You control what you think and do, not what happens to you. Life will, hopefully, throw challenges your way. From them, you will either learn and grow or not, and degrade/plateau.
This is why I write these ‘daily thoughts’ posts.
You control what you think and do, not what happens to you. Life will, hopefully, throw challenges your way. From them, you will either learn and grow or not, and degrade/plateau.
This is why I write these ‘daily thoughts’ posts.
You either do something or you don’t. You either say something or you don’t. If something’s bothering you, you should speak up. If you don’t, then you don’t get the right to complain later. It takes courage to run at something when you’re not 100% of its outcome. It takes guts to say something when you don’t know if your argument/ask is going to get validated. Either way, ask/do and you’ll maybe get. Don’t ask/do, and you surely won’t get.
This is why I write these ‘daily thoughts’ posts.
John Maxwell said, and a lot of others agree: “You will never change your life until you change something you do daily. The secret of your success is found in your daily routine.”
I’d add that it works in the opposite direction too. Meaning, the reason for your failures can be found in your daily routine. Do you wake up and scroll X (where X is whatever ‘un-social’ app you use these days) or do you wake up and do something good for yourself like read, exercise, take a (cold) shower, write a sentence of gratitude in your journal, etc.?
One thing that stayed with me for years now (habit alert!) has been so-called life SAVERS from the book Miracle Morning by Hal Elrod. Try it out and see if it sticks for you.
What’s your daily routine?
This is why I write these ‘daily thoughts’ posts.
Jim Rohn said that you’re the average of the five people you spend the most time with.
Looking at my own life, that’s both true and shocking at the same time. Be it finance, relationships, fitness, beliefs; it all checks out more or less.
Now, it may be the same for you. But, you may not like what you see, and you want to change for the better. Now what? Do you go out and find new people? Sometimes that may be easier said than done.
And even if you’re able to make the change, what do you do with, essentially, your friends, that don’t want to continue ‘traveling’ with you?
I’m seriously curious how did you deal with this in your life?
This is why I write these ‘daily thoughts’ posts.
Why financial literacy isn’t taught in school?
P.S. I know, the drawing looks like a kidney. And no, the joke is not lost on me 🙂
This is why I write these “daily thoughts” posts.
I found many forms of this text online, and here’s one version of it:
Imagine being born in 1900.
When you are 14 years old, World War I begins and ends when you are 18 (with 22 million people dead).
Shortly after that, the “Spanish” flu pandemic starts and kills 50 million people.
You go out alive and free, and you are 20 years old.
Then at the age 29, you survive the global economic crisis that started with the collapse of the New York Stock Exchange causing inflation, unemployment, and hunger.
Nazis come to power at 33. You are 39 when World War II begins, and it ends when you are 45 (a total 60+ million dies).
When you’re 52, the Korean war begins. When you’re 64, the Vietnam war begins and ends when you are 75.
A baby born in 1985 believes that his grandparents have no idea how hard life is, even though they survived several wars and disasters.
A boy born in 1995 and 26 today believes that the end of the world when his Amazon package takes more than three days to arrive or if he doesn’t exceed 15 likes for his posted photo on Facebook or Instagram…
In 2021, many of us live in comfort, have access to various sources of entertainment at home, and often have more than needed.
But people complain about everything.
They have electricity, phone, food, hot water, and a roof over their heads. None of this existed in abundance 100 years ago.
Humanity survived much more serious circumstances and never lost the joy of life.
Appreciate your life – this is not a rehearsal!
I bet that if your first reaction isn’t “OK, BOOMER!”, then this made you appreciate the luck of living in this day and age. I also bet this raises a level of admiration for your grandparents. This should serve as a cautionary tale for those that want to listen, in that we’re just becoming too entitled and soft, while living in the most peaceful time in history, and having way more than we really need.
This is why I write these “daily thoughts” posts.
There’s no such thing as x-y balance in one particular moment. You can focus, truly focus, on one thing at a time. Balance is achieved on a longer time scale.
This is why I write these “daily thoughts” posts.
Sprint through the finish line. Don’t slow down before the finish line. Finish strong.
This is why I write these “daily thoughts” posts.
Positive thinking is underrated. Give it a go for a month and decide for yourself.
This is why I write these “daily thoughts” posts.
It is way easier to do something 100% of the time than < 100% of the time.
I first came across this concept in the book How will you measure your life by Clayton Christensen where he puts it like this:
It’s easier to hold to your principles 100 percent of the time than it is to hold to them 98 percent of the time.
The reasoning is that if you slip up only once, it’s way easier to slip up again because you already slipped up.
You can check out a few of my other favorite quotes from that book.
This is why I write these “daily thought” posts.
It is way easier to do something 100% of the time than < 100% of the time. #consistency https://t.co/pQXj94vkHe
— Nikola Brežnjak (@HitmanHR) January 4, 2022