This seems as good an occasion as any to memorialize some learnings from the past three decades.
Since
thirty trips around the sun doesn’t qualify me as wise enough to tell
anyone else how to live, I’ll address this to my future self.
That said, I hope you’ll find a few gems in here that will bring you more of whatever you’re seeking.
Don’t
trust yourself to make good decisions. Instead, design your environment
so the right decision requires the least amount of effort. This might
mean you avoid bringing unhealthy food into your home or you turn down a
job offer where you may be pressured to compromise your morals.
Whatever the case, you’ll have a better chance of making a good decision
by setting up the right inputs rather than relying on yourself to
create the right outputs.
Whenever
you’re embarrassed by your own ignorance in a certain subject, resist
the urge to convince yourself that it doesn’t matter. Instead, try
reading a book about it. Then you can decide whether it’s important.
This comes from a quote I like by Maria Popova. History is littered
with examples of seemingly smart people who ended up doing or saying
dumb things because they were too attached to obsolete mental models.
Even for beliefs that have served you well in the past, don’t hold on to
any so tightly that they can’t be abandoned in the light of better
evidence.
The
foundation of any valuable relationship is alignment. This goes for
romantic relationships, professional ones, friendships or any other
type. You want her to achieve her goals. She wants you to achieve yours.
Your relationship works because, together, you both have a better shot
at getting what you want. As soon as that that changes (e.g. her
professional success damages your ego) the relationship will start to
deteriorate. Make sure that you stay aligned with the people who matter
to you. Thanks to Russ Klusas for teaching me this one.
This quote by Tim O'Reilly
encapsulates a great operating principle for businesses and individuals
alike. The market typically forces companies to create products that
customers value more than the money they offer in exchange. Businesses
that can’t accomplish this usually cease to exist. Individuals, however,
can hang on for quite a bit longer extracting resources from their
relationships without offering much in return. Rarely, however, does
this lead to happiness. Eventually, those who extract value without
giving to back, end up alone.
When meeting new people, it may be tempting to ask yourself: what can I get out of this encounter? Instead try asking: what might this other person want from our encounter, and how might I deliver it?
Whether this impulse strikes you as altruistic or ultimately
self-serving, it tends to be a great way to build long-lasting
relationships. Put another way, I’ve rarely met anyone who focused on
creating value for others that didn’t reap their fair share in return.
Humor
has always served as my defense to keep unimportant things (politics,
relationship drama) from taking on too much significance. I’ve found it
to be a great way to turn mountains into molehills. Unfortunately, I’ve
also used it to prematurely diminish things (like eating healthy,
personal finance, exercise, etc.) that later turned out to be hugely
valuable. In those situations I used humor to justify my own lazy
choices. Ultimately, embracing humor has made for a richer, happier
life. Just don’t use it as a way to delude yourself out of trying things
that are hard.
Few
great stories concern a hero who wants something and has an easy time
getting it. We instinctually admire those who must overcome massive odds
to achieve their goals. Yet, when obstacles show up in our own life,
it’s easy to fall into self pity. While I can’t claim to have been
tested by truly overwhelming obstacles, I like to challenge myself to
take what problems I do encounter and try to identify the opportunity.
I’ve found that each time I do this, the next problem feels less
weighty. I hope this practice will keep me antifragile in the case that I
end up facing something that truly tests me.
There’s
a story I read somewhere that’s always stuck with me. It involves two
dining companions at a fancy restaurant. Suddenly, one of the guests
screams at the sight of a cockroach in her salad. She swats at the bug
which flies off her salad and lands on her dining companion’s jacket. As
the bug scrambles around his jacket the man starts furiously smacking
himself in an attempt to squash it. Meanwhile, the waiter, alerted by
the commotion grabs a wine glass and napkin, scoops the bug off the
diner’s jacket with the napkin and traps it under the wine glass. He
carries the roach outside and lets it free on the sidewalk.
The
diners reacted and created chaos. The waiter responded and fixed the
problem. I can’t tell you how many problems in my life could have been
better solved by taking 5 minutes to formulate a strategy rather than
reacting impulsively.
Crappy
genes. Bad parents. Poorly designed policies. There are all sorts of
forces outside your control that can cause you to suffer. Ultimately
though, the final layer that reality has to pass through is your own
interpretation. You have the ability to reframe whether you feel like
you can make your life better or whether you’re at the whim of
oppressive external forces. While choosing the latter may feel good, and
may even be justified sometimes, it will not better your life. Developing a strong internal locus of control allows you to believe you have the ability to control your circumstances.
While
I’m unsure to the extent which I believe in free will, I have seen
first hand that those who have a strong internal locus of control tend
to fare much better than those who fixate on external forces (regardless
of how many problems they are facing). So, while there’s a chance this
belief may be rooted in self delusion, it certainly seems to be a useful
one.
If
you want to understand what someone truly values, look at how they
spend their time. It’s a telling indicator because time is everyone’s
most limited resource. Sometimes it may make sense to spend your time
doing things you don’t like in exchange for other assets like money or
information. However, this is a risky strategy as no one can tell you
how much time you have left and there’s no way to get any more of it. I
try to spend my days as if I’m going to make it to 100 while still
remembering that a satellite chunk could fall on my head at any moment.
Balancing respect of death and hope for a long and happy life, seems to
have incentivized me to make good decisions about my time, thus far.
While
you may not be able to get more time, you can slow down how fast it
passes (at least in your mind). To illustrate, have you ever gone on
vacation and noticed how the first day in a new place seems to last a
long time? This has to do with a theory about how the brain processes
novelty. When you encounter new things your brain recruits more
cognitive resources to make sense of it and capture details. This extra
expenditure of brain power makes the encounter seem longer. Conversely,
when you’ve repeated the same commute a few dozen times, your brain
doesn’t need to expend much energy capturing details, making the time
seem to fly by. I’ve taken this as a license to try new things as often
as possible. Traveling to new places or just taking a slightly different
route on my walk to work.
I
hope next time you read this, you’re still trying new things. At best,
it may give you the feeling of just a bit more time and at worst it will
make your life all the richer for trying.
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