30 Life Lessons Learned In 30 Years
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Today is the day. The day that feels so unreal and distant, that you don’t even think about it.
Until you turn 29. Then, on that day, you realize the next year you’ll be 30.
I should say that it feels better than I expected though. Some people experience the middle age crisis and feel terrible — but I think (and hope) that I have already overcame it earlier.
Anyway, how much time is 30 years? Enough to learn some lessons, make mistakes, go through some challenges and achieve something in life.
While approaching this date, I put together a list of lessons that I have learned throughout these 30 years analyzed in retrospective. What I got is a mix of ideas backed up by science, psychology and personal experience that guide me throughout life. Enjoy!
1. Knowledge ≠ Skills
You can read dozens of books on personal development, give advices to other people on personal development and still be terrible at personal development.
That’s because knowledge is different than skill. There is a very simple and demonstrative exercise I came up to demonstrate this idea: write on a piece of paper the sentence “I can write fast and beautiful.” Then switch the pen to the other hand and write don’t the same sentence.
Unless you are used to write with both hands, you will observe a slow and ugly writing process of something you know very good — you know the shapes of each letter, how they should be drawn and connected, yet it is hard to draw nice letters.
Therefore, it is good to read books, but it is also important to practice what you want to develop as a skill or behavior, otherwise you will get what you got the second time you wrote the sentence.
2. On Love And Effort
Love. One word, millions of senses.
As with almost anything in life, we learn what love is mainly from 2 sources: how we see it in our family and how it is being shaped by our interaction with the world (what we read, watch, etc.). On one hand, children in some families learn that love is when one spouse beats the other one, or when there are constant screams and cries, and on the other hand, books and movies show us ideal love, when everything is perfect and the partners are perfect.
I met my wife almost 8 years ago. She is beautiful, but she is not ideal (sorry, dear, if you read this :), nor am I. People are not ideal. You have to keep that in mind. I love her more than anything else, but I can’t say that these eight years were pure pleasure and joy and full of romantic feelings, although it seems like so from aside. When you see a happy couple walking by, holding hands, it seems that everything is great for them. You look at them and think: “Well, they are so happy, why can’t I be the same?” But you don’t know how much effort did they put into their relationship.
If to characterize love, I would use the words of M. Scott Peck — a psychiatrist that wrote a great book — “The Road Less Traveled:”
When we love someone our love becomes demonstrable or real only through our exertion — through the fact that for that someone (or for ourself) we take an extra step or walk an extra mile. Love is not effortless. To the contrary, love is effortful.
You have to put in the effort. Sometimes a lot of effort. Love is about growth and change, it’s about giving as well, not only receiving. If you are in a relationship and do not want to change, you will simply not succeed. And when you see a happy, loving couple holding hands, smiling and being happy, it’s not because they are lucky to find each other, but because they put in the effort to overcome hard times and grow, as love is effortful.
3. On Extremes
Nobody likes to be wrong, yet in any dispute usually both parties are partially wrong, though no one likes to admit it.
Theoretically, people can avoid a lot of pain and stress if they would approach any argument rationally and focus on the issue itself. In practice, though, it is rarely the case, as being right is more important than get things done for a lot of people.
We are binary beings in a way. Psychologists have proved that deep down, under many layers of abstraction and filters, our emotions resolve to one of two states: we either like something or dislike something, therefore adopting a “toward” or “away” attitude. We move “toward” something we like and move “away” of something we dislike. This behavior can be observed in reptiles, birds, mammals… and humans.
Therefore, due to this implicit behavior, we tend to polarize things, concepts and points of views. For instance, whenever a dispute arises, because of confronting views and the fact that we think our idea is correct, we automatically label the other one as wrong (otherwise, there wouldn’t be any sense in having an argument based on two correct points of view) and distance it farther away from our idea, thus polarizing the whole argument into “my opinion is correct and your is wrong” extremes.
At the same time, we tend to dismiss lots of details: at our side we dismiss those that might support the opposing opinion, while on the other side we focus on those that demonstrate why their opinion is wrong, ignoring everything else.
But the world is not binary and “the truth” rarely (if ever) resides on an extreme. “The truth” is in quotation marks, because it depends on the context, that is individual and that we need to take into account. Therefore we have two truths in two different contexts. However, the truth, even in different contexts is somewhere in the middle (some very pronounced examples: heavy meat eaters vs vegans, accepting all refugees in a country vs not accepting refugees at all, liberals vs conservatives, etc.; but subtle examples are all over place in our daily lives).
Therefore, the idea here is (1) to understand the context the opposite opinion is based on and (2) move away from extremes to the “common ground” whenever possible. Usually, when doing so, I find myself that I actually agree with the person I’m arguing with, because in the context that s/he talks about, his/her opinion makes sense. Then, once we moved away from extremes, it’s psychologically easier to listen and find flaws in each other opinions, as they are “closer” to each other than it was in the beginning.
However, all this is futile if you don’t have the willingness to change your own opinion (which implies the ability to listen and analyze facts of the other person). As uncomforting as it may sound, sometimes you’re on the wrong side. And it takes a great deal of courage and honesty to first admit it to yourself and then to acknowledge it to your “opponent.”
Anyway, remember that the truth is always somewhere in the middle.
4. Today Is Tomorrow’s Yesterday
We remember parts of our past with so much nostalgia, but we fail to realize that some time in the future, we will have similar feelings about today.
There’s not much I can add here and I’m working hard on fully understanding and embracing this approach.
If you manage to do this, tell me how.
5. Learn Every Day
If people would stop eating the way they stop learning at some age in their life, the Earth would be very sparsely populated.
I have a strong passion about education and learning. I believe that education is the key to a better, happier, more peaceful world. Also, education is a lifelong journey. Unfortunately, few people realize this.
Today, learning is especially important, as the speed of change in the world is constantly increasing. Everyone’s talking about the fourth industrial revolution and how soon their jobs will get automated by AI.
The sad (or happy?) truth about it is that some jobs will indeed get automated, and if people do not prepare for that (both morally and in terms of skills), they are going to have a tough time.
By constantly learning, you can go either deeper in your domain, or go broader to cover several domains. Either way, you increase the gap between having your job automated and being a needed professional that brings added value (see lesson #16).
But you can also just learn cool things about the world. Today you don’t just have access to information — you have access to top quality information that went through different filters and that has been seen by millions of people, proving that it is indeed useful (or fun). There are TED videos, various channels on youtube, like Vsauce, minute physics, 2minute papers, and many more. Just search your domain of interest and you will find great content done by amazing people who put effort and love in what they are doing.
6. On Our Bodies
Our bodies are incredibly complex, self-regulatory systems that sustain life over years, designed by the Time itself (and natural selection) to be able to function under various conditions, yet we want to see -10kg on our scales, or better outlined muscles and rounder butts, or just to feel better, in just a couple of days. And preferably without much effort in the process.
How many failed attempts of people getting in shape, or losing weight do you know?
Our bodies require time to make lasting changes. Sometimes it is months, sometimes it’s even more. Fast changes are produced only in critical situations (illnesses, injuries), which are never a positive thing for the body. Therefore, do not believe the next commercial that promises you that you’ll lose 10kg in 2 weeks.
Instead, develop a belief and actively practice perseverance and discipline. The former is for doing something despite difficulty or delay in achieving success, while the latter is for continuing doing it on a regular basis.
7. Respect
We are taught to respect the elder, yet pretty often I see the elder have little respect to the younger, which is not fair.
Also, respect is said to be universal, yet there is little respect to many women, people from all groups of minorities and religions in the world.
Sadly, there is so little Respect in the world today. I mean true respect, not selective respect between individuals of specific groups based on economic or other kind of benefit.
Some children are bullied by other in the kindergarden and schools, women are treated badly at the workplace in so many ways, people of color are treated differently. Why is it like this? Sadly, I don’t have an answer.
However, with more respect to each other, people would be happier, families would last longer, societies would flourish and the world would be a better place. This sounds very banal and cliche, but, as you’ll read in my 30th lesson, we tend to overlook things.
Contrary to the current reality, respect should not be based on one’s status, as today status can be easily manipulated and crafted, nor it should be based on one’s age. I really don’t understand why an old person should be respected more than a young one… Instead, respect should be based on one’s actions, as they convey real intentions and define the person.
8. On Our Limited Worldview
“Everyone takes the limits of his own vision for the limits of the world.” — Arthur Schopenhauer
That one’s not mine, but it helps me broaden my own worldview.
Probably you’ve heard the classic parable of “Blind men and an elephant,” where several blind men that have never seen an elephant, after inspection of different parts of it, arrived at different conclusions.
We all live in our own bubbles made of opinions, information and knowledge grabbed from other people and the media. Therefore, it is hard not to fall in the trap of choosing to ignore information that does not align with our own worldview, because if something isn’t in the limits of your worldview, then it means it doesn’t exist or it is not true.
Just keep that in mind when next time your friend will tell you something you will not believe.
9. Treat Your Spouse As You Treat Yourself
Choosing your life partner is hard. Sustaining a healthy relationship requires even more effort.
When you grow up and create your own family, your spouse is one of the closest and dearest persons to you. S/he should be somebody you can trust and who supports you (if s/he is not, probably you’ve made a wrong choice).
However, sometimes you might quarrel with your spouse, take offense and do not talk with s/he for some time. This time is basically time spent in vain, it is wasted time that won’t be ever returned.
That’s why, as a personal rule, if during the day we quarrel, I will never go to sleep while still being in offense at her. Never (since the last 5 years). Sometimes it is hard (sometimes she’s right and I’m wrong), but we will always speak to each other and discuss our thoughts and feelings.
Communication. That’s something we agreed upon to do. Whenever we don’t like something in each other’s behavior, we discuss it. I don’t understand people who keep everything in them until it reaches their boiling point and then they explode with offenses that are weeks and months old, which very often has bad consequences.
If to look at it from a somehow abstract perspective, spouses are just another type of relationship. And in order for any relationship to blossom, you have to work on it, even if sometimes it may be challenging (affecting your ego).
PS: There may be quarrels based on some serious things like cheating, violence, etc. In this case I still believe you have to discuss the situation and make the corresponding conclusions.
10. On Evolution And Emotional Heritage
We are pretty much the same cave people from tens of thousands of years ago, but with a very rich culture.
Don’t agree? Explain then why there are so many cases of violence at home, where nobody’s watching you, and why people believe politicians that tell “scary tales?”
Just look around: there are still myriads of men that frantically search for power and supremacy over others and there are still myriads of women that are ready to obey to men in exchange for wealth and power as well. I know plenty of people from both categories. If you don’t know such people—you are lucky.
It is in the last 5–10 years that there are significant changes in the mentality of the masses (there were lots of individuals that stood out for various causes in the past though) of different groups of people.
Genetically, we almost did not evolve since the appearance of Homo Sapiens, because in terms of evolution, little time has passed, but we evolved a lot in Culture.
Cultural evolution happens on a smaller scale, but it is faster than genetic evolution and its heritage affects whole nations. For instance, you have some specific opinions about people from different countries: Germans, Spanish, Italians, Russians, etc. It is Culture that has a great role in these definitions and that affects how these people are.
Yet there is another evolution happening on a very small scale, but with a very high agility relative to the previous two: the Family Evolution. Its basically the upbringing that each of us receives throughout our first 12–15 years and which greatly affects our personality, sanity and wellbeing.
It’s nature that evolved us into rational beings, history and numerous generations that enriched our cultures, but it is only our responsibility to invest and improve our families, who, in turn, will be able to positively affect and improve our Culture. Just invest and improve your family, every day.
11. On Expectations
The greater your expectation are, the greater the dissappointment when these expectations aren’t met.
But it works the other way around as well: the smaller your expectations are, the greater is the joy of surpassing them.
There is a scientific explanation for this phenomena that is related to the physiology of our brains and to the chemicals that affect our brains (dopamine neurotransmitter plays the key role here), but I won’t elaborate on that here.
I will just ask you to remember when was the last time and how did you feel when you went to a restaurant/bar and the waiter said they will bring your order in 20 minutes, but in reality they have done it in 30 minutes. And compare that with another case, when you were said to have your order in 20 minutes, but it was brought in 10 minutes.
But we have expectations not only when going to a bar and this principle applies to any situation when we expect something. Now, this doesn’t mean we should have no expectations at all (this would be just another extreme), but don’t raise your expectations without any reason.
12. On Beauty
People learned to give too much importance to the wrapper, rather than to what’s inside.
The beauty-meter of the majority of people is so spoiled today, that I wanna puke. And I’m not talking about people’s style. It’s about their bodies and their notions of beauty that are inculcated by the media.
First of all, beauty is much more than appearance. It how a person laughs and thinks, how one gesticulates, expresses emotions, what their interests are and how beautiful their inner world is.
And when you look for these things, when you learn to see through the thick opaque glasses put on you by the social media, suddenly, the world and people around you become more beautiful.
Secondly, don’t judge yourself on how you look (this refers more to women). If you think you need bigger lips/boobs/butt/whatever, or that “you are fat,” because your boyfriend doesn’t like you the way you are — change your boyfriend.
I should note though, that taking care of your body is always a good idea. If you practice some sports and eat healthy, you will even look younger and will be happier. You should do it first and foremost for yourself, as your future You will be grateful. This applies to anybody.
13. Volunteer
Newton’s third law states that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. It applies to life as well — the more you give, the more you will receive.
I would recommend any person to volunteer. Aside the fact that I have contributed to the society, volunteering helped find my first job, learn tons of interesting and useful things that I wouldn’t learn at the university and get to know amazing people, with whom I’ve become friends, with whom I worked together and done business together.
Unless you’re an arrogand bastard, volunteering helps you discover yourself on a human level, live happier and connect on a deeper level with other people and the society you live in.
14. On Human Behavior
If a person says something — there is a reason.
If a person doesn’t say something — there is a reason.
Human behavior is very complex and unpredictable, yet there are some principles upon which it is based — the words that we say and the actions we make have a reason behind them, a motivation to say or do something at some specific moment in a specific context. Learn to spot these reasons and analyze people’s behavior and you will understand them better.
And what is more important, you will understand yourself better.
15. Read A Lot
If the size of human brain would change upon exercise similar to muscles, it would be clear from afar who is the person that walks to you.
This point goes hand in hand with #5 (Learn every day).
One of the critical factors that contributed to our evolution as a species was the fact that our ancestors learned to pass the valuable knowledge gained during their short lives to the next generations. Primarily this was done by language (and some cave drawings) and later on by means of written language (a.k.a. texts and manuscripts).
For millennia, written text was used very effectively to pass on the knowledge gained by many generations to their followers, to avoid mistakes and improve their lives.
Today, the enormous amount of books and websites gives you the possibility to learn from almost any person on the planet. Thousands of books are being published each day and you have never had access to a greater amount of information. Of course some of them aren’t worthy reads, but others can widen your worldview in a remarkable way.
16. Great Professionals Generate Value
Fighting the robots is useless. You cannot work 24/7 with a speed and accuracy of a computer.
But you don’t need to.
Whether you want it or not, today you don’t compete with people from your community or city anymore, you compete with 7 billion people worldwide + an army of robots/algorithms that joined the ranks of your adversaries recently.
However, companies basically need only two things:
- Maximize profit
- Minimize costs
Robots and computers dismiss some professions as obsolete because they do both of these. They minimize profit by not requiring a monthly wage, not needing to sleep, eat, and being always healthy. At the same time they maximize profit by their implicit high speed and precision with which they function.
But this is what some great employees also do: they maximize profit by working more intelligent/improving things and minimize costs by optimizing processes.
There are plenty of things that a computer (and even other people) can’t do (yet) and you need to focus on such things. But for this, you will need to work with your head, even if your job is a routine.
Take a moment and think when was the last time when you suggested an idea to your boss on how to improve things in the company? Or how to simplify some process, or to cut off some expenses?
If you didn’t do this in the past month, then you have a problem.
17. Exercise
Movement means life.
There are so many benefits for our body and brain from physical exercises that you can write a whole book (or a series) on this subject.
It helps lower the risk of strokes, metabolic syndrome, type 2 diabetes, depression, a number of types of cancer, arthritis, coronary heart disease, heart attack, it strengthens your heart and improves lung function, improves mood, help prevent excess weight, boost your endurance and energy levels and even can help you perform better academically. You just need to stop finding an excuse for not practicing sports.
18. Take Care Of Yourself
We think we are invulnerable, unless one day our back starts to hurt.
And only then we become conscious about what we eat, how much we drink, how stressed we are and how much physical activity do we do.
I am a developer and when I sometimes teach programming, I use to say that a programming language is very honest with you. Comparing to a person, when you did something wrong, a piece of code doesn’t take offense at you (as a person sometimes does), but it will stop its execution and tell you exactly where were you wrong and what you did wrong.
Our bodies are very complex systems, but they don’t give you instant feedback when you do something wrong. They have advanced security measures and they try to fix any “errors” automatically. Unfortunately, sometimes our bodies don’t fully succeed, having these errors accumulate.
When you take care of yourself by exercising, eating healthy, controlling stress levels, etc., you reduce the amount of errors that accumulate in your body, resulting in a happier and healthier life later on. But for this, you have to think long-term (see lesson #29)
19. Be Open To Learn From Others
The gift of learning from other’s experience is one of the most valuable assets we have ever had. That’s why we attempt to create Artificial Intelligence now instead of still drawing cave paintings.
As you have your own unique and sometimes valuable experience, so does everyone else. But instead of learning from others, we want to teach them.
I come from a former Soviet Union country, where the mentality of people has yet to catch up with the reality and technological progress in the world. Sadly, there are people who fear that they could lose their job and because of that surround themselves with people who are not smarter than they are.
By learning from others, we can save time, as we already know the direction and won’t spend too much time moving in the wrong direction — people who share their experience have done it for us.
But this doesn’t apply only to job-related concepts and learning. We all can learn from children how to be a little bit less stressed and enjoy life more with what we already have.
20. Travel Often
Unless you travel to see the world and talk to other people, you are alike a domestic cat that lives in a flat on some 10th floor — you think your house is THE WORLD, and you don’t even realize how much you miss.
And when you take the cat out for a walk, it scares the sh*t out of it.
As mentioned in lesson #8 (On Our Limited Worldview), traveling can widen your worldview and teach you many valuable lessons. It makes you more tolerant, less judgemental and enriches your life with great memories. Just travel more often.
21. Listen To People
One of the most valuable things you can give to a person is your attention.
This one works like a charm: if you ever want to make a good impression on somebody, then listen to them. Not only by shutting your mouth, but by shutting your brain parts that are thinking of a response while the person is still speaking.
People love to speak about themselves (especially when someone listens to them). So, ask people questions about themselves and then listen. In the process, you will find out interesting things about them, broaden your worldview and even learn new things.
This is actually one of the easiest and at the same time hard things to do, as naturally we want to speak about ourselves and show how smart/funny/caring/put-a-nice-word-here we are.
Now, this doesn’t mean you need to agree to everything that person is saying, nor does it mean that you must stay silent at all times. But by simply listening to the person without interruption, hearing and thinking for an answer can make a huge difference between a good and a bad impression.
Listen to people you discuss with.
22. On Reasoning, Opinions And Common Sense
Sometimes people do not believe professionals who have spent decades to sharpen their skills, yet unthinkingly believe any politician or stupid advertisement.
Have. Your. Opinion.
It is hard to reason when emotions are taking over. That’s why politicians and advertisements are very good at triggering the right emotions that would blur people’s reasoning.
It is also hard to reason when an authoritative figure tells us something. Because “that person must know better than we know what should be known.”
Stop. Question everything. Inform yourself. Find arguments.
Do not search for evidence that support your point of view — I know you will find it. Instead, search for evidence that supports the opposite point of view. If you have found it, review your position and change your mind. Do not slip to the emotionally-irrational path. Stay on the rational side.
23. Life Has Many Colors
Without sad moments in your life, without pain and suffering, you would not understand happiness.
As I wrote in Understanding the Colors of Our Life, life is made of positive as well as negative experiences, and the more colors you can distinguish between (the more various experiences you have been through), the richer is the picture of life you can savor.
24. On Responsibility
Instead of taking responsibility for their actions and lives, people choose to blame Fate, politicians, neighbors and bad weather.
- if you want to be a valuable employee,
- if you want to do things that matter,
- if you want to become a professional in your field,
- if you want to live a meaningful life,
then assume responsibility for your actions. It’s that easy.
Generally speaking, many people are cowards that do not want to be responsible for what they do. This gives them the possibility to not perform their work well and to blame everything but themselves when things go wrong.
As described in lesson #26, each day you make choices that influence your future. When you approach these choices with responsibility, understanding and being aware of the potential outcomes, you will make better decisions, which will result in a better life.
25. On Self-Deception
Of all the humans, it is the hardest to be sincere with yourself.
One of the best skills that we develop throughout life is to “lie to ourselves.” In fact, we are so good at it that we rarely even realize we are doing it.
Sometimes this lying is good for us. However, most of the times this is one of the most destructive things that we do to ourselves — we destroy our own dreams. Actually we don’t destroy them. We invent reasons that will interfere in our path so that we will fail, or, even worse, we pretend that we already have achieved what we want. This is some kind of masochism — we want something really hard, but constantly delay actions that will bring us closer to our goals and instead think about all possible failing scenarios that can happen, or simply we interpret our reality as being what we want.
There are myriads of examples: you don’t get along well with your spouse, you constantly quarrel, yet you pretend that you have a normal life; you want another job, yet you can say 101 reasons why it’s not a good idea to make the switch now; you feel insecure in your relationship, but you think that it’s how it is supposed to be, etc, etc, etc.
The first step in getting rid of this behavior is deciding to be honest with yourself and be self-aware. The second step is to go see a psychologist — there is nothing wrong in that.
26. Life Is A Series Of Choices
You are making your life, everyday. The actions you make today will define your choices tomorrow.
When you take full responsibility of your life, you have more control over it. Even if fate exists, it isn’t responsible for you wasting hours watching TV, or surfing the internet watching memes and videos with cats.
Want a better life? Ask yourself what are you doing each day to become better and bring more value to your employer/company.
Already working your butt off every day to pay the bills and don’t have time to change your life? Well, it seems you’ve made some choices earlier in life that led you here. First of all — learn your lessons so that you won’t repeat your errors. Then — make a change in your life.
It will be damn hard and it will hurt a lot, but if you won’t make it, everything will stay the same.
27. Successes and Failures
Success does not teach you much.
Failure does, if you are willing to learn.
It is great when you succeed on your first try, be it in sports, relationships, work, startups, or any other activity you might choose to do.
But usually, success comes after a series of failures:
- in sports, until you win, you will lose many times;
- in relationships, you might meet people you won’t get well along, until you find a person you feel good with;
- at work, you will make plenty of mistakes, until you will learn and gain more experience (even then, you will still make mistakes);
- in startups, you might fail several startups, until you will succeed;
Failure is a part of our lives and we need to learn to deal with and overcome it. Yet from early years we are taught that failure is something bad, something that should be avoided at all costs. This causes people to feel insecure about themselves or paralyzes them to do nothing.
Do not avoid failures. Embrace them.
28. We Have More Similarities Than Differences
“The atoms of our bodies are traceable to stars that manufactured them in their cores and exploded these enriched ingredients across our galaxy, billions of years ago. For this reason, we are biologically connected to every other living thing in the world. We are chemically connected to all molecules on Earth. And we are atomically connected to all atoms in the universe. We are not figuratively, but literally stardust.” — Neil deGrasse Tyson
In contrast with the next point on this list, I internalized and fully understood this idea only recently, in the previous 2–3 years.
But before moving on, think about five things that are common between Emma Watson (actress, activist), Jack Ma (businessman, Alibaba CEO), a chemistry teacher from Uganda and you.
Did you manage to get your 5 common things? What about 5 differences? I bet it is easier to come up with differences than with similarities.
Nevertheless, there are lots of similar things between people, all people.
But let’s actually enumerate some differences first:
- gender
- skin color
- income
These are the three main differences that I came up straight ahead. But these are also the differences between all your known friends.
It’s the same with similarities. All those people have:
- interests
- problems
- emotions
Some time ago I involved in the organization of the TEDxChisinau event as the speakers coach. We had great speakers (businessmen, artists, celebrities, inventors, and many other great people), with whom I had some amazing discussions. However, it isn’t (only) their achievements that made these discussions so interesting, but rather the fact that you talk to them on some random topics and realize that they are human, just as you and your friends are — with their own interests, emotions and problems they have to deal with.
Probably this seems insignificant, but when I realized that I am the same person, in terms of needs and possibilities, as a celebrity (not better or worse, but the same), or as a homeless person (not better or worse), it helped me realize how similar we all are.
29. Be Long-Term Oriented
There are two types of people: those who eat the most delicious part of a dish first and those who savor it at the end.
People can benefit in so many cases by delaying gratification and by focusing on the mid- and long-term goals, yet there are plenty of those who choose instant, but smaller reward instead of a delayed, but larger one.
Probably you have heard about the Stanford Marshmallow Experiment:
I first learned the benefits of delaying gratification and focusing on the long-term objectives while being of the same age as the children in the above video, but in a real world setup — in the kindergarden.
After lunch, all children went to bed for the sleep hour (which I believe was actually 2 or 3 hours — the time flew so slow!), but very few actually slept. As the educator was ocasionally leaving the room, nasty boys and girls were jumping on their beds, making noise while playing around.
This, of course, disturbed the educator upon returning from wherever they came from. And then, somehow, I realized that if I am quiet during the sleeping time, I can turn this into my advantage later on, when after sleep, all children were sitting and waiting when the educator will give permission to go to play with the toys in the room.
During that time, when all my kindergarden mates, me included, were eagerly waiting to play, I would approach our educator and say something like:
Mrs. *name*, I was quiet during the sleep time, can I go and play now, as the play time has almost started. (In my kindergarden, everything had its own time).
I have never received a “No” (as far as I remember).
Then I would go and choose the best toys there were out there, feeling proud about the fact that I managed to stay quiet during the sleep time.
Long-term objectives are so hard to pursue, because there is no reinforcement, no feedback for our actions. The reward is so far away, that our minds struggle to connect our action now to the reward we will receive later.
But the reward is out there, waiting for those who are able to reach it. And very often it is bigger than the instant gratification pleasure someone receives.
On the other side, you bite a piece of cake and you instantly feel the pleasure and its delicious taste. It’s so tempting to get the reward now, because you see the results of your action, instead of receiving nothing now and waiting for some time to get something in the future.
30. On Happiness
We search for the extraordinary, when the ordinary is more than enough to live a happy life.
Congratulations! You reached the last one.
If you‘ve read through all lessons, probably you’ve observed that some points aren’t that “new” as ideas. Conversely, some of them are old as the hills. That’s because you don’t need computers to contemplate on the meaning of life — people have done it for thousands of years. And people were living happy for thousand of years.
Internet is full of extraordinary people, photos, news, etc., more than half of which are fake or artificial, just to look or be cool. But each photo is just a snapshot, an instant in the continuous existence of the person, that might, or might not reflect their true state, as happiness is much more than a smile on a photo on a fancy background. After all, people were living happily for thousands of years, therefore must be precious lessons we can learn from past generations. But I believe each person should address this topic individually, as we all have unique experiences and expectations from life.
Instead Of Conclusion
Thank you for reading and I hope some points have resonated with you.
30 is just a number and I’m looking forward to what lessons I will learn in the upcoming years.
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