What are the most valuable things everyone should know?
Try One (Or All) Of These If You Want To Add Value to Your Life
When I would stay up all night anxious and scared and afraid
about money and love and life, I had no rules to live by.
I expected too much. I was dishonest – with others and myself.
I had to change. This is what I started to figure out over the
past twenty years.
It seems hard to follow the rules. But it isn’t. Life became
infinitely easier and better.
There’s
always a Good Reason and a Real Reason
My daughter tells me she wants to study at the library and work
on her homework. Good reason.
There’s boys at the library. Real reason.
Almost everything people say to me has a good reason and a real
reason.
Happiness
= Reality / Expectations.
If I am 200 pounds I can change reality slowly. But I can change
expectations lower in a second (I’m fine weighing 200 pounds but I’m going to
start eating healthier).
Anger = Fear Clothed
I’m angry at an ex. But what am I really scared of? Am I scared
nobody will like me again? Am I scared that other people will wrong me and I
will be powerless to stop with?
An ex business partner is angry at me? Did I do something wrong?
Or is he afraid because his wife cheated on him and now he thinks other
partners will cheat him?
Understanding the underlying fears that angry people have leads
to mastery in life.
The 5/25
Rule
I’m borrowing this for the moment from Warren Buffett. Thank
you, Warren for lending this rule to me.
List the top 25 things you most want to accomplish in life.
Now take the top 5, move them over *here*, and take the bottom
20 and move them over *there*.
These 20 are still in the TOP 25 things you want to do in life.
So they are special and important to you.
Some painful things can come out of this. I will never be a
professional standup comedian. But that’s ok. It’s not in my top 5.
Cal Newport, author of “Deep Work”, would call this “The Deep
Work Rule” – do Deep Work versus Shallow Work.
The 5×5
Rule
I spent all my time hanging out with people who only valued
money. This is what happened: I ended up valuing money too much. I lost it all.
I stopped being creative. I started being arrogant.
The road to recovery was: I had to start hanging out with a
different group of people.
The 5×5 rule is:
·
you are the average of the 5 people you spend the most time
with.
·
your health is the average of the 5 foods you eat the most
·
your mental state is the average of the 5 things you think about
the most.
·
your creativity is the average of the five works of art you
spend the most time trying to read or watch or understand.
·
your ability to be loved is the average of the five things you
most do that are lovable.
Corollary: Stand next to the smartest person in the room.
Persistence
+ Love = Abundance
Everything in life is pretty difficult. Being born is difficult.
And it starts there.
When I wanted to write and public a book, I wrote 4
unpublishable novels, I wrote 40–50 short stories. I pitched and shot pilots for
two different TV shows. I did years of research and work on the topic that
eventually became my first published book.
Now 18 books later I’m debating working on the 19th.
The same is true for business, for love, for health.
The 1% Rule
If something compounds at 1% a day, it will be 37 times better
in a year.
If something loses 1% a day, it will be 0.03% of what it was in
a year.
If I want to get better at golf, I should try to get 1% better
every day. Then, in a year, I will be 37 times better.
If I want to get better at being a loving person, try to be 1%
more kind each day.
I know it’s hard to quantify. It’s impossible. But the direction
is what is important. It will all shake out in the end.
This is the path to improvement any are of life.
The ‘What
I Liked As a Kid’ rule
List the things you liked when you were 6, 8, 10, 14.
I liked writing, science fiction, games, James Bond, The Force,
etc.
List at least ten things.
Now list what you can do with those things as an adult. How did
these loves age with you?
If you do this every day, eventually you will find what you want
to do as an adult.
Is it every too late? It’s never too late. I’m 49 and I do some
form of this exercise every day.
Plus,
Minus, Equal
To learn anything. You have to find a:
PLUS: a real or virtual mentor who can teach you.
EQUALS: people who can challenge you
MINUS: people you can teach, because teaching solidifies
learning.
Everyone
is Irrational All of the Time
Borrowing this from Scott Adams. Thanks Scott!
He told me, “once I realized that everyone is irrational all of
the time my life became a lot simpler.”
People are programmed by their upbringing, their genetics, their
educations, the desires of the people around them, their cognitive biases that
date back millions of years.
There’s no way to fight through that jungle of bias to come up
with rational behavior.
What this means: it’s no use assuming people will be rational
towards us. It’s no use fighting for strong opinions. It’s no use telling
people what to do or using rational arguments to get people to do what you
would like them to do, even if it’s to treat you nicer.
This is the argument for living by example. Even in life: Show
and don’t tell.
The 64/4
Rule
If 20% of the effort creates 80% of the value (think of a job:
20% of the employees do 80% of the work), then square that.
So now 20% of the 20% of the effort makes 80% of 80% of the
value.
So 4% of the work you do in life creates 64% of the benefits in
your life.
Find that 4%, be ok with only creating 64% of the benefits, and
then use the other 96% each day to focus on things that you love.
I do this. I have not maximized, for instance, the money I could
make in life. But every day I do my top 5 things (see the 5/25 rule) and I gave
away about 96% of my possessions because only the 4% were providing most of the
value in my life.
And now I have time to be creative every day, to be with people
I love, to not worry about my material possessions, to spend time exploring
this wonderful world we live in.
The
Self-Esteem Rule
It’s really hard to have self-esteem. Everyone wants to take it
from us. A boss, a teacher, a parent, a friend, a lover.
But it’s hard to hold onto your own self-esteem, let alone have
two.
Never let someone else take care of your self-esteem. Even the
partner you love the most.
They can’t handle it. They have to deal with their own
self-esteem. That’s a full time job.
When you feel yourself giving the keys to your self-esteem to
someone else, stop yourself. Say out loud, “I will not outsource my
self-esteem”.
Bring the
Target Closer
Thank you Tony Robbins for telling me this rule.
When he was young he was asked to teach a class of marines how
to shoot guns better. He was scared to death. He had never even shot a gun
himself.
So he studied dozens of expert shooters.
He came up with one idea. He brought the target very close. They
all shot bullseyes. Then he moved a bit further. And so on. His class had the
best scores ever.
A friend of mine was overwhelmed. He had a job, a commute, a
wife, a family. But he wanted to write a thriller.
It seems overwhelming. How can he write 400 pages with all this
responsibility.
So every day on the train to work he wrote a few paragraphs. In
two years he had a thriller that went on to sell 100,000 copies. Now he’s the
writer on a major TV show.
Break a problem into smaller parts. List the parts. Break those
parts down. List them. Do one thing. You just brought the target closer.
The 1,000
Hour Rule (or “Idea Sex”).
It took the Beatles, Einstein, Bobby Fischer, Mozart, Michael
Jordan, etc 10,000 hours of work to be the best in the world at music, math,
chess, etc.
But the 10,000 hour rule can be beat.
Spend 500 hours getting pretty good at one thing. Spend 500 hours
getting pretty good at something else.
Now you will be the best in the world at the intersection.
Matt Berry was a screenwriter in Hollywood. He was also obsessed
with sports.
He quit being a screenwriter, started blogging about fantasy
sports, and became the best in the world. Now he’s the ESPN anchor for Fantasy
Sports. He’s #1 in the world.
Mick Jagger had a charismatic stage presence. He also loved a
music style started in America called “The Blues”. Nobody ever says he’s the
best musician ever.
But he combined the two and he created one of the most
profitable and lasting bands in history.
Elon Musk was one of many people who sold a company in the
Internet boom of the 90s. He also became obsessed with reading about rocket
science. He wasn’t the best. But he knew enough.
Now he’s the founder of the first private space company in
history.
The 1000 Hour Rule is the #1 rule for success.
The F+
Rule
In school, my kids feel if they don’t get an A+ all of the time
then they are doing poorly.
Schools try to get kids to get A+ scores because their funding
depends on it. This is ruining kids.
In real life, if 51% of your decisions are mostly good, then you
will be a massive success in life (in Baseball, of course, if only 30% of the
time you hit safely to base then you are an all-star).
If more than 70% of your decisions are good then you are probably
a failure. You aren’t taking enough risks.
50–60% seems to be the right mix. Practice being wrong.
Nobody
Cares If You Are At The Party
I always think if I don’t produce every day, people will get
upset. I get upset at myself.
But people care only when you have something great to offer.
Nobody cares when you mess up. Everyone messes up.
Nobody is ever thinking about you. They are worried about what
you think of them.
Create something good. Then come to the party.
Positive
Action > Feeling Gratitude
Nothing wrong with gratitude. But there’s a lot of gratitude
porn out there right now. It’s a good meditation: spend five minutes thinking
of things you are grateful for.
But even better, when I am feeling down, I think of three
positive things I can do today that will make my life move forward. And then I
do them.
Every time I feel stressed or anxious, this is usually because I
am worried irrationally (because all people are irrational) about something
invisible happening in the future.
Gratitude will band-aid those feelings. But taking positive
actions, however small, will actually give me greater confidence that the
future will be better than I imagined.
Well
Being = Good relationships + Improving Competence, + Freedom
At the end of the day can you check the box on those three
things? Did I improve my relationships? Did I improve my competence at some
area I love. Did I do something to increase my feeling of freedom?
If so, then this is the best indicator of future well-being.
Happiness is fleeting and often beyond our control. We’re happy
when we hit a goal. And then it disappears.
But well-being is something we build up. A giant well we fill
that we can draw on for the rest of our lives.
The Hell
Yeah Rule
Thanks to Derek Sivers for always letting me take TOTAL credit
for his ingenious rule.
“If it’s not a HELL, YEAH, it’s a NO!”
This is the way to say NO almost all of the time.
This can also be called the “Life is too short” rule.
And finally,
Surrender
A good poker player plays the hand he or she is dealt. Never
complains and says, “I wish I was dealt an ace”.
I can’t control my kids. My partners, My friends. The weather.
Popular opinion.
I can only do the best I can right now and then surrender the
results. Once you release the bowling ball, your job is done.
Once I give you a kiss to wake you up, the feeling you have when
you open your eyes and look at me, is totally up to you.
Credit : http://www.jamesaltucher.com/
I’d love to hear your views on this…
I’d love to hear your views on this…
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