Don’t ever do anything for money

The problem is, once you start down that road, the question is no longer whether or not you can be bought but what’s the price?

Slopes are slippery for a reason. After you have justified yourself once, it is easy to do it again.

If only

If opens the door of possibility. If means something might not work.

The problem is when we introduce only to the conversation. Only is conditional, restrictive and wishful. Only is predicated on the actions of others (chance). Only implies that something has to work.

If only we can get the boss to change his mind. If only we could get the right funding. If only we could get one more customer. I could be charitable too if only I had a million dollars.

If we are going to insist on sticking with things that can’t fail, what we are competent at,  then we are living below our potential.

If failure is not an option, than neither is success.

Distractions cloaked in productivity

Meetings, phone calls, Tweets can feel productive but what are we really accomplishing?

Anything that is keeping us from doing the work that we are most afraid of doing is a distraction.

Slogging through emails to get to inbox zero can feel productive, but really, this is another form of hiding.

How we think the world works

Draw a circle and put a dot in the center of it.

Unfortunately, too many of us think this is how the world works–it revolves around “me”.

That is our hubris.

Until we learn to lose ourselves in the service of others, I’m not sure we are going to find whatever it is we are looking for in this life.

Put it on the shelf

Stuck on a question that can’t be answered or a problem that can’t be solved?

Once you have looked at it from all angles, tested, measured, sometimes it is best to put it on the shelf.

Not in a spot where you will never find it again, where it can be ignored. But on a figurative shelf. Somewhere tucked away safe in our brains that you can go back to and check on occasionally.

Overtime, you will be surprised to discover that eventually the answers sort of pop up out of nowhere.

Have faith–the substance of things hoped for but not seen–that the missing piece of the puzzle you seek will be revealed in due time.

Truth is not the same as knowledge

Knowledge is the facts and information we acquire through our experiences. We expand our knowledge by reading books, vigorously testing and measuring, drawing reasonable conclusions from axioms and through mindfulness, intentional day-to-day living.

Truth, on the other hand, is completely different. Truth is universal. It is the same yesterday, today and forever. They are the laws of the universe that can’t be changed.

What is interesting is even with more knowledge available than all the Great Libraries of the World combined right at our fingertips, we live in a culture of picking our own truth.

The two-headed monster of cable news has conditioned us go from one news cycle to the next, social media drives us to check incessantly whether the world has broken, all the while toying with our lizard brain.

Knowledge and truth are not the same things. Knowledge is what we obtain to better understand the world in our pursuit of finding truth. Knowledge is what opens the door to discovering truth.

“I worked hard to get where I am today”

Did you? Really?

Sure, we worked. No life is easy. But hard?

When what the last time we were down in the salt mines sweating for 15 hours a day with no lunch breaks? When was the last time we went to bed hungry? How far did we have to travel to find clean water today?

It is more likely that we took advantage of the opportunities we were given. We can’t confuse our industrial world as “hard” over the real struggle for survival that too many face every day.

It is important, essential to remember: That we were born in the greatest, safest periods in human history and enjoy the fruits of the sacrifices others made before us. We enjoy many comforts that the rest of the world is still yearning to have.

What is essential going forward isn’t resting on what we did to achieve our current status but what have we done to help others along the way in this short journey.

There are lots of people that work hard and don’t ever make it. What right do we have? What did we do to deserve this?

Here is your hammer

When there is nothing to lose, you have nothing to lose.

Yet, the older we get, the more accustomed to certain lifestyles we become, it is easy to tighten the hold we have on our artifacts (house, cars, TV’s) we possess.

Loss aversionendowment effect kicks in, debt becomes ubiquitous, more and more we feel trapped. The lizard brain says, “Don’t be stupid!”

No one wants to risk starting over. But is starting over the worst thing that can happen?

It’s a shame that the system has worked overtime to put a glass ceiling on our potential.

Taking chances feels more risky the older we get but the greatest risk is doing the same things we did yesterday today in a fast, changing world.

Recognizing the false limits we put on ourselves and having the courage to break through is one of the greatest contributions we can make in a culture that tries to dumb down the masses.

You may not feel comfortable standing out of a crowd and leading, but it is the opportunity you have been given.