May 2013
M T W T F S S
« Dec    
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Archives

life

30 (actually 40) lessons I’ve learned in 40 years

30 Lessons I’ve Learned In 30 Years

Reblogged from The Minimalists

(with my addition (at the end of this post) of 10 extra years to match my 40!)

1. We must love. You know the saying, “tis better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all,” right? I know, such statements sound so banal and vapid on the surface that we often dismiss them with a waive of the hand. But it’s the cold truth, a truth so profound that perhaps we can only discuss it with little clichéd statements. But we must love, even if it breaks our hearts. Because unless we love, our lives will flash by.

2. Love isn’t enough. Although we must love, love is not enough to survive. We must take action to show others that we care, to show them that we love them.

3. Happiness is not for sale in any store. We can’t buy happiness. Hell, it sounds cliché to even say that, and yet we search the aisles and shelves and pages on eBay in search of something more, something to fill the void. But we can’t fill the void with stuff. It doesn’t work that way, no matter how hard we try or how much stuff we buy, because that stuff won’t make us happy. At best it will pacify us momentarily. At worst it will ruin our lives, leaving us empty and depressed and even more alone, alone among a sea of material items—sometimes a crowded room can feel the most alone. The truth is that we are all going to die, and heaping our tombs with treasure will not save us from this fate. Ryan and I wrote about happiness for Dave Bruno’s 100 Thing Challenge: The Minimalists On Happiness.

4. Success is perspectival. I used to think I was successful because I had a six-figure job that my friends and family could be proud of. I thought the house with too many bedrooms would make me look even more successful, and so would the luxury car and the tailored suits and the nice watch and the big screen TV and all of the trappings of the material world. But I got all of that and I sure as hell didn’t feel successful. Instead, I felt depressed. So what did I do? I bought more stuff. And when that didn’t work I figured out that I had to do something else with my life, that I had to stop living a lie and start living my dreams.

5. You must make change a mustI knew that I wanted to change my life for the longest time. I knew I was unhappy, unsatisfied, and unfulfilled. I knew I didn’t have freedom. Not real freedom. The problem was that I knew these things intellectually but not emotionally. I didn’t have the feeling in my gut that things must change. I knew they should change, but the change wasn’t a must for me, and thus it didn’t happen. Anthony Robbins has a good aphorism to describe all these shoulds in your life: he says “after a while you end up shoulding all over yourself.” But once you understand these things on an emotional level you are able to turn your shouldsinto musts. I believe that that is the pivotal point, that is when you get leverage, that is when you are compelled to take action. Thus, a decision is not a real decision until it is a must for you, until you feel it on your nerve-endings, until you are compelled to take action. Once your shoulds have turned into musts, then you have made a real decision.

6. Growth & contribution is the meaning of life. Giving is living, I said that before. I believe that the best way to live a meaningful life is simple: continuously grow as an individual and contribute to other people in a meaningful way. Growth and contribution. That’s all. That’s the meaning of my life.

7. Health is more important than most of us treat it. Without health, nothing else matters. It took me over a year and a half to lose 70 pounds—70 pounds of disgusting fat—but that was seven years ago and I’ve kept the weight off and I’m not turning back. I’m 30 years old now, but I’m in the best shape of my life, by far. And it’s only going to get better from here. I wrote about my exercise and diet in this essay: Minimalism Is Healthy: How I Lost 70 Pounds

8. Sentimental items are not as important as we think. My mother died in 2009. It was an incredibly difficult time in my life, but it also helped me realize a lot about the unnecessary meaning we give to stuff. I realized that I could hold on to her memories without her stuff, that I don’t need Mom’s stuff to remind me of her. There are traces of her everywhere: In the way I act, in the way I treat others, even in my smile. She’s still there, and she was never part of her stuff. I wrote an essay about that experience: Letting Go of Sentimental Items.

9. Your job is not your mission. At least it wasn’t for me, though I thought it was for the longest time, I gave it so much meaning and worked so much that the rest of my life suffered. I wrote an essay about leaving my corporate job to pursue my passions and live my mission: Screw You, I Quit! You can also check out Day 19 of our journey for further explanation.

10. Finding your passion is important. My passion is writing. Maybe you already know what your passion is, maybe you don’t have a clue. Do yourself a favor and figure it out, it will change everything for you. Read the above mentioned “Screw You, I Quit!” essay for more discussion about finding your passions.

11. Relationships matter. Not every relationship matters all that much, but there are a few that really, really matter. There are a few relationships we should focus on (for most of us there are a handful of relationships that truly matter, probably no more than 20). I’ve found that minimalism has helped me focus on these relationships. And I recently learned how to establish deeper connections with people.

12. You don’t need everyone to like you. We all want to be loved, it’s a mammalian instinct, but you can’t value every relationship the same, and thus you can’t expect everyone to love you the same. Life doesn’t work that way. Julien Smith articulates this sentiment very well in his essay The Complete Guide to Not Giving a Fuck: “when people don’t like you, nothing actually happens. The world does not end. You don’t feel them breathing down your neck. In fact, the more you ignore them and just go about your business, the better off you are.”

13. Status is a misnomer. Similar to “success,” our culture seems to place a lot of emphasis on material wealth as a sign of true wealth, and yet I know too many people of “status,” too many “rich” people—hell, I’ve been to some of their dinner parties—who are miserable, who are not wealthy at all. They are only ostensibly “rich,” but they are bankrupt inside, emotionally drained and broke almost everywhere except in their wallets. But perhaps Chuck Palahniuk said it best: “You’re not your job. You’re not how much money you have in the bank. You’re not the car you drive. You’re not the contents of your wallet. You’re not your fucking khakis.”

14. Jealousy and envy are wasted emotions. This one might be easier for me than it is for you. I’ve never been the jealous type. In fact, it has hurt some relationships for me in the past, because I didn’t articulate this fact—that I’m not the jealous type—to the other person. It’s strange but some people expect us to be jealous to show that we care. Instead, I choose to show that I care about someone by showing that I trust them and telling them that I trust them. Just be up front with people, tell them you don’t get jealous because you love them and you trust them. It makes everything easier.

15. Everybody worships something. My favorite fiction writer, David Foster Wallace, said it best: “In the day-to-day trenches of adult life, there is actually no such thing as atheism. There is no such thing as not worshipping. Everybody worships. The only choice we get is what to worship.” Many of us chose to worship our stuff. That’s what led me to minimalism. Ryan and I wrote an essay about it at the beginning of the year: Everybody Worships Something.

16. I am not the center of the universe. It’s incredibly difficult to think about the world from a perspective other than our own. We are always worried about what’s going on in our lives. What does my schedule look like today? What if I lose my job during the next round of layoffs? Why can’t I stop smoking? Why am I overweight? Why am I not happy with my life? Suffice it to say that we are acutely aware of everything connected to our own lives. That’s why Ryan and I wrote an essay about consciously removing yourself the center of the universe; it’s about paying attention to what’s going on in front of you and around you and inside you: I Am Not The Center Of The Universe

17. Awareness is the most precious kind of freedom. This is yet another reason why minimalism is so appealing to so many people. It removes many of the obstructions and allows us to focus on what’s important. Minimalism is a tool to rid ourselves of superfluous excess in favor of a meaningful life, it is a tool to take a seemingly intricate and convoluted world, cluttered with its endless embellishments, and make it simpler, easier, realer. It is unimaginably hard to remain conscious and attentive and aware. It is difficult not to fall back into a trance-like state, surrounded by the trappings and obstructions of the tiring world around us. But it is important to do so, for this is real freedom. Ryan and I wrote an essay about awareness and conscious freedom for Nina Yau’s site earlier this year: Awareness: The Most Precious Kind of Freedom

18. Be On The Mountain. This is the term I use for “living in the moment.” I wrote an essay about it a few years ago: Be On The Mountain.

19. We are often scared for no reason. Just ask yourself “what am I afraid of?” We are usually scared of things that don’t have a real impact on our lives (or that we can’t control, so we’re worrying for no reason).

20. It’s OK to change; change is growth. We all want a different outcome, and yet most of us don’t want any change in our lives. Change equals uncertainty, and uncertainty equals discomfort, and discomfort isn’t much fun. But when we learn to enjoy the process of change—when we chose to look at the uncertain as variety instead of uncertainty—then we get to reap all of the rewards of change. And that’s how we grow as people.

21. Pretending to be perfect doesn’t make us perfect. I am not perfect, and I never will be. I make mistakes and bad decisions, and I fail at times. I stumble, fall. I am human—a mixed bag, nuanced, the darkness and the light—as are you. And you are beautiful.

22. The past does not equal the future. My words are my words and I can’t take them back. You can’t change the past, so it’s important to focus on the present. If the past equaled the future, then your windshield would be of no use to you; you would simply drive your car with your eyes glued to the rearview mirror. But driving this way—only looking behind you—is a surefire way to crash. Ryan and I wrote an essay about letting go of the past: Your Past Does Not Equal Your Future.

23. Pain can be useful; but suffering—there is absolutely nothing useful about suffering. Pain lets us know that something is wrong. It is an indicator that we need to change what we’re doing. But suffering is a choice—one that we all choose from time to time—and we can choose to stop suffering, to learn a lesson from the pain and move on with our lives.

24. Doubt kills. The person who stops you from doing everything you want to do, who stops you from being completely free, who stops you from being healthy or happy or passionate or living a meaningful life is you. We can doubt ourselves to death.

25. It’s OK to wait. Leo Babauta always reminds his readers to slow down, that we don’t need to hurry. Sometimes it’s OK to wait a little longer for something. Why rush if you don’t have to? Why not enjoy the journey? Example: These days, when I’m walking the streets of Dayton or Portland or Oakland or wherever, I don’t rush across the crosswalk when I see the flashing red hand warning me that I need to hurry up and cross the damn street! Instead, I wait. I let red hand turn solid, warning me to halt!and I let the traffic light change color from green to yellow and then red, and I wait. I look around, I breathe, I think, and I wait. It’s OK to wait. We wrote an essay about waiting earlier this year: Reasons For Waiting. Also, clearing my plate helped me tremendously with this.

26. Honesty is profoundly important. Honesty, at the most simple level, is telling the truth, not lying. It’s incredibly important to be honest, and it’s hurtful when you’re not, but…

27. Openness is just as important as honesty. Openness is more complicated than honesty. Openness involves being honest, while painting an accurate picture, shooting straight, not misleading other people, and being real. Openness is far more subjective, and you have to be honest with yourself before you can be open with others. This doesn’t mean that you must put your entire life on display. Some things are private, and that’s OK too.

28. Adding value to other people is the only way to get their buy-in. We recently wrote an essay about adding value to other people. It’s something I’ve lived by for a long time. When I managed a large team of people I constantly asked them questions like, “how did you add value this week?” I also asked that same question of myself, and I would share with my team how I added value that week. That’s how I got their buy-in.

29. Hype is cancerous. While eating lunch with Leo in San Francisco he said something that stuck with me: “I’m allergic to hype.” That sentence touched my nerve-endings and resonated in a special way. So often we fall for the hype (e.g., “Buy More, Save More” and “Three Day Sale!”) and we are suckered into rash buying decisions because of scarcity and a false sense of urgency. But we can train ourselves to not only resist such hype, but to have a vitriolic reaction to the hype, to elicit a response so off-putting that we avoid anything that’s hyped. This goes back to being aware, which is, as I mentioned above, the most precious kind of freedom.

30. I’m still trying to figure it all out. I don’t intend to promulgate my views and opinions as some sort of life maxims or absolute lessons by which you should live your life. What works for me might not work for you (hell, sometimes it doesn’t even work for me). Hopefully some of it does work for you though. I’m always growing, so I’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments below.

 

 

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

 

Now for my decade:

31. Be a priority, not an option. Whether in love, life or work, don’t be a doormat. This is a painful lesson to learn. I allowed myself to be an option for a man I was dating, fooling myself into thinking I was his priority. Little did I know he had nine options! Same in friendship. True friends are like rare gems. Hard to find and important to hang on to. True friendship is always based on priorities. Acquaintances are options. There’s nothing wrong with having acquaintances… to each his own. But real friends? In a lifetime we may have but a handful of real, true friends. Don’t let options get in the way of your priorities.

32. Know when it’s time to stop. Don’t let fear trap you into a job, relationship or situation that is squelching your life force. I closed my online business of 13 years last year. Not because I wanted to, but because I had to. I should have sold it 6 years ago when it was what was strangling me, not other things.

33. Turn the other cheek and see what happens. What happens can set you free. Yes, it’s hard when someone has hurt you and you’re in pain, angry, upset or grieving… but you can’t carry grudges, anger and searing pain in your heart when someone you love (friend, family or lover) wrongs you. It takes two to tango. Grown-ups work together to understand each other and learn from their differences to forge even stronger relationships. Turn the other cheek, or you won’t see the answer you seek.

34. Don’t keep score. Life is not about keeping points so that you can use things you did (or the other person did or didn’t) as ammunition. And that’s the tough part. When someone is keeping score and starts hurling their ammo at you in a disagreement, it is almost impossible to not reply in kind. Let’s face it- when you’ve been in a relationship or a friendship and been supportive, kind, generous, caring and sincere, it can be agonizing to listen to an angry person rattle off a long laundry list of things they did for you, or that you didn’t do for them. Trust me. It just happened to me. Solid relationships cannot be built upon scoreboards. No one wins.

35. You’ll never be happy unless you can be happy with yourself. Like alone. In silence. Silence is golden. Filling the empty spaces in your life might satisfy you for a while (but also leave you overweight, penniless, addicted to alcohol or drugs, or friendless) but as I have learned the hard way… they key to being happy in your own skin is not filling up empty spaces, but rather in BEING the empty space yourself. Yes. Like meditate. Do yoga. Wake up early and watch the sun rise. Get off your computer and actually look up at the sky. Smell the flowers. Draw a picture. Go for a walk. JUST BE. In that empty silence, you will find a bliss that no chocolate, wine, new dress, sex, or- well any of the inane ways we strive to fill our lives when we simply cannot be STILL. be QUIET. be ALONE or be HAPPY in our own skins.

36. Be who you are. I’ve spent my entire life forcing myself to be what other people wanted me to be. Usually at my own expense. I’ve forced emotions, forced myself to be, do, go, etc, etc, etc ad nauseum. But in reality? I was only exhausting myself, stressing my mind and body and completely un-centering myself from my core, which I have to keep carefully in a balanced state in order to function was what appears to be normal.

37. Sacrifice money, stuff and things for happiness. Just try it. Even a little bit… and see what happens. It’s liberating. Go all-out if you want… I’m currently in the midst of performing what most people would deem to be financial suicide. My divorce and having to close my business resulted in my putting my house on the market last November. I went through every possible route to work with the bank and ever single one was a no-go. The end result? Foreclosure. I’m letting it go, losing everything I put into it, and letting my credit score take a dive. And you know what? I’m thrilled. I can’t wait to be free of it. I did everything I possibly could to make things work with the lender. In the long run, what seems like complete insanity to most, is for me, a much happier, less stressful, simpler life.

38. Take care of yourself. I don’t mean go over the top and preen and primp like a peacock all day long… but let’s face it. You’ve got this body and it’s the only one you’ve got. Take care of it. Take pride in it. Eat healthy food. Be excessive only in moderation. Take pride in your appearance. It doesn’t mean you are vain. Love yourself. If you don’t love yourself, you can’t love others. If you don’t take care of yourself, you’ll find yourself unable to take care of really important people in your life… such as, your children, for example…

39. Don’t force things. Go slow. Take it easy. It’s ok to give yourself a break. This has been a really hard change for me to make. But the quote about how nature takes her sweet time yet still gets the job done has resonated with me.

40. There is no such thing as failure. You own your own perception of your happiness and what defines it. Keep going. Try and try again. Take a new path. Take a huge leap of faith. Take a chance. But don’t ever let a “failure” take the spring out of your step. Sure, sleep on it for a night or even 6 months, but come back stronger than ever.

what do you see?

A pessimist only sees the dark side of the clouds, and mopes;
a philosopher sees both sides and shrugs;
an optimist doesn’t see the clouds at all —
he’s walking on them.

-Leonard L. Levinson

life IS short.

 

Each second we live is a new and unique moment of the universe, a moment that will never be again. And what do we teach out children? We teach them that two and two make four, and that Paris is the capital of France. When will we also teach them what they are? We should say to each of them: Do you know what you are? You are a marvel. You are unique. In all the years that have passed, there has never been another child like you. Your legs, your arms, your clever fingers, the way you move. You may become a Shakespeare, a Michelangelo, a Beethoven. You have the capacity for anything. Yes, you are a marvel. And when you grow up, can you then harm another who is, like you, a marvel? You must work, we must all work, to make the world worthy of its children. 

— Pablo Casals 

100 things to be happy about v.2

I posted my first list of 100 things to be happy about almost 2 years ago, on the blog of my otherwiseknownasthesuccessfulonlinemineralmakeupcompanyiownedfor13years. here.

Time to revisit the happy.

My son took the photo above, a few weeks ago… we were out for a walk, picking wildflowers. He said he never saw a picture of me where I looked so happy. Out of the mouths of babes?

So… 100 things to be happy about, version 2:

1. freedom

2. endless curiosity

3. speaking Italian

4. dreams coming true

5. flexibility

6. silence

7. new friends

8. watching my son blossom

9. every sunset

10. walking in the forest

11. making spur of the moment decisions

12. being healthy

13. watching the stars

14. wildflowers

15. singing in the car

16. fields of sunflowers

17. happy people

18. ideas coming to fruition

19. no longer being afraid

20. seeing my first opera

21. driving with the windows down

22. the best coffee ever

23. taking leaps of faith

24. cool night breeze

25. linden trees in bloom

26. falling asleep in exhaustion from a day of seeking

27. picking wild blackberries

28. getting a tan for the first time in decades

29. sudden creative epiphanies

30. people-watching

31. working on my family tree

32. dancing

33. feeling a true sense of community

34. being true to myself

35. realizing that the grass is NOT always greener on the other side

36. making huge sacrifices for a better, simpler life of joy

37. sitting in complete silence

38. the silvery blue color of the sky at dawn

39. window shopping

40. curvy mountain roads

41. ancient architecture

42. new traditions

43. accepting my neurodiversity and working with it.

44. knowing my Father is with me every day, in some way

45. realizing that very little in life is worth stressing over

46. taking it easy on myself. finally.

47. dreaming about what I will do next.

48. seeing the tiny details in life that other people miss

49. watching my son sleep

50. watching flowers bloom

51. being a stranger in a strange land

52. realizing just how small the world is

53. slow food

54. cool night breeze

55. air-dried laundry

56. olive oil

57. all things unexpected

58. thousands of years of history within miles

59. having no idea what may come next

60. poppies

61. curly hair

62. simplicity

63. second chances

64. not feeling my age (or caring of it)

65. endless vistas

66. knowing it will all work out

67. re-learning how to live

68. doing nothing while doing everything

69. having no regrets

70. knowing the glass is overflowing

71. being comfortable in my own skin

72. just existing

73. detaching from the ego

74. letting go of material things

75. fingernails the color of an iridescent seashell

76. working less, doing more, living more

77. reveling in the night’s chorus, singing me to sleep

78. letting go of the past

79. not being controlled by technology

80. walking. just walking.

81. starting to play my violin again

82. no longer being a doormat

83. waking with the sun. and the roosters.

84. watching the stress drain from my body.

85. once a girl, now a woman.

86. crisp cotton sheets on a hot night

87. fireflies shimmering in a tunnel of trees

88. each day, a mystery.

89. wondering what could be.

90. feeling safe. loved. secure.

91. expanding the definition of family.

92. sleeping with the windows open at night

93. not having to guess what people think or feel

94. acceptance

95. living life fully. passionately.

96. learning from my mistakes. aka lessons.

97. forgiving myself.

98. listening to myself.

99. allowing what will be, to be.

100. feeling my senses engaged, ready, waiting.

101. knowing that you may have no clue… but I do!

keep going!

Only those who will risk going too far can
possibly find out how far one can go.

-T. S. Eliot

the truth about failure

 

Some of my biggest failures (aka “mistakes”) in life have been my greatest successes (aka “lessons”). So I tend to see failure as a positive thing. This was of course something I learned gradually… and of course, something that I still have to coax myself to do in times of stress or being overwhelmed. And still, something that I don’t always realize until some time has passed (enter the old adage “hindsight is 20/20″)

One of my favorite great “failures” is Thomas Edison- who had only one invention that was a success. The light bulb. But what light his failures have shed on us…

My artistic failsafe is failure. I set out to create based on combinations of things that should never work. And sometimes, they magically do… creating new and beautiful things that are spontaneous and “right”. It is seldom safe or homogenous combinations of variables that render exciting results.

The next time you feel you have failed, turn it around. More than likely, you’re probably on the right path. And at least you failed. Some people don’t even get that far… they’re too frightened.

Failure is one of many stops on whatever journey you’re taking.

Keep going.
You have not failed. You simply have not yet succeeded.
You are not at a dead end. Turn around, go in a new direction.
You are not inferior if you fail, but you are imperfect (and perfect is boring!).
You have not wasted time. You’ve learned along the way and will begin anew.
You won’t give up. You’ll try harder, differently.
You haven’t been foolish, but rather had the faith to try. And try again.

~ sonnolenta

“if no one walks with you, walk alone”

If no one responds to your call, go forward alone.

If no one talks to you, oh luckless one,

If everyone turns away from you in fear,

Reveal your thoughts and express your ideas to yourself.

If everyone leaves you while you are travelling a dangerous road,

If no one wants to look after you,

Walk on alone, on the road strewn with thorns, trampling on them with bleeding feet.

If no one shows a light, if in the dark stormy night everyone shuts their doors,

Use your rib as a torch, lit from the fire of thunder. –

Rabindranath Tagore

take the first step


As a single footstep will not make a path on the earth, so a single thought will not make a pathway in the mind. To make a deep physical path, we walk again and again. To make a deep mental path, we must think over and over the kind of thoughts we wish to dominate our lives.

-Henry David Thoreau

stop. sit.


Your vision will become clear only when you look into your heart. Who looks outside, dreams. Who looks inside, awakens.

-Carl Jung

grow upward, outward.

 

I am an excitable person who only understands life lyrically, musically, in whom feelings are much stronger as reason. I am so thirsty for the marvelous that only the marvelous has power over me. Anything I can not transform into something marvelous, I let go. Reality doesn’t impress me. I only believe in intoxication, in ecstasy, and when ordinary life shackles me, I escape, one way or another. No more walls.

—Anais Nin