Time is our most precious resource.

I started thinking about this when I published a deep-dive on Lin-Manuel Miranda, the creator of the popular musical "Hamilton."

"Hamilton" focuses on the life of Alexander Hamilton, one of the nation's most prominent Founding Fathers.

👇
Born out of wedlock, raised in poverty in St. Croix, abandoned by his father, and orphaned by his mother as a child, Hamilton moved to New York City as a teen.
Determined to make the most of his life, he authored two-thirds of the Federalist Papers, served as George Washington’s aide during the Revolutionary War, and became America’s first Treasury Secretary.
.@Lin_Manuel Miranda says he was struck by Hamilton's impatience and determination to achieve more.

"I think what Hamilton had is what I have, which is this thing of 'Tomorrow's not promised; I have to get done as much as I can today.'"

Hamilton spent his life educating himself every step of the way.

He made sense of the world through extensive reading and elaborate note-taking. But he always knew it wasn't enough to just learn. He knew he needed to immediately put it into action.
Hamilton studied, took, and passed the bar exam after only six months of self-directed education.

Time and time again, he would follow learning with swift acton.

He translated many of his ideas into proposals, political arguments, and eventually, America's financial system.
"All the genius I have lies in this; when I have a subject in hand, I study it profoundly. Day & night it is before me. I explore it in all its bearings. Then the effort which I have made is what people are pleased to call the fruit of genius. It is the fruit of labor & thought."
In other words, what made Hamilton successful wasn't some God-given talent or intelligence.

It was learning paired with action. Day after day. Year after year.

As author Ron Chernow put it, Hamilton was a thinker and a doer; a "sparkling theoretician and masterful executive."
The question in Hamilton's finale is: "Who lives, who dies, and who tells your story?"

It's meant to remind us to be the authors of our own stories by living life like we're constantly running out of time ... because we are.
"Your story will be told by those who survive you, you have no control over that. You can only control what you do and what you put into the world,” @Lin_Manuel says.

Operate like Alexander Hamilton: Learning paired with action. Whatever you want to accomplish, do it today.
Read the whole post here: theprofile.substack.com/p/time-resourc…

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More from @polina_marinova

3 Nov
On Election Eve, here are the top 10 lessons on leadership I've learned from the world's most interesting & successful people:

Shockingly (or not), none of them are politicians.

🧵 below:
1. Know the edge of your own competence.

When Charlie Munger was younger, he struggled to overcome his own arrogance.

Over the years, he’s learned a valuable lesson: No one is infallible, and you need to operate within the subject areas you know best.

theprofile.substack.com/p/the-profile-…
2. Let people be their true selves.

As a leader, Chobani CEO Hamdi Ulukaya believes you have a responsibility to create an environment where people don’t feel like they have to pretend in order to fit in.

“Normalize the phrase, ‘I don’t know,’” he says

theprofile.substack.com/p/the-profile-…
Read 12 tweets
2 Nov
ICYMI yesterday's @ProfileRead: We talk about the importance of learning paired with swift action

theprofile.substack.com/p/the-profile-…
The investors betting big on crypto: Fred Ehrsam & Matt Huang convinced top institutions to give them $750 million to invest in a market they were too blue-blooded to touch directly. Take a look inside cryptocurrency VC firm Paradigm. (@alexrkonrad)

forbes.com/sites/alexkonr…
The world's best bureaucrat: Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell's propensity for action has kept the economy relatively stable in the face of the unprecedented crisis that was COVID-19. Meet one of the most powerful figures in Washington. (@jbarro)

nymag.com/intelligencer/…
Read 10 tweets
19 Aug
I've read thousands of long-form profiles since launching @ProfileRead 3 years ago.

I want to introduce you to 10 of the world's most interesting people that you've probably never heard of.

Meet them below 👇
Richard Montañez was a janitor w/ a 4th-grade level education who couldn’t read or write.

But he was a janitor with an idea — one that would make Frito-Lay billions of dollars and become one of history’s most iconic snack foods: Flamin’ Hot Cheetos

thehustle.co/hot-cheetos-in…
Jennifer Wynn's job is to compile the life story of a defendant, so the information can be used to convince a jury to deliver a sentence other than death.

Wynn has worked on 30 murder cases (25 of which were death penalty-eligible) & won them all.

melmagazine.com/en-us/story/me…
Read 12 tweets
29 Jul
Here are the top 10 actionable lessons I've learned from the world's most successful people by working on the @ProfileRead every week:

👇
1. Be interesting, not perfect

Malcolm Gladwell says people are drawn to things that are done imperfectly. Whether it’s art, movies, or books, people talk more about the flawed things that get stuck in their head than they do the obvious, perfect things

theprofile.substack.com/p/the-profile-…
2. Start from first principles

So many of us do things a certain way simply b/c that’s how they’ve always been done. Few ask, “Why?” @elonmusk says we need to think like a scientist and start with only the information you know to be scientific fact.

theprofile.substack.com/p/the-profile-…
Read 12 tweets

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