Virend Singh was born and raised in South Africa. In 1989, Virend migrated to Australia to start a new life with his wife and two young children. He has since worked for three major corporations before realizing that his chances of becoming financially free from a job was virtually non-existent.
A business professional with an MBA and a graduate of the ‘school of hard knocks’, Virend finally learned that highly successful people think and act different than others.
In 1998 Virend struck out on his own as an independent business owner and, less than four years later, generated a generous residual income stream that has helped him secure his financial future and quit his full-time job forever.
He now enjoys complete autonomy - the kind of lifestyle that most people, including some of the most successful CEOs and business owners, dream about.
Virend thinks of himself as an on-going learner, and a student of life. He is a warm hearted, compelling speaker and success coach who is committed to helping people improve the quality of their personal and professional lives.
Having learned first-hand what it takes to achieve notable success, he teamed up with his daughter, Verusha, and authored ‘The Inexplicable Laws of Success’, which soon became a #1 Kindle bestseller.
Life is a game
And like any game
There are rules.
You can play to win
Or you can play to lose…
And you always get to choose.
But whether you win, or you lose
Will depend on how you apply the rules.
The rules are mysterious, even baffling at times.
Often you will say that you are doing all you can do,
But your results will tell ‘that is not true’
Clearly, you have breached the rules
For which you must pay the price
And repeat the lesson
Till you have learned it right.
Only then will you win
The Game Of Life
~ Verusha Singh (www.TheInexplicableLawsOfSuccess.com)
On Raising Our Children
If we tell our children they're so bad
They'll grow up as we hope they never had
But, if we tell our children they're so good
They'll grow up exactly as we hope they would
If our expectations of them are low
In their performance, it'll show
But, if our expectations of them are high
They'll stretch and reach for the sky
If we don't openly show them affection
It could lead to a misconception
But, if we show them love through touch
They'll grow close to us
If, with them, we hardly talk
Then, at what we say, they'll baulk
But, if with them, we'll join and play
Then as a family, together we'll stay
by Virend Singh