you. A full life isn't one with more in it. It's one with the right things in it. I can tell you from experience that crowded doesn't feel full. It feels frantic. The busy-ness is real. But so is the emptiness underneath it. Burkeman asks a question in his book, Four Thousand Weeks: What would it mean to spend the only time I ever get in a way that truly feels like it counts? That question has a way of sorting very quickly between what's filling your life and what's just crowding it.So here's the question: Is your life full right now, or is it crowded? Because knowing the difference, as the quote says, is a form of wisdom. And acting on the difference and choosing depth over volume, meaning over busyness, the few right things over the many available ones, that's where a full life actually gets built. Not by adding more. By finally being willing to leave some things out. That's it for today. I'm Andrew McGivern — I'll see you in the next one with another Daily Quote.

    5 min
  8. Dr. Seuss - "Sometimes you will never know the value of a moment until it becomes a memory."

    3 APR

    Dr. Seuss - "Sometimes you will never know the value of a moment until it becomes a memory."

    Welcome to the Daily Quote, I'm your host Andrew McGivern and this episode is brought to you by the Great News Podcast. Because good news should be heard. Link is in the show notes.Today's quote comes from Theodor Seuss Geisel, the man the world knows simply as Dr. Seuss. Best known for The Cat in the Hat and Green Eggs and Ham, he was also capable of extraordinary wisdom that had nothing to do with rhyming or whimsy. He wrote:"Sometimes you will never know the value of a moment until it becomes a memory."That word "sometimes" is doing quiet but important work at the start of this quote. Not always. Sometimes. Because some moments we recognize as precious while they're happening, like a wedding, a birth, a long-awaited achievement. We know, in real time, that we'll want to remember this.But Dr. Seuss is pointing at the other kind of moment. The ordinary Tuesday. The unremarkable dinner. The conversation that had no agenda. The afternoon that felt like nothing special at all. The specific moments we treasure most were often nothing out of the ordinary when they actually took place, we never would have guessed that one day they'd become as important as they have. And here's what makes that both beautiful and heartbreaking at the same time: you cannot always know which moments those will be while you're in them. The last time you laughed with someone you loved before everything changed. The ordinary morning that turned out to be the last one of its kind. The version of your child at a particular age that you didn't realize you'd miss until it was already gone.This quote carries a message about the impermanence of life, a reminder that time is fleeting, and the moments we take for granted may eventually become the moments we most long to revisit. This isn't a call to nostalgia. It's a call to presence. To slow down just enough to actually inhabit the moment you're in, not because you know it will be precious, but precisely because you can't know yet. The value is being created right now. You just won't see it until later.Looking back, some of the moments I'm most grateful for were ones I nearly sleepwalked through. Conversations I was half present for. Ordinary evenings I was too distracted to notice. When the kids were babies and I was exhausted. And it was only later that I understood what they had actually been worth.Dr. Seuss is asking us to close that gap. Not to wait for the memory to reveal the value. But to bring a little of that future appreciation back into the present — where you can actually do something with it.So here's the question: What's happening in your life right now, something ordinary, unremarkable, easy to overlook, that you might one day look back on as one of the moments that mattered most?Because it's already becoming a memory. Every second that passes is moving from now into then. The question is whether you were present enough to feel its value while it was still here.Pay attention. Some of this is precious. You just don't know which parts yet.That's it for today. I'm Andrew McGivern — I'll see you in the next one with another Daily Quote.

    4 min

About

Tune in daily to get a short dose of daily inspiration to kick start your day in a positive way. the Daily Quote brings you inspirational quotes to help motivate and inspire your day with positivity. Listen to the show for positive quotes from Albert Einstein, Maya Angelo, Seth Godin, Tony Robbins, Winston Churchill, Martin Luther King Jr, John Lennon, William Shakespeare, Lao Tzu, Confucius and more... Every single day you will hear a motivational quote to fire up your day.

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