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This article is the latest in the Project: I, Blogger series.  This series is an attempt to get a community level discussion started about online ethics.  Have your say and be sure to comment!

I’d like to share a comment left by getboboweds on my article Project: I, Blogger UPDATE!  It’s a very long comment and makes some excellent points about a life and a life worth living.

Hi. I am here at the first time. Would you like to lay out an interesting article. Original lifehack.org.

If you want to look back on a life that fills you with joy, conventional rules for success are not the place to start

1. Dont chase money, power, or status.
If they come to you, thats fine. But most conventional ideas about success go wrong because they focus on outcomes instead of on the processes of living. Outcomes come around from time to time, but life itself—the process of living, acting, thinking, and being—happens all the time. No outcome is going to make a lousy, miserable process feel worthwhile.

If you hate what you do, no amount of power or money will make up for that. If your life is constantly stressful, boring, unhappy, or frustrating, how can achieving some high status once in a while make up for all the miserable days and weeks you spent getting there? Its tempting to feel that the end will more than make up for the means; that youll forget the misery in the blaze of achievement. And you will—for a few moments. Then youll be back on the treadmill, with only the distant hope of some fresh achievement or monetary gain to console you. Thats like being a laboratory rat conditioned to unnatural behavior by occasional pellets of food.

2. Take whatever time you need to discover what matters to you most
Success isnt simply a matter of money, power, or prestige. You could gain all of those and still feel that you have fallen short of what you wanted; or you could gain none of them and be blissfully happy and fulfilled. What constitutes personal success is mostly in your mind. It has much less to do with finding the best career in other peoples eyes, creating a killer business, or holding down a fancy job with a big salary than with achieving what really matters to you. Many people find this out too late. They struggle for years to get where other people said they should go, only to find it does little or nothing for them. Sad;y, its often too late by then to do anything else.

3. Dont base your choices on others approval. We all want to please those we care about, so its natural to try to do what they approve. Natural, but rarely a good idea as the basis for lifes choices. I dont say that you should deliberately ignore sound advice, or reject a career path simply because other people suggest it. But even the most loving parent or friend cant always see what is going to make your heart sing. Listen to others. Value their input and their support. But go your
own way. Its better to be committed to doing what you truly love than accept something lesser for the sake of being approved by someone else.

4. Stay authentic. That means always doing what truly matters to you and is part of who you are. The simplest definition of a hypocrite is someone who says one thing and does another: like a person who says that he or she wants to work at something that benefits society, then forgets that at the first sight of a fistful of dollar bills. Somewhere inside of you is a part that recalls what truly matters and will never quite let you forget it. Over the years, that inner voice is only going to get louder.

5. Go for meaning over money every time. Its perfectly possible to do something meaningless to you and earn a great deal of cash while doing so. Some people do, especially in parts of the media world. It just requires a stronger stomach and more cynicism that most people possess, plus a huge tolerance for boredom.

Is it worth it? If money is truly all that matters to you—and you can make lots of it quickly and get out—it might be. Few areas of work will allow you to do that, aside from criminal ones. Meaningless days corrode most peoples minds and destroy their happiness. Doing something that means a great deal to you almost always makes you feel energized and alive. Its your choice.

6. Be endlessly greedy—for learning. You can never learn too much or overfill your mind with new ideas. Nothing is more useful in life than a well-developed, well-stocked mind, especially one that has been broadened and enlarged in the process. Its hard to name a single famously successful person who was narrow-minded, bigoted, or stupid. The list of notable successes who are recognized for the power of their minds is long. And you don’t have to have had an expensive education to be able to develop a great mind. There have been plenty of near geniuses whose education was almost entirely self-produced.

7. Make a friend of failure. You are certain to fail sometimes, and the higher your aspirations, the more frequent and significant that failure will be. People who don’t strive for anything glorious rarely fail; they take no risks and never aim beyond what is easily attainable. But if you treat failure as an enemy, it’s going to lead only to discouragement and even the abandoning of your hopes and dreams. Failure can be a friend, pointing out what isn’t right yet and showing you the way to do better. The more proficient you become at accepting the lessons of failure, the quicker you will succeed.

8. Make sure that every time you make a mistake, it’s a new one. Making the same mistake several times shows that you haven’t learned what it can teach you. Making new mistakes proves that you’re trying something different. The best definition of a loser is someone who makes the same mistakes over and over again, never managing to learn anything in the process. Such a person is doomed.

9. Choose to spend your time with the right people. I don’t mean that in the sense of the rich and the powerful, the movers and shakers of society. Whether they’re powerful or not, the best people to spend time with are those from whom you can learn most: the ones whose own lives have brought them joy and endless fulfillment. That means people who do what they love and love what they do. People who have become experts in life, thinking people, people with wide-open minds and wide-open hearts.

Seek them out wherever you can. Listen to them. Never mind if they are no longer living. Read their books and emulate their largeness of spirit. Learn from them all, but don’t simply copy what they did in this world. What they did was right for them, but may not be right for you. What you need to use as models are their ways of thinking and responding to the challenges of the world; the process of their lives, not what it happened to contain.

10. Drop whatever is inconsistent with these principles. That means all activities that don’t move you forward towards what you value most; things that get in the way of learning; pursuits that waste time and dull your senses; and people who hold you back. You may sometimes have to be ruthless. Each of us has only one life. If you waste it, you don’t get another chance. Besides, if you have chosen your dreams and aspirations wisely, what you must leave behind by dropping what’s inconsistent with those dreams will not be worth worrying about anyway. Those who make bad choices find, too late, that they have abandoned things and people that meant more to them than whatever they gained in exchange. If that happens, you have truly reached one of life’s lowest points.

Lets discuss?

And my response, not as long but comes from my point of view…

Sounds exactly like some conversations I had with a young lady back in college. I didn’t have a family back then, but I still feel the same. Growing up, we all were brought up living a certain lifestyle, be it living hand-to-mouth or having a new car every year because you get tired of the old one. I don’t claim to speak for all men, but I feel that it’s my duty as the husband and father to do as well for my family as my father did, better if possible. I have a loving wife and two wonderful little boys; I love them all to death! There’s almost nothing I wouldn’t do to take care of them. I sacrifice, gladly, to make sure that their needs are taken care of. At this point we go from needs to wants and desires. I believe that my family should have the finer things in life; does that mean a new car every year? No, but a car under 3-5 years old would be nice ;). I have dreams for my family and myself. Is it wrong to work towards those dreams and hope to turn them into reality? I don’t think so. That brings us to the ways and means; does the end justify the means? Do work your life away to provide for your family? Do you miss out on precious moments with your children as they’re growing up to make life alittle more enjoyable for them? I would love to be able to stay at home and not miss a thing when it comes to my 1 year old’s firsts (first walking type of stuff), but I work my job and businesses so my family can do better. Is that wrong, I think so, but like the poet goes, “But I’ve got promises to keep, and Miles to go Before I Sleep, and Miles to go Before I Sleep.”

What are your thoughts?

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5 Comments »

2007-09-18 16:16:03

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Comment by Michael Martine Subscribed to comments via email
2007-09-18 17:43:37

Desty, great stuff. That whole thing is a very compact little manifesto. I too am providing for my family and whenever I feel down about things I see their faces in my mind’s eye and get back to work.

I’ve long been concerned about ends vs. means. We can see the results of ends justifies means thinking all around us, and it isn’t pretty: exploitation, war, deception. Fewer are the powerful examples of means justifies ends. So few, in fact, that I can’t think of any off the top of my head. Maybe someone else can.

But no extremes are ever true, so we all operate along the spectrum between means and ends.

 
Comment by Desty
2007-09-18 20:52:10

I have the pictures of my family either in frames beside my computer at work, or as my background at work. When I get stressed, I clear the desktop and see the smileing face of my 1 year old :)

As a society, we are led to believe that looking out for others is the proper thing to do. Do unto others as they would have you do unto them. The bad thing is that while as a society, we hold this in high regard, but on an individual level, for the most part everyone is on their own, and trying to get what’s their’s.

 
Comment by Bunk Subscribed to comments via email
2007-09-21 13:45:16

Thank you for this incredible post! Thank you! Thank you!

 
Comment by bopdilly
2008-11-16 05:54:57

Excellent site! I wish the owner to develop and please all!

 
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