In 2008, my friends and I decided to come up with a list of life rules
Our goal was to define the fewest possible rules that applied to any situation in our lives
We refined our list until we had nine rules, each philosophically consistent with the others
I remember sharing the rules with a friend of mine who was a new dad, and he said, “Those are the rules of a child.”
When I shared the list with my parents, they replied with a list of their own:
11 instructions on how to live, and 11 observations about the nature of life
My Dad wrote, “Notice we dated our rules as we think they should change as you grow older and wiser.”
Since then, I’ve kept a file called “The Basics” and use it to capture thoughts on life and how I should relate to it
I updated the list when I became a dad in 2015
And here’s the list as of today
I’m sure it’ll evolve in the years ahead
Want to feel rich?
Get rid of things
Want to be happy?
Get in a rhythm
When things get hard or complicated...
🔷Get started (it’s the hardest part of any task)
🔷Keep going (success is inevitable through hard work over time)
🔷Challenge yourself (joy and duty are one and the same)
Wish for and seek…
🔷A healthy mind, body, and spirit
🔷Loving relationships with family and friends
🔷The satisfaction of spending yourself in a worthy cause
Ask yourself, "Can I give more?"
The answer is usually "Yes."
-Paul Tergat, distance runner, Olympic champion
In one sense, life is a struggle for power (it's harsh, brutal, and unforgiving)
In another sense, life is also perfectly free (it’s joyful, sublime, and beautiful)
Find beauty, wonder, and exhilaration, no matter how ugly, dreadful, or boring life can be
There’s more to life than competition
Strive to be humble, kind, and helpful
Learn from the past, look ahead, and cooperate
Be curious, inquisitive, and aware
Be grateful, gracious, and affectionate
Be carefree, enthusiastic, and self-assured
Embrace change and learn from it...
🔷Fill yourself with ideas
🔷Observe, question, and reason
🔷Explore, ask questions, and think for yourself
Want to be spontaneous?
"Live like a clock."
-Jumbo Elliot, @VillanovaU coach on how runners should structure their lifestyle
(Get up to the first alarm. The rest takes care of itself)
Sometimes it’s easy to forget:
“The number one duty between life and death is to enjoy the moment.”
-Mark Twain
Ultimately, life is not a work of art...
...and the moment cannot last
-A River Runs Through It
Remember, in good times and bad, this too shall pass.
So live life! Enjoy the moment!
Life’s too short for anything else.
This is your life, live it from the ground up, one day at a time!
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That may be the best-ever quote about creative flow.
The creative process succeeds in one direction (consuming ideas and then creating) and stalls in the other (trying to create and then looking for ideas).
@thisiskp_ In practice, consuming and creating aren’t separate activities; they’re connected and fold together like an accordion.
@thisiskp_ Start pulling apart the accordion and more activities emerge:
To create, curate. To curate, consume.
Keep pulling and the full creative stack appears: to consume, collect; to collect, explore, and so on for seven more levels!
I channel successful creators in my personal life and @gumroad
Here’s what I’ve learned from them in the past six months, in their own words.
Stages of the Builder’s Journey – a Blueprint for Aspiring Creators:
Don’t wait until you have a big following (i.e. start now)...
🔷“I had fewer than 300 followers when I started”
🔷“I had fewer than 400 followers when I started”
🔷“I had fewer than 500 followers when I started”
Create without a plan (i.e. just be creative)...
🔷“This started as an experiment”
🔷“I wasn’t trying to build a business”
🔷“I didn’t set out to become a creator”
🔷“This wasn’t something I thought I’d be doing”
Nearly thirty years ago, at the end of my eighth-grade school year, I received an award named in honor of Ray Kroc. The prize was one share of McDonalds Corporation common stock.
Strunk & White's "The Elements of Style" is the best-known instruction book on writing in English.
I organized and distilled chapter five, "An Approach to Style (With a List of Reminders)," from 6,500 words to 1,300.
The summary includes ten observations and 21 reminders:
There’s no key that unlocks the door...
🔷No infallible guide to good writing
🔷No satisfactory explanation of style
🔷No inflexible rule by which writers may shape their course
These reminders state what most of us know and at times forget...
🔷Style is an expression of self
🔷To approach it, turn away from mannerisms, tricks, and adornments
🔷Move toward plainness, simplicity, orderliness, and sincerity
I channel the worldviews of interesting people on Twitter.
I do that by organizing and distilling their tweets into a summary of their big ideas. For my own education I summarized the timeline of @JoeBiden, and it’s helped me to look beyond the headlines.
I believe it’s valuable to channel people of all stripes and persuasions, and in that spirit, I’ll continue to share summaries of writers and thinkers, artists and creators.
In one place, read the philosophy of @JoeBiden, win or lose:
America is full of possibilities…
🔷We have respect for hard work
🔷We have determination, resilience, and grit
🔷We have opportunity to go as far as our dreams take us