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Quick self test to examine what you are doing with yourself
0 Comments | Posted by Raphael in Uncategorized
I’ve been particularly impressed by the chapter in Steve Pavlina’s book “Personal Devleopment for Smart People” on Love. He introduced me to the concept of connection with the people, activities and things in my life. I am always choosing to connect with something or another, consciously or not. By improving the things I choose to connect with I can dramatically improve the quality of my life.
What are you connecting with in your life? Run through this exercise to find out if you are wasting your time on things that are not improving your quality of life or empowering you in some way.
You are choosing to connect with something, some attitude, person, thing, etc all the time. Are you doing it consciously and choosing things that are empowering or things that weaken you? Are you choosing to let petty excuses defeat you and allow you to settle for less? Lets find out.
Write down all of the things you choose to connect with over the course of a week:
Something you connect with includes any activity you engage in, and thoughts you routinely think, people you interact with, etc
Here are some of the things I connect in a given week:
- Video games (I like Enemy Territory)
- TV shows on hulu.com (usually crime shows)
- news sites (reddit)
- social media websites (facebook, twitter)
- misc. web browsing looking for something interesting (delicious.com/popular)
- cooking lunch or dinner with my wife
- listening to podcasts about business (internet business mastery, mixergy, other paid courses)
- blogs (personal development blogs like stevepavlina.com, finance blogs like iwillteachyoutoberich.com, internet business blogs like smartpassiveincome.com, Seth Godin’s blog, and many others)
- consulting clients, including one primary client and several smaller clients
- new technical material (blogs, how-to’s, books, etc)
- idle chatting with friends (best case) or complaining with friends about whatever (worst case)
- writing down ideas as they come to me throughout my workday
- checking email
- worrying about whether or not I will be successful
- day dreaming and looking at shiny things I want to acquire
- thinking about what I really want to accomplish and identifying the blockers to it and systematically removing them
There are quite a few things there – lets ask ourselves if these activities are empowering or weakening me?
Video games, day dreaming, worrying, tv shows, idle chat, incessant checking of email, news, and social media sites are pretty obvious examples of weakening connections. There are a several more things that are stealth weakeners though – things that on the surface appear to be useful or important but really aren’t doing much at all (in fact are just serving as fuel to further delude yourself with.) such as:
Most reading that is unfocused or without specific intent; always looking out for the next personal development, marketing, or personal finance tidbit that will make me successful. If you’re anything like me you either have in the past or currently read at least 10 articles every week, buy multiple paid courses and read through them as fast as possible, minimizing the actions taken, and finding reasons to fail or why it doesn’t work for me.
Continuing to work with the wrong clients (even if they pay in a timely fashion, etc) is hurting you in the long run if it is doing something you don’t want to be doing.
Think about what you are choosing to connect with – you can’t connect with everything. Make damn sure that you are connecting with things that further empower you to achieve your dreams, and let the thoughts, things, activities, and people that drag you down fall out of connection with you.
Wouldn’t it be wonderful if we could all get intensely motivated as soon as we knew we “should” do something? I know I should save 10% of my income, wake up early, focus on my most important objectives every day, write down my goals, meticulously track my time, exercise daily, and eat a healthy diet full of fresh fruits and vegetables. That doesn’t mean I do these things consistently, or at all.
I even know by careful reasoning what the actual effect is on my life to NOT do those things, in the sense that I know I could be missing out on all kinds of life improvements and happiness. That isn’t always enough for me either. I don’t think it’s enough for anyone to look at a calculation and see that eating out costs them hundreds of thousands of dollars 30 years from now to get them to stop doing it.
But why not? Theoretically I know I would rather have the hundreds of thousands of dollars vs any given meal out. Because of this, I don’t think the loss of perceived opportunity or future gain is enough to motivate you to take action consistently.
It’s like the lazy lurker that just wants you to coast along instead of really push yourself to achieve. Everyone does this because of several reasons, which I believe partly include the following:
- you think you can always ‘make up for lost time’
- the cost in your current quality of life is greater than the perceived benefit down the road
- you want something NOW
Luckily, I have a guaranteed way to defeat your own worst enemy (yourself).
Make it impossible to fail by increasing the pain of failure. Tony Robbins talks about linking pain to certain activities you’d like to stop doing. How I actually applied that, was to create myself a 30 day challenge – I increased the cost of failure, and so I succeeded.
I made an agreement with my friend Lars that I would do several things, and for each failure to do one of those things, I would pay him $50. The things I decided to take on were going to bed by 10pm, waking up by 7AM, and working 8 hours every day, including weekends. I do not recommend the same things. At the time when I took this upon myself I decided I needed to convince myself that I was capable of working hard, given the right motivation to do so. Indeed, I was capable.
It was exhausting, but also tremendously empowering at the same time. I knew I could do anything and succeed at it, by simply increasing the cost of failure. I’m working on some new challenges for myself that are longer term, and more sustainable. The biggest mistake in that first challenge I did, was that the cost was great on both sides – hard to fail because I didn’t want to keep paying out, and hard to succeed because I was burning out.
A couple more things I learned:
- Taking massive action is not the same as creating the results you desire. I was realizing that I was doing so much every day, but I found myself filling up my day with non important work when I had to fill my quota. I was confusing motion with action.
- Working 8 hours every weekend day is not a good idea – especially because of the reduced time I had to spend with my wife and friends.
- Working hard is still tremendously valuable – I (l)earned more in those 30 days than I did in any other month. I earned quite a bit from consulting, but even more valuable was everything I learned doing the experiment. If you read a book one page at a time you will learn much slower than if you read it several pages in one sitting.
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We’re writing an ebook on growing up
0 Comments | Posted by Raphael in Action, Education, Productivity
Growing up is serious business. Some people never want to grow up. That’s fine – but they will suffer for it. Growing up is the most important thing you could be doing with your life, and in my opinion, you should seek out whatever you can that will help you grow up as fast as possible. You will have a threshold of how much change, learning, and growth you can take before you want to explode. You should be pushing hard against that threshold if you want to become awesome. People who are awesome don’t delay the process of growing up – they know it is the most essential part of their life. By aggressively growing up, you are getting closer and closer to living an awesome life.
We’ve found a lot of people are having trouble growing up. Some people never grow up. People who aren’t growing up are blaming the outside world for their problems, not taking responsibility for themselves, have low expectations of what they can achieve, and are generally just living mediocre lives. Growing up is the most important thing you can do in your life – but how do you do it?
So we decided to write an ebook to help young adults (and anyone else) grow up more effectively. I have spent years consuming content voraciously and producing nothing. I’ve been soaking up knowledge like a sponge and have not been applying it as well as I could. I considered starting a blog before it was cool and brushed it off because “I didn’t know what to write about”. Guess what? It doesn’t matter. Start something anyway. Get feedback and adapt.
Here’s my commitment to you – faithful readers:
We will release our ebook about growing up in 3 months – by February 15th 2010
We’ll keep you updated as we go along.
What about growing up do you need help with or would like to know more about? (leave a comment below)
I’d like to share something with all of you that I found to be extremely helpful when attempting to learn new things. I believe that any skill, no matter what the perceived difficulty is, can be developed to a level of working proficiency in about two weeks. (more…)
There are always easier paths than the one that will take you to becoming awesome. There will be paths that suck the life straight out of your veins. Often the path of mediocrity is the path that is most comfortable. You just coast along in your crappy job giving you just enough to get by. You go back to college after having some difficulties trying to get a job, because it’s comfortable to be a student. You aren’t responsible for your life if you’re a student. You can just say “Hey I’m still learning – it’s not my fault”. The fact is that you have created your life as it is now. You created yourself into your crappy job, your never-ending education, and your own immaturity. You may be headed on your way to ultimate mediocrity, but you don’t have to be. Crush your comfort zone. See it driven before you. Hear the lamentations of your scared friends. (more…)
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How to Increase Your Productivity… By Blocking Time-Wasting Websites
0 Comments | Posted by Lars in Productivity
Do you sometimes find yourself fiddling around on the internet for hours on end when you should be doing something more useful with your time? Do you want to kill that temptation so you can actually get stuff done? If so, here is a simple trick that any semi-savvy computer user can do to block “time-waster” sites that suck away hours of your precious time.
“When you finish with high school, get into a good college immediately, then find a good company to work for. Bust your ass for forty years and then retire.”
Forty years ago this was awesome advice. (more…)
I just noticed a savvy internet businessman use an intruiging technique to increase the accuracy of his email open statistics. If you don’t already know, email open rates are not very reliable. This is because they typically rely on embedding a very small image file into the email. The sender can then see how many people requested that image by looking at their webserver logs, and guesstimate how many people opened the email. This is inaccurate because not everyone has images enabled. They are essentially untracked (unless tracked by some other metric like clicks.)
So the open rate stats are probably underreported. I’m not sure exactly by how much. To increase the response rate, you need to give your reader a reason to turn images on. Perhaps include a graph, or some other image that adds to the content of the email. Or even a superfluous image of a cat with a line underneath it saying “If you can’t see this cute cat, turn on images in your email client”. If you can increase the value to your customers with images, it will increase their value to you as well.
