Steve Goodier Wisdom: Make a Difference
October 1, 2019 by admin
Filed under Steve Goodier Wisdom
In this inspirational article, master storyteller, Steve Goodier, shares a key piece of life wisdom about making a difference. Enjoy!
Do you ever think that one person really doesn’t matter? Tabitha Brown proved that one person does matter.
It was 1846. She joined one of the wagon trains of adventurers hoping to start a life in America’s west. Read more
Julian Kalmar and Rick Beneteau want to know if you've got what it takes to step up and be a leader in the new world transformation. CLICK HERE to find out.
Best of Steve Goodier: Make a Difference
June 12, 2016 by admin
Filed under Best Of Blog, Empowerment
This post first appeared in our blog here.
Do you ever think that one person really doesn’t matter? Tabitha Brown proved that one person does matter.
It was 1846. She joined one of the wagon trains of adventurers hoping to start a life in America’s west.
Grandma Brown, as she was affectionately called, was 62 years old, only five feet tall, and weighed all of 108 pounds when well fed. Because she was partly paralyzed, she leaned on a cane and walked with a limp.
Along the way, she showed great courage and stamina. As she crossed the Great Plains and the Rocky Mountains, she nursed the wagon train’s sick, though at one point, she neared starvation herself after the caravan’s cattle were rustled off by Rogue River Indians. Read more
Steve Goodier - Make a Difference
September 4, 2012 by admin
Filed under Empowerment
Do you ever think that one person really doesn’t matter? Tabitha Brown proved that one person does matter.
It was 1846. She joined one of the wagon trains of adventurers hoping to start a life in America’s west.
Grandma Brown, as she was affectionately called, was 62 years old, only five feet tall, and weighed all of 108 pounds when well fed. Because she was partly paralyzed, she leaned on a cane and walked with a limp.
Along the way, she showed great courage and stamina. As she crossed the Great Plains and the Rocky Mountains, she nursed the wagon train’s sick, though at one point, she neared starvation herself after the caravan’s cattle were rustled off by Rogue River Indians. Read more