1. The career advice I
wish I had at 25
2. 5
Choices You’ll Regret Forever
3. 13 Things You Should Give
Up If You Want To Be Successful
4. The 27 Rules of
Conquering the Gym
The career advice I wish I had at 25
Shane Rodgers
In the future, when we turn 50, we will each be given a
ticket to a time machine and, just once, we will be able to
go back in time and talk to our 25-year-old selves.
Even then, time travel will be expensive and wreak havoc
with frequent flyer programs. So there will only be one
trip. So what if we could? What would we say? What advice
would we give?
I often wish I could do this. Just once. So, just in case
the time machine ever comes along, this is the career advice
I would give my 25-year-old self.
1. A career is a marathon, not a sprint
Chill. When we are younger we tend to be impatient. As you
get older you realise there is no real rush. Life, and the
careers we pursue to fill it and pay the bills, needs to be
approached on a long-term basis. If you sprint you will wear
out or start to resent work that you previously enjoyed.
Allow yourself time to breathe and grow. Things will come if
you work hard and allow yourself time to get good at things.
Always rushing only leaves you empty, and tired. It is fine
to give yourself permission to take some time in the slow
lane with the hat people. You will find yourself seeing
things on the journey that you didn’t realise were there.
2. Most success comes from repetition, not new things
I remember hairdressing legend Stefan Ackerie telling me
this in 2003. I had never really thought about it before. A
few years later Malcolm Gladwell’s brilliant book Outliers
was published, promoting the idea that you needed to spend
10,000 hours on something to become truly expert at it. This
applied to the Beatles and their Hamburg gigs and Bill Gates
who, through a series of fortuitous accidents, ended up
spending more time than almost anyone else on a computer.
The lesson here is get good at things before you try to move
to the next thing. Genuine expertise belongs to an elite
few. They seldom have superpowers. They usually have
endurance, patience and take a long-term view. They also
love what they do. If your find that, don’t let it go.
3. If work was really so great all the rich people would
have the jobs
It is well established that almost nobody laments on their
death bed that they didn’t spend enough time at the office.
This seems obvious. Yet still we let contrived circumstances
and fairly trivial issues keep us from important events like
school sport days and kids getting badges for picking up
rubbish. I wish somebody had schooled me about these
priorities at 25. I can remember every sport day and
certificate presentation I missed. I can’t remember any of
the reasons I missed them.
4. Deprioritize your career when your kids are young
If you have skills, commitment and passion, careers tend to
take care of themselves. Over the long haul, it really
doesn’t matter if you have a few years when your career is
in canter mode while you prioritize young children. This
should apply to men and women. I was watching some video of
my kids when they were little last week and I realized,
again, that the little people in that video don’t exist in
that form anymore. They have grown into pride-worthy adults
but the tiny people with wonder in their eyes were just
passing through. If you miss that time meeting deadlines and
finishing reports, you never get it back. Childhood is
fleeting. When it is in its formative stages, you get one
chance.
You can also miss the chance to learn. Children teach you a
lot more than you teach them. They give you a second chance
to see the world for the first time through their eyes. And
you will be astounded what you miss in the clutter of life.
Hold onto those times while you can. As the nun sang in The
Sound of Music, you can’t keep a wave upon the sand. And you
look kind of ridiculous trying.
5. In the workforce, always act like you are 35
A recruiter gave me this advice some years ago. It is quite
inspired. What she meant was, when you are young in the
workplace, don’t act as a novice. If you are smart and
competent, step up and do whatever you are capable of doing
in a mature way. Similarly, when you are an older worker,
don’t act like it. Approach your day with youthful energy.
To quote a famous Frank Sinatra song: “You’re 35 and it’s a
very good year”.
6. Management is about people, not things
It is easy to fall into the trap of believing that all
people are equal, behave the same every day and have a
generic capacity to perform. Humans are simply not made like
that. Business guru Jack Welch says the workforce consists
of 20 per cent of people who are high performers, 10 per
cent that you should get rid of and 70 per cent who do okay.
The problem is the 70 per cent. Most managers want everyone
in the 20 per cent. We need to be careful not to believe
that the 70 per cent are underperformers. Sometimes we need
to celebrate the competence of the masses not the
superpowers of the elite. As managers, we are not managing
things, we are empowering people and making the best use of
whatever it is they bring to the table.
7. Genuinely listen to others
It is easy to fall into the trap of thinking we have all the
answers as individuals. We don’t. As a group we are far more
powerful. We need to learn to genuinely collaborate and
really listen to the opinions of others. And we need to ask
our own people first. So many managers and firms fall into
the trap of asking external consultants for answers and then
trying to implement the recommendations over the top of
tried-and-true employees. In almost every case, our own
people already know the answers. We need to avoid letting
familiarity blind us to the talent sitting around us.
8. Never work for horrible bastards
Life is way too short to tolerate really bad bosses. If you
find yourself working for one, unless you are desperate or
starving, start looking for a new job. Immediately. Then
sack the bad boss. By leaving.
9. Recognize that staff are people with finite emotional
capacity
This is one I really wish I had known earlier. It is clear
to me now that humans have a finite emotional capacity. If
there is something challenging happening in their personal
lives, they have limited capacity left to deal with issues
at work. In nearly 100 per cent of cases I have dealt with
of people suddenly under-performing at work, it has nothing
to do with work. When good people have problems, managers
and companies need to carry them. This should be a personal
mission. If we learn to carry people when they most need it,
we become a stronger community and we empower people in ways
that we probably can’t imagine when we are young. A
re-invigorated broken employee is a corporation’s most
powerful force. They become a slightly better version of
themselves without the need for a V energy drink.
10. Don’t just network with people your own age
Beware the whiz kid syndrome. Smart, young people have a
habit of forming communities of other smart young people and
feeding off each other’s energy. In the older world they are
seen as “bright young things” that give confidence that the
future is in good hands. Argghhhh. How many times have you
heard that? Youth enclaves can actually be restrictive.
Smart 20-somethings should make sure they network with older
people too. In fact their networking should be about meeting
useful mentors and career champions who can open doors and
fast track careers. Similarly, older, successful people
shouldn’t just sit in musty clubs talking about the 1970s.
They should be proactively seeking out smart, young people
who can shake them out of their comfort zone and open their
eyes to new ideas.
11. Celebrate cultural differences in the workplace
One of the big mistakes we make in Australia is failing to
adequately recognize the value of overseas experience and
people from a variety of cultures. Diversity brings a
richness to our workplaces that benefits all of us. Overseas
experience is real experience. We should take every
opportunity to inject new thinking into our workplaces. It
is where the magic begins.
12. Take the time to understand what your business does
I love the story of President J F Kennedy’s visit to NASA
during which he asked a cleaner what his job was. The
cleaner replied that he sent rockets to the moon. All of us
should feel part of what our organizations actually do. We
should take the time to be part of the big picture and
always feel connected with the true objectives of our
workplace. Don’t wait for someone to tell you or lament that
internal communication is crap. Find out for yourself.
13. Don’t put off working overseas
Geography is becoming less relevant. We are all citizens of
the world. President Obama made the point during his
University of Queensland speech that the world was becoming
smaller and even the Pacific Ocean was now just a lake. If
you get the chance to work overseas, and you aspire to do
that, take it. There is never a right time. And we always
regret the things we don’t do far more than the things we
do.
14. Work in an office where you have friends
You will spend a lot of time at work. You should work with
people you like. I used to be a bit skeptical about a
question in employment engagement surveys asking people if
they had a “best friend” at work. I realize now that work is
much better if you are among friends. The happiest people
are those who do things they are passionate about with
people they really like. Further to that, if you find you
have taken on a job you hate, ditch it quickly. Your career
can survive a few well-intentioned detours and mistaken
pathways.
15. Never sacrifice personal ethics for a work reason
Crucial to workplace happiness is value alignment. If you
work somewhere that compromises your personal ethics and
values, get out of there as quickly as you can. Good people
will be unnerved by things that don’t feel right. If it
doesn’t feel right, it probably isn’t. Bad things only
manifest when good people don’t take a stand.
16. Recognize that failure is learning
As bizarre as it might sound, failing is not failure.
Researchers recognize that failure is just part of a process
to eliminate unsuccessful options. To misquote Woody from
Toy Story, when we make a few mistakes, we are not failing,
just falling - with style. Even fairy-tale princesses
recognize that you need to kiss a lot of toads before you
find a handsome prince. Thomas Edison articulated this best:
“I have not failed. I have just found 10,000 ways that don’t
work.” If we fear failure we tend to take a minimalist
approach to our jobs and the opportunities around us. Takes
some risks. Sometimes failing spectacularly is the best
evidence that we are alive, human and serious about aspiring
to the extraordinary. There is no value in being ordinary
when you have the capacity to be remarkable.
Now, to get started on that time machine…
13 Things You Should Give Up If You Want To
Be Successful
Zdravko
Cvijetic
”Somebody once told me the definition of hell: “On your
last day on earth, the person you became will meet the
person you could have become.” — Anonymus
Sometimes, to become successful, we do not need to add more
things, we need to give up on some of them. Even though each
one of us has a different definition of success, there are
certain things that are universal, which, if you give up on
them, you will be more successful. Some of them you can give
up today, while it might take a bit longer for others.
1. Give Up On The Unhealthy Lifestyle
“Take care of your body. It is the
only place you have to live.” — Jim Rohn
If you want to achieve anything in life, everything starts
here. First, you have to take care of your health, and there
are only two things you need to keep in mind:
-
Healthy Diet
-
Physical Activity
Small steps, but you will thank
yourself one day.
2. Give Up The Short-term Mindset
“You only live once, but if you do
it right, once is enough.” — Mae West
Successful people set long-term goals, and they know that
these aims are merely the result of short-term habits that
they need to do every day. These healthy habits should not
be something you do; they should be something you are. There
is a difference between: “Working out to have summer body”
and “Working out because that is who you are.”
3. Give up Playing Small
“Your playing small does not serve
the world. There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so
that other people will not feel insecure around you. We are
all meant to shine, as children do. It is not just in some
of us; it is in everyone, and as we let our light shine, we
unconsciously give others permission to do the same. As we
are liberated from our fear, our presence automatically
liberates others.” - Marianne Williamson
If you never try and take great opportunities, or allow your
dreams to become realities, you will never realize your true
potential. Moreover, the world will never benefit from what
you could have achieved. So voice your ideas, don’t be
afraid to fail, and certainly don’t be afraid to succeed.
4. Give up Your Excuses
“It is not about the cards you are
dealt, but how you play the hand.” - Randy Pausch, The Last
Lecture
Successful people know that they are responsible for their
life, no matter their starting point, weaknesses, and past
failures. Realizing that you are entirely responsible for
what happens next in your life, is both frightening and
exciting. However, it is the only way that you can reach the
success because excuses limit and prevent us from growing
personally and professionally. Own your life; no one else
will.
5. Give up The Fixed Mindset
“The future belongs to those who
learn more skills and combine them in creative ways.” ―
Robert Greene, Mastery
In a fixed mindset, people believe that
their intelligence or talent, are simply fixed traits and
that talent alone creates success — without effort. They are
wrong. Moreover, successful people know this. They invest an
immense amount of time on a daily basis to develop a growth
mindset, acquire new knowledge, learn new skills and change
their perception so that it can benefit their lives.
Remember, who you are today, it is not whom you have to be
tomorrow.
6. Give Up Believing In The “Magic Bullet.”
“Every day, in every way, I’m
getting better and better” — Émile Coué
Overnight success is a myth. Successful people know that
making small continuous improvement every day, will be
compounded over time, and give them desired results. That
why you should plan for the future, but focus on the day
that’s ahead of you, and improve just 1%.
7. Give Up Your Perfectionism
“Shipping beats perfection.” — Kahn
Academy’s Development Mantra
Nothing will ever be perfect, no matter how much we try.
Fear of failure (or even fear of success) often prevents us
from taking action and putting our creation out there in the
world. However, many opportunities will be lost if we wait
for things to be right. So, “ship,” and then improve (that
1%).
8. Give Up Multi-tasking
“You will never reach your
destination if you stop and throw stones at every dog that
barks.” ― Winston S. Churchill
Successful people know this. That is
why they choose one thing and then beat it into submission.
No matter what, a business idea, a conversation, or a
workout. Being fully present and committed to one task, is
indispensable.
9. Give Up Your Need to Control
Everything
“Some things are up to us, and some
things are not up to us.” — Epictetus, Stoic philosopher
Differentiating these two is important. Detach from the
things you cannot control, and focus on the ones you can,
and know that sometimes, the only thing you will be able to
monitor is your attitude towards something. Moreover,
remember, nobody can be frustrated while saying “Bubbles” in
an angry voice.
10. Give up Saying YES To Things
That Don’t Support Your Goals
“He who would accomplish little must
sacrifice little; he who would achieve much must sacrifice
much; he who would attain highly must sacrifice greatly.” —
James Allen
Successful people know this that to
accomplish their goals, they will have to say NO to tasks,
activities, and demands from your friends, family, and
colleagues. On a short-term, you might sacrifice a bit of
instant gratification, but when your goals come to fruition,
it will be worth it.
11. Give Up The Toxic People
“You are the average of the five
people you spend the most time with.” - Jim Rohn
People we spend the most time with, add up to whom we
become. There are less ambitious people, and there are more
ambitious people than us. If you spend time with the ones
that are less driven than you, your average will go down,
and with it your success. However, if you spend time with
people more advanced than you, no matter how challenging
that might be, you will be more successful. Take a look at
around yourself, and see if you need to make any changes.
12. Give Up Your Need To Be Liked
“The only way to avoid pissing
people off is to do nothing important.” — Oliver Emberton
Think of yourself as a market niche. There will be many
people that like that niche, but there will be individuals
who do not, and no matter what you do, you will not be able
to make an entire market like you. This is entirely natural,
and there’s no need to do anything to justify yourself. The
only thing you can do is continue being authentic, and know
that growing number of “haters” means that you are doing
important things.
13. Give Up Your Dependency on The Social Media &
Television
“The trouble is, you think you have
time” — Jack Kornfield
Impulsive web browsing and television watching is a disease
of today’s society. These two should never be an escape from
your life or your goals. Unless your goals depend on either,
you should minimize (or eliminate) your dependency on them.
Moreover, direct that time towards things that can enrich
your life.

5 Choices You’ll Regret Forever
Dr. Travis Bradberry
Our days are filled with a constant stream of decisions.
Most are mundane, but some are so important that they can
haunt you for the rest of your life.
A recent study from Columbia University found that we’re
bogged down by more than 70 decisions a day. The sheer
number of decisions we have to make each day leads to a
phenomenon called decision fatigue, whereby your brain
actually tires like a muscle.
A new study from the University of Texas shows that even
when our brains aren’t tired, they can make it very
difficult for us to make good decisions. When making a
decision, instead of referencing the knowledge we’ve
accumulated, our brains focus on specific, detailed
memories.
For example, if you’re buying a new car and trying to decide
if you should go for the leather seats, even though you know
you can’t afford it, your brain might focus on memories of
the wonderful smell and feel of the leather seats in your
brother’s sports car, when it should be focused on the
misery you’re going to experience when making your monthly
car payments. Since you don’t have memories of this yet,
it’s a hard thing for your brain to contemplate.
"I am not a product of my circumstances. I am a product
of my decisions." –Stephen Covey
Some decisions are minor, such as what to eat, which route
to drive to work, or in what order to tackle tasks; others
are more difficult, such as choosing between two job offers,
whether to move to a new city for someone you love, or
whether to cut a toxic person out of your life. Regardless
of the magnitude of the decision, our brains make it hard
for us to keep the perspective we need to make good choices.
Bronnie Ware spent her career as a palliative care nurse,
working exclusively with people who were 3 to 12 months from
death. She made a habit of asking them about their greatest
regrets, and she heard the same five regrets time and time
again. By studying these regrets, you can make certain that
you make good choices and don’t fall victim to them
yourself.
They wish they hadn’t made decisions
based on what other people think. When you make your
decisions based on other people’s opinions, two things tend
to happen:
1. You make a poor career choice: There
are too many people out there who studied for a degree
they regret or even spent their lives pursuing a career
they regret. Whether you’re seeking parental approval or
pursuing pay and prestige over passion, making a poor
career choice is a decision that will live with you
forever.
2. You fail to uphold your morals: When
you get too caught up in what your boss thinks of you,
how much money you think your spouse needs to be happy,
or how bad you will look if you fail, you are at high
risk of violating your own morals. Your intense desire
to make yourself look good compromises your
ability to stay true to yourself and, ultimately, to feel
good.
The best way to avoid falling prey to the opinions of others
is to realize that other people’s opinions are just
that—opinions. Regardless of how great or terrible they
think you are, that’s only their opinion. Your true
self-worth comes from within.
They wish they hadn’t worked so hard. Working
hard is a great way to impact the world, to learn, to grow,
to feel accomplished, and sometimes even to find happiness,
but it becomes a problem when you do so at the expense of
the people closest to you. Ironically, we often work hard to
make money for the people we care about without realizing
that they value our company more than money. The key is to
find a balance between doing what you love and being with
the people you love. Otherwise you’ll look back one day and
wish you’d focused more on the latter.
They wish they had expressed their
feelings. We’re taught as children that emotions are
dangerous and that they must be bottled up and controlled.
This usually works at first, but boxing up your feelings
causes them to grow until they erupt. The best thing you can
do is to put your feelings directly on the table. Though
it’s painful to initiate, it forces you to be honest and
transparent.
For example, if you feel as though you don’t make enough
money at work, schedule a meeting with your boss and propose
why you think you’re worth more. As a result, she will
either agree with you and give you a raise or disagree and
tell you what you do need to do to become more valuable. On
the other hand, if you do nothing and let your feelings
fester, this will hinder your performance and prevent you
from reaching your goal.
They wish they had stayed in touch
with their friends. When you get caught up in your
weekly routine, it’s easy to lose sight of how important
people are to you, especially those you have to make time
for. Relationships with old friends are among the first
things to fall off the table when we’re busy. This is
unfortunate because spending time with friends is a major
stress buster. Close friends bring you energy, fresh
perspectives, and a sense of belonging, in a way that no one
else can.
They wish they had let themselves be
happy. When your life is about to end, all the
difficulties you’ve faced suddenly become trivial compared
to the good times. This is because you realize that, more
often than not, suffering is a choice. Unfortunately, most
people realize this far too late. Although we all inevitably
experience pain, how we react to our pain is completely
under our control, as is our ability to experience joy.
Learning to laugh, smile, and be happy (especially when
stressed) is a challenge at times, but it’s one that’s worth
every ounce of effort.
Bringing It All Together
Some decisions have repercussions that can last a lifetime.
Most of these decisions are made daily, and they require
focus and perspective to keep them from haunting you.

The 27 Rules of
Conquering the Gym
By Jason Gay
Sweating is a good way to begin. Exercise, like dark
chocolate and office meetings that suddenly get cancelled,
is a proven pathway to nirvana. But if you're going to join
a gym—or returning to the gym after a long
hibernation—consider the following:
1. A gym is not designed
to make you feel instantly better about yourself. If a gym
wanted to make you feel instantly better about yourself, it
would be a bar.
2. Give yourself a
goal. Maybe you want to lose 10 pounds. Maybe you want to
quarterback the New York Jets into the playoffs. But be
warned: Losing 10 pounds is hard.
3. Develop a gym routine.
Try to go at least three times a week. Do a mix of strength
training and cardiovascular conditioning. After the third
week, stop carrying around that satchel of fresh-baked
chocolate chip cookies.
4. No one in the history
of gyms has ever lost a pound while reading "The New Yorker"
and slowly pedalling a recumbent bicycle. No one.
5. Bring your iPod. Don't
borrow the disgusting gym headphones, or use the sad plastic
radio attachment on the treadmill, which always sounds like
it's playing Kenny Loggins from a sewer.
6. Don't fall for
gimmicks. The only tried-and-true method to lose 10 pounds
in 48 hours is food poisoning.
7. Yes, every gym has an
overenthusiastic spinning instructor who hasn't bought a
record since "Walking on Sunshine."
8. There's also the
Strange Guy Who is Always at the Gym. Just when you think he
isn't here today...there he is, lurking by the barbells.
9. "Great job!" is
trainer-speak for "It's not polite for me to laugh at you."
10. Beware a hip gym with
a Wilco step class.
11. Gyms have two types of
members: Members who wipe down the machines after using
them, and the worst people in the universe.
12. Nope, that's not a
"recovery energy bar with antioxidant dark chocolate."
That's a chocolate bar.
13. Avoid Unsolicited
Advice Guy, who, for the small fee of boring you to death,
will explain the proper method for any exercise in 45
minutes or longer.
14. You can take 10 Minute
Abs, 20 Minute Abs, and 30 Minute Abs. There is also Stop
Eating Pizza and Eating Sheet Cake Abs—but that's super
tough!
15. If you're motivated to
buy an expensive home exercise machine, consider a "wooden
coat rack." It costs $40, uses no electricity and does the
exact same thing.
16. There's the yoga
instructor everyone loves, and the yoga instructor everyone
hates. Memorize who they are.
17. If you see an indoor
rock climbing wall, you're either in a really cool gym or a
romantic comedy starring Kate Hudson.
18. Be cautious about any
class with the words "sunrise," "hell," or "Moby."
19. If a gym class is
going to be effective, it's hard. If you're relaxed and
enjoying yourself, you're at brunch.
20. If you need to bring
your children, just let them loose in the silent meditation
class. Nobody minds, and kids love candles.
21. Don't buy $150
sneakers, $100 yoga pants, and $4 water. Muscle shirts are
for people with muscles, and rhythm guitarists.
22. Fancy gyms can be
seductive, but once you get past the modern couches and
fresh flowers and the water with lemon slices, you're
basically paying for a boutique hotel with B.O.
23. Everyone sees you
secretly racing the old people in the pool.
24. If you're at the
point where you've bought biking shoes for the spinning
class, you may as well go ahead and buy an actual bike. It's
way more fun and it doesn't make you listen to C+C Music
Factory.
25. Fact: Thinking about
going to the gym burns between 0 and 0 calories.
26. A successful gym
membership is like a marriage: If it's good, you show up
committed and ready for hard work. If it's not good, you
show up in sweatpants and watch a lot of bad TV.
27. There is no secret.
Exercise and lay off the fries. The end. |