Start With Yes

Just like every great improv scene starts with “Yes”, every great experience you will have ever have in your life, including the tough learning ones, must start with “Yes.”

You must say “Yes” to all that life throws at you.

It’s the only way to grow.

Open. Open. Open.

Yes. Yes. Yes.

Energized AND Exhausted

You need both energy AND exhaustion to have a successful day, and life.

If you’re energized in the morning, but not exhausted at night. That means you didn’t give it your all. Don’t let yourself off the hook. Do better tomorrow.

If you’re exhausted at night, but not energized in the morning, it means you’re not doing the work you’re meant to be doing. Spend time figuring out what that work is, immediately.

Better Late Than Never

“Better late than never.”

Yes, this ancient proverb (From the Latin…”Potiusque sero quam nunquam….The historian Livius first recorded in 27 BC) is true. It is better to accomplish a goal or arrive at your destination late than never at all.

But the proverb is not an excuse to turn in lazy or careless work.

If that’s the case, then you’re “better never than ever.”

YOUR Goals.

It’s hard enough to achieve your goals amidst all the inevitable obstacles that will come your way.

It’s impossible to achieve other people’s or society’s goals that they have for you.

What do you want to do?

Why do you want to do it?

Take as much time as you need to figure out the answer to these two questions. Get clear.

Then, set specific and tangible goals. That way you can see the fruits of your efforts pay off, even if just a little bit. Incremental progress will keep you going.

Now, go execute.

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One Pitch Away

“You’re one pitch away!” the coach exhorts from the dugout.

Okay, so you’ve walked three batters. Bases are loaded. (You do have one out though.) You’re struggling with your control on this next batter.

Stop.

Walk around the mound.

Deep breath.

Gather your composure.

Reset.

And remind yourself that as bad as this inning started, you’re one pitch away from ending it. (You can get the batter to ground into a double play ball.)

Nothing that came before matters.

All that matters is what you do on this next pitch.

Believe in yourself.

You can do it.

“You’re one pitch away!”

Go do it.

(Of course, this baseball metaphor applies to all of life.)

No Tsk Tsk Tsk…Task

The task is the task.

Don’t make it any more than what it is by thinking about how much you don’t want to do it. Or why you have to do it. Or how arduous and long it’s gonna take.

Just start doing it.

Almost always you’ll find the actual task wasn’t all that bad. You might even enjoy it. Especially if you can be completely present and give yourself fully to it.

Satisfiers Vs. Maximizers

Stop trying to optimize and maximize every single area of your life. You will drown in a sea of choice and indecision. Which will lead to unhappiness.

Instead, satisfy.

Know your priorities and order your values. Separate the essential from the non essential. Do a bit of research if you must.

Then, just pick something and go.

P.S. – This NYT article

Twice As Nice

If you enjoy the play the first time you see it, then go see it again (and bring a friend).

Not only will your support mean a whole heckuva lot for the artists and theatre company, but you yourself, will enjoy the show that much more. You’ll notice and appreciate things you didn’t catch the first time out. Everything from story beats to design elements to subtle nuances in the actors’ performances.

Speaking of which, I saw Ironbound again last night. I loved it on opening night (post show photo above), but I loved it even more two weeks later. There are three performances left and one of those is sold out (Sunday closing). If you haven’t seen it, go see it Thursday or S. Click Here for tix/info. Use discount code “VS” for $25 tix. And if you’ve already seen it, go see it again. You’ll love it that much more!

P.S. – Shout out to JJ and Cindy for seeing it twice including our “Vs. Live” outing yesterday.

Constraints

You think you want and need more time, autonomy, and choice.

You don’t.

You just need more intentional and better-designed constraints.

Habits Over Plans Every Single Time

You can have the greatest plans in the world, but if you don’t have good habits, there is no way those plans get executed.

Because the minute you feel a bit of pressure or life doesn’t go your way or you just don’t feel like doing something, those plans go right out the window.

And all you have left is your habits.

So before making any plans, choose (and form) good habits.

Or they will choose you.