You have to know about the word “momentum”
But my favorite part of Trump’s Address to the Nations Boy Scouts is where he just veers off into telling them a long boring story about this one guy he met 50 years ago, like any other damn windbag you accidentally sit next to at a dinner or on a bus or in the dentist’s waiting room. You know those – the ones who just talk, regardless of who is next to them or what the likelihood is that anyone in hearing will give a damn.
In life, in order to be successful, and you people are well on the road to success, you have to find out what makes you excited. What makes you want to get up each morning and go to work? You have to find it.
If you love what you do and dedicate yourself to your work, then you will gain momentum, and look — you have to, you need to. The word momentum — you will gain that momentum, and each success will create another success. The word momentum.
I’ll tell you a story that’s very interesting for me when I was young. There was a man named William Levitt — Levittowns, you have some here, you have some in different states. Anybody ever hear of Levittown? (Applause.) And he was a very successful man. He was a homebuilder — became an unbelievable success, and got more and more successful. And he built homes, and at night he’d go to these major sites with teams of people and he’d scour the sites for nails and sawdust and small pieces of wood. And they’d clean the site so when the workers came in the next morning, the sites would be spotless and clean, and he did it properly. And he did this for 20 years, and then he was offered a lot of money for his company.
And he sold his company for a tremendous amount of money. At the time especially — this was a long time ago — sold his company for a tremendous amount of money. And he went out and bought a big yacht, and he had a very interesting life. I won’t go any more than that because you’re Boy Scouts, so I’m not going to tell you what he did.
AUDIENCE: Booo —
TRUMP: Should I tell you? Should I tell you?
AUDIENCE: Yes!
TRUMP: Oh, you’re Boy Scouts, but you know life. You know life. So — look at you. Who would think this is the Boy Scouts, right?
So he had a very, very interesting life, and the company that bought his company was a big conglomerate. And they didn’t know anything about building homes, and they didn’t know anything about picking up the nails and the sawdust and selling it — and the scraps of wood. This was a big conglomerate based in New York City, and after about a ten year period they were losing a lot with it. It didn’t mean anything to them, and they couldn’t sell it.
So they called William Levitt up and they said, would you like to buy back your company, and he said yes, I would. He so badly wanted it, he got bored with this life of yachts and sailing and all of the things he did in the south of France and other places. You won’t get bored, right? You know, truthfully, you’re workers. You’ll get bored too. Believe me. (Applause.) Of course, having a good few years like that isn’t so bad. (Applause.) But what happened is he bought back his company, and he bought back a lot of empty land. And he worked hard in getting it zoning, and he worked hard on starting to develop.
And in the end he failed, and he failed badly. Lost all of his money. He went personally bankrupt, and he was now much older. And I saw him at a cocktail party, and it was very sad because the hottest people in New York were at this party. It was the party of Steve Ross who was one of the great people — he came up and discovered — really founded — Time Warner, and he was a great guy. He had a lot of successful people at the party.
And I was doing well so I got invited to the party. I was very young, and I go in — but I’m in the real estate business — and I see 100 people, some of whom I recognize and they’re big in the entertainment business. And I see, sitting in the corner, was a little old man who was all by himself. Nobody was talking to him. I immediately recognized that that man was the once great William Levitt of Levittown, and I immediately went over — I wanted to talk to him more than the Hollywood show business communications people.
So I went over and talked to him, and I said, Mr. Levitt, I’m Donald Trump. He said I know. I said, Mr. Levitt, how are you doing? He goes, not well, not well at all. And I knew that, but he said not well at all. And he explained what was happening and how bad it has been and how hard it has been. And I said what exactly happened? Why did this happen to you? You’re one of the greats ever in our industry. Why did this happen to you? And he said, Donald, I lost my momentum. I lost my momentum. A word you never hear when you’re talking about success. When some of these guys that never made ten cents, they’re on television giving you things about how you’re going to be successful, and the only thing they ever did was a book and a tape.
But I’ll tell you, it was very sad, and I never forgot that moment. And I thought about it, and it’s exactly true. He lost his momentum. Meaning, he took this period of time off long — years — and then when he got back, he didn’t have that same momentum. In life, I always tell this to people, you have to know whether or not you continue to have the momentum, and if you don’t have it that’s okay. Because you’re going to go on and you’re going to learn and you’re going to do things that are great. But you have to know about the word momentum.
As long as you know about the word “momentum” you’ll be fine.
Yes, momentum. Not many people know that it’s mass times velocity. But you should have it. Like Donald Trump. Or a freight train that’s jumped the rails. If you have enough of it, you can just plow through everything in your path. and not even have to care. It’s a very good thing, momentum. One of the best things.
I’m particularly stricken here with the grandiose, blatant message that being a success means being rich — that he’s talking to young boys and young men who joined the Boy Scouts because they want to accumulate a lot of THINGS. “This guy, he made a lot of money and he quit making money to do other stuff — but that’s BORING, amirite? — so he tried to make more money and couldn’t.”
New addition to Boy Scout oath: a Boy Scout is wealthy. And materialistic.
I’m appalled. Just when you think Trump’s hit rock bottom, he goes lower.
Many folks have pointed out on Twitter that Levitt sold all his houses under a restrictive covenant that forbade ever re-selling them to black people. Levittowns were whites-only. This, our Dear President describes as “one of the greats ever in our industry.”
And Levittowns were essentially pre-fab housing. In short, crap quality that was all alike with no individualism. They didn’t take long to build, and they didn’t cost that much to build. They were not artisan work where a human being can live to express their individual personality; they are cookie cutter homes where people live to express that they are just like every other person on their block, and will not rock the boat. Which fits with what Avenger said, because after all, if you are not white, you don’t look like everyone else on the white people block of houses. Must keep that uniformity, because that is how we keep people in line as workers, as citizens, as whatever.
It seems appropriate that Trump would extol the virtues of Levitt rather than someone who created different and aesthetically pleasing work that took time and money to create, and may have decreased the profit margin a bit.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-o-7MmhqNfA
Waffles on a bit, doesn’t he. I think what he was trying to say before losing his way was something like the old adage that if you make a career doing what you enjoy, you’ll never have to work a day in your life.
Judging from my experience, if you make a career out of doing something you enjoy, you will end your career hating what you used to enjoy. I am finding this both in teaching and in playwriting – there is always someone out there who is determined to make sure the life of other people is miserable, and they will do their best to break you.
iknklast @7,
Thank you for that — I’ve often that bit of advice is dodgy at best. For some people it’s entirely practicable, because what they “love to do” matches up with what the market will pay you to do. But quite often, it doesn’t.
I really like to cook. But several of the things I like about it are (1) it’s purely voluntary, I don’t have to cook on days I don’t feel like it; (2) there’s no pressure from anyone else; either I’m cooking for myself or for friends who aren’t going to complain if I screw up; (3) I do it in small doses. I’ve read enough accounts of the culinary world to know that this bears no resemblance to the professional world.
But hey, if you like to do something, you should make it your career, right? Hardly. Working long shifts in a hot sweaty restaurant kitchen, night after night, with customers sending back dishes for good reasons or lousy ones, some Gordon Ramsey wannabe chef yelling at me, for minimal pay, is not appealing to me. The people who do that have to either (1) not have anything else they can do for a living; (2) take a perverse pleasure in that kind of environment; and/or (3) be really really driven by the prospect of one day becoming that Gordon Ramsey wannabe. And great for them — I sort of envy that kind of determination and certainty about your goals.
I never said it was a good old adage….