
I had an idea, I was passionate about it and I had to work hard
I had an idea, I was passionate about it and I had to work hard to turn that into a big success and more products.






Hear the words of Lori Greiner, who declared: “I had an idea, I was passionate about it and I had to work hard to turn that into a big success and more products.” In this simple yet profound statement lies the sacred path of creation. She speaks of three pillars that have guided all inventors, builders, and dreamers since the dawn of civilization: the birth of an idea, the fire of passion, and the discipline of hard work. Without one, the others falter. Together, they become the foundation upon which empires are built and legacies endure.
The ancients knew that every great endeavor begins as a whisper in the mind, an idea that seems small and fragile. The pyramids of Egypt began as lines etched in sand. The voyages of Columbus began as a dream of distant shores. The lightbulb of Edison began as a sketch, mocked by many. But an idea alone is like a seed buried in stone—it must find soil, water, and care if it is to grow. Greiner reminds us that an idea without labor is nothing more than air, vanishing as quickly as it came.
Yet an idea gains power only when joined with passion. For passion is the fire that sustains when the road is long, when doubt creeps in, when failures strike. Consider the Wright brothers, who faced endless crashes and ridicule. Their idea of flight might have perished had not their passion burned hotter than the scorn of skeptics. In time, that passion lifted humanity into the skies. So too Greiner speaks: she did not merely have an idea—she loved it, she believed in it, and that devotion gave her the strength to fight for its reality.
But even idea and passion are not enough without hard work. Dreams without toil remain ghosts. History shows us countless visionaries who began with brilliance but faltered through sloth. Yet those who wedded their ideas to sweat and discipline carved their names into eternity. Thomas Edison, through thousands of failed experiments, showed that true innovation is not a flash of genius but the relentless labor of trial and error. In Greiner’s own words, she had to “work hard” to transform her spark of inspiration into something tangible, valuable, and lasting.
Her mention of “more products” also reveals a deeper truth: success is not a single moment, but a chain, each link forged by continued effort. To create once is admirable; to continue creating is divine. The ancient philosophers taught that excellence is not an act but a habit, and Greiner embodies this teaching. She did not stop with one victory, but built upon it, multiplying her success through persistence and expansion.
To you who hear this, take the lesson: if you carry an idea, guard it as precious. Nurture it with passion, let it burn so brightly that it lights your path when shadows fall. And above all, commit to hard work, for only through labor does the invisible become visible, and only through discipline does the seed grow into the tree. Do not rest content with one triumph, but let each success be the foundation for the next, so that your life becomes a ladder climbing ever upward.
Practical wisdom follows: write down your ideas, for memory is fleeting. Feed your passion with knowledge and community, so that doubt cannot quench it. And discipline yourself to daily work, even when the results are unseen, for unseen labor often yields the greatest harvests. Finally, when success comes, do not stop—expand, grow, and build upon what you have made.
Thus, remember the truth in Lori Greiner’s words: an idea, passion, and hard work together create success. This is the path of inventors, leaders, and dreamers across the ages. Walk it faithfully, and your life will not only bring forth creation, but inspire others to kindle the fire of their own ideas and carry them into the world.
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