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I just thought of a question: many people know KFC, but how many truly understand the founder behind this brand? I'm talking about Colonel Sanders, the legendary figure who has passed away.
His story sounds like a movie script. Born in Indiana in 1890, he lost his father at age 6. Imagine a young boy having to take care of his siblings while his mother worked outside, and also responsible for cooking. Childhood was essentially nonexistent—only responsibility. He dropped out in 7th grade, and his life afterward was like wandering through a maze—farmer, streetcar driver, train conductor, soldier, insurance salesman—almost every job ended in failure, repeatedly being pushed out.
The turning point came when he was 40 years old. Operating a diner at a gas station, cooking for passing travelers. His fried chicken recipe started gaining popularity, and people really loved it. For the first time, he felt he had something to be proud of. But fate played a cruel joke. At age 65, the government built a new highway that bypassed his restaurant entirely. Business collapsed. He was left with only a $105 Social Security check.
This is the moment most people would give up. But Colonel Sanders was different. With that fried chicken recipe in hand, he embarked on a crazy journey—driving from one restaurant to another, offering the recipe for free, only asking for a small share of sales. He slept in his car, knocked on doors, pitched his idea, and faced rejection. Rejected 1,009 times. Yes, over a thousand times. But on the 1,010th, a restaurant said "yes."
That "yes" ignited everything. Kentucky Fried Chicken was born. By his seventies, KFC was everywhere across the United States. In 1964, this once-wealthless man sold the company for $2M, but his face and name forever became symbols of the brand. Today, KFC has grown into a global empire, with over 25,000 stores in 145 countries.
The greatest gift the late founder left us isn't fried chicken, but a perspective: failure is never the end; it’s just feedback. Success often requires thousands of rejections. If someone who started at 65, with only $105, and faced countless failures can build a multi-billion dollar empire, what reason do we have to give up halfway? Whenever you feel like quitting, remember Colonel Sanders—the man who turned his last opportunity into a world legacy.