Which parts of this list do you agree (or disagree) with?

Udhay

http://blog.samaltman.com/the-days-are-long-but-the-decades-are-short

The days are long but the decades are short

I turned 30 last week and a friend asked me if I'd figured out any life
advice in the past decade worth passing on.  I'm somewhat hesitant to
publish this because I think these lists usually seem hollow, but here is a
cleaned up version of my answer:

1) Never put your family, friends, or significant other low on your
priority list.  Prefer a handful of truly close friends to a hundred
acquaintances.  Don’t lose touch with old friends.  Occasionally stay up
until the sun rises talking to people.  Have parties.

2) Life is not a dress rehearsal—this is probably it.  Make it count.  Time
is extremely limited and goes by fast.  Do what makes you happy and
fulfilled—few people get remembered hundreds of years after they die
anyway.  Don’t do stuff that doesn’t make you happy (this happens most
often when other people want you to do something).  Don’t spend time trying
to maintain relationships with people you don’t like, and cut negative
people out of your life.  Negativity is really bad.  Don’t let yourself
make excuses for not doing the things you want to do.

3) How to succeed: pick the right thing to do (this is critical and usually
ignored), focus, believe in yourself (especially when others tell you it’s
not going to work), develop personal connections with people that will help
you, learn to identify talented people, and work hard.  It’s hard to
identify what to work on because original thought is hard.

4) On work: it’s difficult to do a great job on work you don’t care about.
And it’s hard to be totally happy/fulfilled in life if you don’t like what
you do for your work.  Work very hard—a surprising number of people will be
offended that you choose to work hard—but not so hard that the rest of your
life passes you by.  Aim to be the best in the world at whatever you do
professionally.  Even if you miss, you’ll probably end up in a pretty good
place.  Figure out your own productivity system—don’t waste time being
unorganized, working at suboptimal times, etc.  Don’t be afraid to take
some career risks, especially early on.  Most people pick their career
fairly randomly—really think hard about what you like, what fields are
going to be successful, and try to talk to people in those fields.

5) On money: Whether or not money can buy happiness, it can buy freedom,
and that’s a big deal.  Also, lack of money is very stressful.  In almost
all ways, having enough money so that you don’t stress about paying rent
does more to change your wellbeing than having enough money to buy your own
jet.  Making money is often more fun than spending it, though I personally
have never regretted money I’ve spent on friends, new experiences, saving
time, travel, and causes I believe in.

6) Talk to people more.  Read more long content and less tweets.  Watch
less TV.  Spend less time on the Internet.

7) Don’t waste time.  Most people waste most of their time, especially in
business.

8) Don’t let yourself get pushed around.  As Paul Graham once said to me,
“People can become formidable, but it’s hard to predict who”.  (There is a
big difference between confident and arrogant.  Aim for the former,
obviously.)

9) Have clear goals for yourself every day, every year, and every decade.

10) However, as valuable as planning is, if a great opportunity comes along
you should take it.  Don’t be afraid to do something slightly reckless.
One of the benefits of working hard is that good opportunities will come
along, but it’s still up to you to jump on them when they do.

11) Go out of your way to be around smart, interesting, ambitious people.
Work for them and hire them (in fact, one of the most satisfying parts of
work is forging deep relationships with really good people).  Try to spend
time with people who are either among the best in the world at what they do
or extremely promising but totally unknown.  It really is true that you
become an average of the people you spend the most time with.

12) Minimize your own cognitive load from distracting things that don’t
really matter.  It’s hard to overstate how important this is, and how bad
most people are at it.  Get rid of distractions in your life.  Develop very
strong ways to avoid letting crap you don’t like doing pile up and take
your mental cycles, especially in your work life.

13) Keep your personal burn rate low.  This alone will give you a lot of
opportunities in life.

14) Summers are the best.

15) Don’t worry so much.  Things in life are rarely as risky as they seem.
Most people are too risk-averse, and so most advice is biased too much
towards conservative paths.

16) Ask for what you want.

17) If you think you’re going to regret not doing something, you should
probably do it.  Regret is the worst, and most people regret far more
things they didn’t do than things they did do.  When in doubt, kiss the
boy/girl.

18) Exercise.  Eat well.  Sleep.  Get out into nature with some regularity.

19) Go out of your way to help people.  Few things in life are as
satisfying.  Be nice to strangers.  Be nice even when it doesn’t matter.

20) Youth is a really great thing.  Don’t waste it.  In fact, in your 20s,
I think it’s ok to take a “Give me financial discipline, but not just yet”
attitude.  All the money in the world will never get back time that passed
you by.

21) Tell your parents you love them more often.  Go home and visit as often
as you can.

22) This too shall pass.

23) Learn voraciously.

24) Do new things often.  This seems to be really important.  Not only does
doing new things seem to slow down the perception of time, increase
happiness, and keep life interesting, but it seems to prevent people from
calcifying in the ways that they think.  Aim to do something big, new, and
risky every year in your personal and professional life.

25) Remember how intensely you loved your boyfriend/girlfriend when you
were a teenager?  Love him/her that intensely now.  Remember how excited
and happy you got about stuff as a kid?  Get that excited and happy now.

26) Don’t screw people and don’t burn bridges.  Pick your battles carefully.

27) Forgive people.

28) Don’t chase status.  Status without substance doesn’t work for long and
is unfulfilling.

29) Most things are ok in moderation.  Almost nothing is ok in extreme
amounts.

30) Existential angst is part of life.  It is particularly noticeable
around major life events or just after major career milestones.  It seems
to particularly affect smart, ambitious people.  I think one of the reasons
some people work so hard is so they don’t have to spend too much time
thinking about this.  Nothing is wrong with you for feeling this way; you
are not alone.

31) Be grateful and keep problems in perspective.  Don’t complain too
much.  Don’t hate other people’s success (but remember that some people
will hate your success, and you have to learn to ignore it).

32) Be a doer, not a talker.

33) Given enough time, it is possible to adjust to almost anything, good or
bad.  Humans are remarkable at this.

34) Think for a few seconds before you act.  Think for a few minutes if
you’re angry.

35) Don’t judge other people too quickly.  You never know their whole story
and why they did or didn’t do something.  Be empathetic.

36) The days are long but the decades are short.


-- 

((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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