A Satisfied Mind

All the money, fame, success, pleasure and power in the world doesn’t hold a candle to having a satisfied mind.

Kurt Vonnegut knew the secret when he talked to F. Scott Fitzgerald. It was…

…knowing that he had enough.

P.S. – The song “A Satisfied Mind” is one of the most covered songs in music history, but the Jeff Buckley version is my all-time favorite. It is truly sublime. Click Here to listen.

“What’s My One Thing?”

Gary Keller’s advice above is great, but don’t let it paralyze you from starting.

Just pick a task, any task, and go COMPLETE it.

Do this again and again. Day in and day out.

Eventually you fill figure out the exact, right, one thing. But not before you complete a whole bunch of other things.

Reality

The reality is…you are reality. Here and now.

You’d be wise to remember this at all times.

On Waiting Well

According to MIT Professor Richard Larson, sometimes called “Dr. Queue“, Americans spend roughly 37 billion hours each year waiting in line. That works out to about two to three years of the average person’s lifetime. That’s a whole heckuva lot of time, and behooves us to learn to wait well. So how to do it?

Resist the urge to fill up every moment with some sort of productive time or dopamine rush. Put the phone down.

Instead, allow your mind to just notice and appreciate your surroundings. Be still. It’s not only okay to be bored, it’s actually really beneficial for you.

It might not feel like it in the moment, but the better you can wait, the better you will feel and be. And more often than not, the creative breakthrough you seek lies at the end other end of your stillness.

P.S. – This excellent Marginalian post.

Those Who Can Do, Also Teach

The idiom “those who can’t do, teach” originated from George Bernard Shaw in his play Man and Superman. It was originally intended as a cynical jab at political revolutionaries rather than an attack on educators. Over time, it morphed into a popular, often derogatory, stereotype suggesting that teachers are simply people who failed at their primary vocational goals. Which is so not true.

Interestingly enough, the original maxim goes all the way back to Aristotle which reads, “Those who know, do. Those who understand, teach.” In other words: Only those who truly understand complex ideas can break them down for others to understand.

Wanna know if you really grasp the fundamentals? Wanna get better at your craft?

Try teaching it. There’s no better test than that.

Try Out The New Thing

I love this post about reinventing from Sahil Bloom.

If you’re seeking to make a big change in your life but feeling anxious about doing so, why not split the difference? Before outright quitting, try out the new thing. Take it for a test drive.

As Sahil advises, set a goal of 30 minutes a day for 30 days in a row of doing the new thing. Take action on it.

Depending on your desired change, this could involve things like:

-Having casual learning conversations with people who are doing the new thing you’re interested in.

-Having conversations with trusted friends and/or family members.

-Attending industry or networking events.

-Reading books or articles about your new field

-Reaching out to potential clients for your new business idea.

-Building your website or a simple landing page for your product/service offering.

-Writing a strategic or business plan, including budget and financial projections.

If 30 minutes for 30 days is too daunting, do 20 for 20. The point is, make a commitment to trying out your desired change (aka “prototyping“) and then do it.

You’ll either find out that you love the new thing and then be much more ready to go all in on it. Or, you’ll find you don’t love the new thing as much as you thought you did. You’ll stick with what you were doing, yet work to find something else.

And if you can’t or are unwilling to commit to trying out the new thing?…Well, now you know you’re not ready or it’s not the right thing.

Selling Sand In The Desert

My friend Turney tells a great story on IG about selling. You can find it Here. And be sure to check out all his posts. They are chock full of phenomenal advice, especially for a young person trying to find their way in the world.

If you know exactly what you’re selling AND why it’s important AND exactly who you are selling to AND what they might want, then you can even sell sand to someone in the desert.

If you don’t know the above yet, start by finding your minimum viable audience. Which, per Seth Godin is “The smallest group that could possibly sustain you in your work.”

If You Build It, Will They Come?

They will.

If.

You know specifically, who they are.

And.

You know specifically what you are building.

Yes, Roy Kinsella took a huge leap of faith. And didn’t really know why other than a strong voice telling him to.

But, he did know he was building a baseball field for baseball players to play on it.

Before building it, ask yourself, who’s it for and what’s it for?

Then you can leap.

Not The Way You Hoped

You busted your ass getting ready for the audition.

You spent countless hours preparing the pitch.

You planned the perfect event.

You trained like a demon and went all out in the race.

All that time.

All that energy.

All that work.

All that sacrifice.

But you didn’t get the job.

They didn’t like the pitch.

No one showed up to the party.

You lost the race.

Things didn’t go the way you hoped.

And I know. It stings. It hurts. A lot.

But damnit, you tried. You put yourself out there. And what a gift you had. To be able to want something and then go for it. So many people don’t get this gift. They don’t have anything they care enough about to risk. To go all out like you just did.

Take a moment to be sad. To grieve.

And then go find the next meaningful thing to care about.

If you can do that again and again and again, then you will have one helluva good life.

In Praise Of Sleep

The single best cure for your problems is a good night’s sleep.

When you wake up rested, more often than not, you will realize your problems weren’t really problems. Certainly not as monumental as you thought the day before.

Or, you will now have the energy, clarity and focus to deal with these problems effectively.

Either way, put the phone down, stop the worrying, and go to sleep.

Your mind and body will thank you in the morning.

P.S.- Also be sure to consult this self-care checklist.