1. Exercise
– Exercise is essential; I briefly touched on what happens to you in the short
term but consider also the long term effects of regular exercise. As you
maintain a regiment of exercise your body fat percentage drops, your flexibility
and strength increase (less chance of injury) your lifespan extends, your
immune system is bolstered, you maintain your youth longer, you carry over a
sustained vigor to other parts of your life, your resting heart rate goes down,
and you have a general feeling of well being. Pretty sweet. Clearly exercising
is very important; given both its short and long term benefits.
But
do you have to do this every day? That seems strenuous. Try expanding your
definition – You don’t give it your 100% every day. Some days may be 10 minutes
of simple light stretching, just to keep the habit. Other days may be 2.5 hour
monster gym sessions.
I
use this habit to help me accomplish two other things very important to me,
meditation and getting into nature. Often times my physical exertion is a one
hour walk through the park or along the water front. Practicing a walking
meditation is a great way to center yourself and help carry the skill over to
everyday life. Being in nature has a similar balancing effect on your well
being.
But
you don’t need me to tell you to work out. The benefits are all clearly
documented by scientists and people. There are networks and resources for
support and endless sources of inspiration to motivate you.
2. Meditation
– This habit is invaluable. You need to meditate. Think about what part of the
human experience spirituality addresses – the ego and fear – two concepts that
would benefit you SO much to control. I think a lot of people get messed up
here because the benefits are very intangible at first. The “S curve” of
Mastery that I described above has a very looong period of ‘sucking shit’. If
you’re not experienced then your image of what meditation should be like is
wrong. Fighting your expectations will be a constant battle as you learn to
meditate. Here are some resources to help you learn.
- Reddit Article – Very concise introduction to meditation
- Mindfulness in Plain English – Amazing book that covers the topic clearly and in depth
- Meditation Retreat – 10 day intensive mediation retreat
- Binaural Beats – Beats that can help induce a meditative state (great training wheels, also make sure you are using good quality headphones)
- Self Transformation Through Meditation – Another article on this site you can check out
Practice
– Start meditating everyday. The evidence is in by a landslide, both
anecdotally and empirically. Meditation will change your life so start today,
any reason you may have for not trying is an excuse.
Once
you get the hang of it you will leave your meditation sessions feeling
centered, calm, and relaxed. It has an ego-lessening effect and awareness
increasing effect that spills over to your everyday life. If you keep up the
practice you’ll notice that your focus and attention span increases
dramatically, as does your sight and sound sensitivity (think of the most
visceral things you do – sex, eating, sports etc.) Brain regions associated
with attention, interoception and sensory processing will literally become
thicker.
In
the long term, meditation offers a ‘profound transformation of how you
experience reality’ It will bring you joy, peace, and happiness. This is real
and you need to be doing it.
3. Reading
– If you read the right books you will be moved, inspired, and motivated.
Think
about what you expose yourself to. There’s a million shitty blogs on the
internet written by whoever. But then there’s books out there that will change
your life. Books that the most gifted human beings on earth have spent years
writing. A lifetime of experiences, insights, and lessons learned given to you
in a nice handheld easily digestible form.
I
started this habit at a half hour a day. Recently I’ve started reading about an
hour a day and am burning through books. With a constant flow of information
in, you increase your ability for information to flow out (applying knowledge
to your life)
Reading
is an easy habit to put off and you need to make it a priority. If you’re not
regularly reading then you may start to fall asleep as you pick up a book. Your
mind is not conditioned properly and you need to force yourself through that
period. Your reading speed and comprehension do pick up over time – just stick
to it.
If
you have no idea where to begin, the recommended reading section is a good
place to start.
4. Creative
Recreation – People are going to approach this one very differently but if
there is something you can sit down and do purely for your enjoyment than
that’s awesome. Think of a flow state activity that you can put your full
expression into. For me it’s playing an instrument. If you’ve ever seen someone
play the guitar or piano at an extremely high level in a non performance
setting then you’ll know what I’m talking about. The “S” curve of learning an
instrument is very, very, very long. But you get out what you put in. Your
amusements will leave you feeling rejuvenated and can often break up and
lighten the day. As you invest in your hobbies you will get more and more out
of them
I
generalized this habit as ‘creative recreation’ because I want to emphasize the
fact that recreation is not a spectator sport. Vegetating on the couch watching
commercials is not recreation.
5. Nutrition
– As you build a productive life your ability to stay focused and have energy
becomes very important. What you eat has a big effect on how you feel. If you
eat right you can avoid energy crashes, fight off sickness, and generally just
feel ‘good’.
I
know that I’m definitely not the best person to give nutrition advice but the
resources are out there. It should be obvious that what you put in your body is
very important. Do yourself a favor and learn how your body works.
For
me, I don’t eat sugar or processed food. I drink 1.5L of water a day and I make
an extra effort to eat more plant based foods. I supplement my diet with fish
oil etc. I think what’s most important though is that you proactively decide
what you put in your body. Make the time to cook your meals, keep your fridge
stocked, and don’t buy convenience food.
6. Reasonable
Spending – Like nutrition, this habit is more of a choice you make rather than
an active investment of your time. Its pretty straight forward, every day I try
to manage my money reasonably.
Apply
the concept of reactivity/proactively to your spending and you have an
excellent framework for managing your money. Did you plan on making this
purchase? If not then don’t do it. The nature of planning a purchase is that it
is in line with your goals and budget. The nature of making an
impulsive/reactive purchase is quite the opposite, ‘it is right here and will
satisfy me right now’ (mostly consumer/convenience items)
7. Brain
Buster + Current Events – Part of my morning routine is to check out the
economist, my local news site, or the new york times and read two or three
articles. Given my background and where I want to go in life it is going to
serve me well to be informed and have the ability to notice trends and
understand the complexity of global issues.
I
also work very hard to develop my critical and lateral thinking. Every day I
challenge myself to solve one extremely difficult problem. Actually I only
figure them out about 30% of the time. On my computer I have a repository of
IQ, Mensa, brain buster type books that would take a lifetime to work through.
Some problems I solve in five minutes others take me thirty until I break down
and look at the solution.
If
you run a business or are any kind of decision making authority (or eventually
want to be in that position) then I can’t vouch enough for this habit. You need
to be sharp and informed. Period.
8. Social
– Every day I make an effort to advance my social skills. Your ability to
communicate effectively with human beings has so many implications in your
personal and professional life. I’ve gone through experiments with this habit
and I think the less your around people the more you need to make it a priority
(my lifestyle right now has me around new people ALL the time, but there have
been other times in my life when I actively had to make that happen)
I’ve
tried a few different things. For a while I really focused on listening to
people with the intent to understand, pushing the urge to get my point across
aside and giving other people the floor when they were expressing themselves.
I’ve done different experiments with eye contact and physicality while
communicating as well. Regardless, going out and just talking to people trumps
all when it comes to developing your social skills.
9. Personal
Management – This is the easiest of all habits to implement. Just 10 minutes a
day and your bachelor pad is looking clean and fresh. Not many long term
benefits here except maybe you don’t lose your possessions as often and they
have and increased lifespan. In the short term doing your laundry, not letting
your dishes pile up, and making your bed can offer you a peace of mind and
allow you to work unfettered on other projects.
10. Project
1, 2 or more times a week – For me I set aside a two hour block twice a week to
work on a personal project. This could be fleshing out a business feasibility
plan, recreating my weightlifting routine, catching up on some reading,
creating a budget, doing research, or writing this mega post.
At
the beginning of each week I choose what two projects I plan to work on and
within the week I find time to fit them in. Use this habit as a way of
revitalizing old projects that are collecting dust or to begin something new
that you’ve been thinking about but haven’t got around to.
The
effects this habit has on your short and long term productivity are enormous.
11. Podcast/TED
Talk/University Lecture – If you’re a thinking human being with a desire for
knowledge then you should be listening to podcasts, watching ted talks and
viewing the thousands of lectures professors and researchers have on the
internet.
This is a habit I integrated for both its
short term and long term benefits. In the short term I find it interesting to
learn about new topics. A lot of times it’s on a subject I’m interested in at
the time, other times its something completely new. Either way I’m exposing
myself to the best and brightest minds of today and expanding my understanding
of the world.
If
you engaged yourself with this material every day, what would the long term
effects be? Besides a vast and varied wealth of knowledge you would begin to
draw disciplines together. Your understanding and awareness would grow so large
that the value and wisdom you could offer other people would be incredible.
*For
a practical tip, throw a queue of talks you’re interested in on your iPod and
listen while exercising.
12. Language
– Every day I spend thirty minutes learning a new language. This is an ongoing
task that I struggled to integrate. You realize almost no immediate benefit and
that makes it exceptionally difficult to do every day. The “S” curve of mastery
is very, very long (years).
But
alas, the benefits in the long term must be exceptionally rewarding. I can only
speculate as I currently only speak one language, but from my time studying in
Italy I can tell you I would have got a lot more out of the experience had I
spoke the language. Coming from a business perspective being bi/multi-lingual
would likely be a huge advantage.
For me, I intend to spend a large part of
my life travelling. If you expect to live another 50/60 years of life on this
earth then imagine the lifetime of opportunities and experiences other
languages may open you up to. Don’t cut yourself off.
For
some practical advice getting started I recommend the Rosetta stone. It’s a
visual program that is a great way for getting you started. Listen to talk radio
(via internet) and get a language book with exercises to help you practice. Get
a woman your seeing to join in. It accelerates the process so much if you have
someone to practice speaking with.
We
are the first generation with ready access to the internet. The resources to
help you pick up a language are out there and they are free – use them.
13. Plan
the next day – This is so crucial.
Note
that there is a small learning curve to this as you figure out a system that
works for you. Maybe you like to manage your timetable through your phone, or
maybe you just pencil out what you do on a list. Whatever the method it must
satisfy two requirements: 1) The document must be easily accessible to you
throughout the day, and 2) it must specify approximate times when you will
complete each task.
It’s pretty simple. When you have some time
to think with a clear mind you plan out what you want your next day to look
like you do it. The time you know you have to yourself (mornings usually) you
can set a more ridged structure than the times where there are many variables
as to what you may be doing.
The
plan is your servant, not your master. Never get upset if things don’t go the
way you thought – it’s just a guideline to keep you on track. Lost time,
interferences, failing to execute out of laziness or apathy, unforeseen events,
all of this will happen. Don’t be worried, the element of proactivity you
introduce into your life by planning your days out already places you way
ahead.
Another thing to keep in mind is that your
primary goal is not to be efficient. It is to be effective. Don’t be so worried
about having some intense schedule that will burn you out quickly. Allow a good
amount of time for transitions and even more for other forms of time you will use
organically. If you have in your head a picture of someone ruthlessly triaging
priorities, feverishly executing tasks and running around from one item to the
next then you should rethink your understanding. As you go through your day you
will apply yourself to each activity wholly and with everything you’ve got. You
will take things slow and execute with passion, care and effort not with haste
or carelessness.
14. Sleep
– You’re either plugged into the matrix or you’re not. If you’re plugged in
you’re a spectator – you watch TV, you kill time on Facebook, you days slip by
as you wander through in lower consciousness. If your unplugged you’re a player
– You are taking consistent and massive action, you are constantly ingesting
new information, you are pushing your boundaries and limitations, you are
growing.
So naturally if you’re living your life
fully engaged you need a good night’s sleep. The amount of stress you
experience by pushing yourself, the information your internalizing, and the
focus and stamina you need to keep going can all be facilitated by a good nine
hours on the pillow.
Take
this shit seriously – you will notice a difference.
If
you’ve ever studied sleep you know that your body goes through approximate 90
minute cycles (from deep sleep to REM sleep), you know the amount of light you
are receiving effects your bodies melatonin production, you know that what you
eat before bed can affect your sleep, and you also know that sound can disrupt
your sleep. You know that sleep plays an integral role in learning and memory.
You are also aware that the human body associates certain surroundings or
conditions with sleep (think when you walk into a bathroom you feel like you
have to pee. The same thing when you are in your bed – you get sleepy. Therefore
only use your bed for sleep and sex).
I sleep in total darkness, in a cool room,
with a fan for white noise (drown out traffic and creaks in house that would
otherwise wake me up). I have comfortable mattress and I wake up to an alarm
clock that gets brighter instead of making noise.(simulates the sun rising) I
don’t set my alarm for the same time every morning, I set my alarm either 7.5
or 9 hours from when I fall asleep (so I don’t wake up in the depth of a sleep
cycle – you may have to tinker with the times but you will learn your body).
Try some of this and you will be amazed with the effects on your energy levels,
retention of information, and how you enter your days in the morning.
15. Professional
Development – You’re either working in the industry you want to be in or you’re
not. Either way you should spend some of your day developing the skills
necessary to succeed in the industry you want to be in.
If you’re stuck in a job you don’t like
then this daily ritual is the key to breaking through. You will develop
yourself in the area of your interest until you have the credentials,
credibility, or opportunity to move permanently. Maybe you’re stuck working as
a bank teller, but you want to get into internet marketing. You should begin to
spend a part of your day learning the skills you are going to need to be an
internet marketer.
Think
of it this way, most people are reactive. Most people land a job through
connections or convenience and after they have that job they then learn the
skills necessary to succeed. You are not that person. You will do the reverse.
You will gain the skills through your own force of will and then land ‘the
job’. This is the formula to carve a life of your design and live your dreams.
If you’re already in the industry of your
dreams then you should never stagnate. Constantly focus on learning new
material, keeping up with trends, observing competitors, or expanding your
professional reputation. Focusing on this will allow you to offer more value in
whatever you do and will facilitate success.
16. Journal
+ Research – Keep a journal and update it every day.
What
is a journal? A journal is a place where you write out your thoughts and then
look back at them and ponder. You then write about what you thought of your
thoughts and think about that. (Meta-meta cognition) Do you see how this can be
a valuable tool for personal insight and growth?
This
isn’t a high school dairy. It’s a tool you use to track your thoughts, expand
on insights, accelerate your growth, and look back on your progress. Shits
happening? Write about it. The very act of consciously creating syntax to your
thoughts can help you become more rational and can facilitate problem solving
in your life.
There is a second part to your journal
writing ritual that you need to engage in. Research. As you make discoveries
and insights you should seek out truth and guidance. We have the internet and
it is an amazing tool for feedback.
Our
parent’s generation had to live with misinformation their whole lives. Our
generation enjoys the luxury to – with incredible ease – access the forefront
of human knowledge in the snap of a finger. Use this luxury to fuel your
growth.
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