Paul Rocca Author

Paul Rocca Author Leadership and bible teaching that will help you get the most out of your life! Practical application

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Happy Mother's Day‼️I celebrate you and all that you do for your family. If you are a man that has full time care of you...
09/05/2026

Happy Mother's Day‼️I celebrate you and all that you do for your family. If you are a man that has full time care of your children, this does NOT make it your day‼️And the same with women on Father's Day. Just saying‼️🤣😂🤣 (Btw, I never hear men doing that.)

Acknowledging that it could be a tough day for some; their child is no longer talking to them for whatever reason or their mum is no longer here. Or, they desperately wanted to have children but couldn't. Big hugs to you‼️ 😢💔
On this special day I acknowledge the hard work, dedication, and love that you have given. THANK YOU‼️

09/05/2026

I've learnt these valuable lessons the hard way‼️
"Leadership is the art of building relationships as you head towards a goal" Paul Rocca. We are all involved in leadership daily whether we are leading or following. If we're leading others it makes sense to study to do better. If we're following then it helps to support our leaders. It comes back on us‼️

The Art of mentoring. Part 1The art of mentoring is a multifaceted practice that goes beyond mere instruction or directi...
07/05/2026

The Art of mentoring. Part 1
The art of mentoring is a multifaceted practice that goes beyond mere instruction or direction giving; it involves a deep and meaningful investment in individuals' growth and development.
Mentoring is about building relationships, fostering trust, and guiding others toward personal and professional development. Central to this process is building relationships with those we wish to lead rather than standing aloof and issuing orders from a distance.
To truly mentor someone effectively, you must be willing to invest time, energy, and empathy into understanding their unique strengths, weaknesses, goals, and aspirations. This requires a willingness to listen attentively, observe closely, and engage authentically with the mentee. By
walking alongside them, mentors can offer guidance, support, and encouragement in a way that is both personalized and meaningful.
When mentors build relationships with their mentees, they commit to their growth and
development beyond simply imparting knowledge or expertise. Instead of dictating solutions or prescribing actions, they engage in a collaborative process of exploration and discovery, empowering their mentees to find answers and chart their course.
Copyright ©️ 2024 Paul Rocca
Visit my website to purchase my book and read more articles.

25/04/2026

Remembering those who paid the ultimate price, either giving their lives or coming back to our great country with P.T.S.D.
I honour them all. Thank you. I salute you 🫡

21/04/2026

People who celebrate others tend to build stronger
relationships. They attract trust, goodwill, and collaboration. Others want to be around
them, work with them, and support them in return. Over time, that creates opportunities
that someone stuck in insecurity simply won’t access.
Insecurity and fear are often the root cause of others refusing to celebrate other people’s
success. But the encouraging part is that both can be addressed. As a person builds
confidence, clarity, and a sense of purpose, celebrating others stops feeling like a loss…
and starts feeling natural.

©️ Copyright Paul Rocca 2021

Celebrating Other People's Success. Part 4.People who celebrate others tend to build stronger relationships. They attrac...
21/04/2026

Celebrating Other People's Success. Part 4.

People who celebrate others tend to build stronger
relationships. They attract trust, goodwill, and collaboration. Others want to be around
them, work with them, and support them in return. Over time, that creates opportunities
that someone stuck in insecurity simply won’t access.
Insecurity and fear are often the root cause of others refusing to celebrate other people’s
success. But the encouraging part is that both can be addressed. As a person builds
confidence, clarity, and a sense of purpose, celebrating others stops feeling like a loss…
and starts feeling natural.

©️ Copyright Paul Rocca 2021

Celebrating Other People's Success. Part 3Being able to celebrate others is a strong indicator of confidence. It shows t...
16/04/2026

Celebrating Other People's Success. Part 3

Being able to celebrate others is a strong indicator of confidence. It shows that a person knows who they are, trusts their own path, and isn’t shaken by someone else moving forward. That kind of mindset is powerful because it frees up energy—energy that would otherwise be wasted on comparison, jealousy, or quiet resentment.

There’s also a practical side to this. People who celebrate others tend to build stronger relationships. They attract trust, goodwill, and collaboration. Others want to be around them, work with them, and support them in return. Over time, that creates opportunities that someone stuck in insecurity simply won’t access.

15/04/2026

People who can celebrate others have usually done some internal work. They’ve shifted from a scarcity mindset to an abundance mindset. They’ve separated their identity from constant comparison. They understand that someone else’s success is not a verdict on their own life—it’s simply evidence of what’s possible.

Part 2) Celebrating other people's success. Continued from part 1)Fear adds another layer. Fear of being left behind. Fe...
14/04/2026

Part 2) Celebrating other people's success.

Continued from part 1)
Fear adds another layer. Fear of being left behind. Fear of not measuring up. Fear that opportunities are scarce, and if someone else gets ahead, there’s less available. This creates a quiet, competitive tension—even in situations where there doesn’t need to be any competition at all.
Put those two together, and celebration becomes difficult because it requires emotional safety. You can’t genuinely be happy for someone else if, deep down, you feel like their success diminishes your own chances or value.

But here’s the turning point: people who can celebrate others have usually done some
internal work. They’ve shifted from a scarcity mindset to an abundance mindset. They’ve
separated their identity from constant comparison. They understand that someone else’s success is not a verdict on their own life—it’s simply evidence of what’s possible.

13/04/2026

Part 1) Celebrating other people's success.

When someone struggles to celebrate others, it usually isn’t because they’re a bad person;
it’s because something inside them feels threatened. Success, in that moment, stops
being admirable and feels like a comparison. Instead of “good for them,” the internal voice
says, “What does that say about me?”
Insecurity feeds that voice.

Part 1) Celebrating other people's success. When someone struggles to celebrate others, it usually isn’t because they’re...
13/04/2026

Part 1) Celebrating other people's success.

When someone struggles to celebrate others, it usually isn’t because they’re a bad person; it’s because something inside them feels threatened. Success, in that moment, stops being admirable and feels like a comparison. Instead of “good for them,” the internal voice says, “What does that say about me?”

Insecurity feeds that voice. It tells a person their worth is limited, fragile, or dependent on how they stack up against others. So when someone else wins, it feels like proof that they are losing. That’s not reality—but it feels real enough to shape behaviour.

Fear adds another layer. Fear of being left behind. Fear of not measuring up. Fear that opportunities are scarce, and if someone else gets ahead, there’s less available. This creates a quiet, competitive tension—even in situations where there doesn’t need to be any competition at all.

Address

Po Box 656
Wanneroo, WA
6946

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