But despite everything he's been through, he teaches us that tragedy can be used to create a beautiful life filled with joy and kindness.
This is his story 👇👇👇
Born in Beirut, Reeves's early life was marked with turbulence and instability.
He was 3 when his father left the family, and the last time they spoke was when Reeves was 13 years old.
In 1994, his dad was arrested with heroin and cocaine, and sentenced to 10 years in jail.
Reeves refuses to discuss his relationship with his father, only saying, “The story with me and my dad’s pretty heavy. It’s full of pain and woe and f*cking loss and all that sh*t."
Throughout his childhood, Reeves and his sister would move around with their mother to Hawaii, Australia, and New York before settling in Toronto.
Reeves attended four different high schools in the span of five years.
Reeves struggled with academics because of his dyslexia, but he found a passion for theater when he was 9.
He dropped out of high school to pursue acting, and after moving to L.A in 1986, Reeves landed his career-launching role in the science fiction comedy film Bill and Ted.
But before long, tragedy struck again.
In 1991, his younger sister was diagnosed with leukemia that she battled for years.
Reeves started a private foundation that donates to children’s hospitals and cancer research.
In 1999, just as Reeves gained national acclaim for The Matrix, he and his girlfriend Jennifer Syme were expecting their first child.
In December, their daughter was stillborn at 8 months.
Unable to recover from the grief, Reeves and Syme ended their relationship.
Eighteen months later, Syme passed out at the wheel, collided with three parked cars, and was thrown from the car.
She died in the accident.
“Grief changes shape, but it never ends,” Reeves said. "When the people you love are gone, you’re alone.”
Reeves has become a legendary actor, producer, and director, but he also has a reputation for being a genuinely good person.
He's become known for his random acts of kindness, of which there are many.
We've seen him giving up his seat on a crowded subway to a woman with a large bag, jumping out of a car to autograph a sign he saw on a fan's lawn, and hanging out with a homeless man on the side streets of West Hollywood.
Reeves once handed over a %age of his profits from "The Matrix" sequels to the special-effects and costume-design team because he felt "they were the ones who made the movie and that they should participate."
Money doesn't change you, it just magnifies who you already were.
Reeves has been through a lot, but he believes you can always make time to be a good person.
"If you have been brutally broken but still have the courage to be gentle to other living beings,” he says, “then you’re a badass with a heart of an angel."
🎉 It's been a full year of The @ProfileRead Dossier, which is a deep-dive on a prominent individual that takes you on a journey from their greatest triumphs to their most gut-wrenching failures.
Here are 10 practical lessons I've learned from the world's most successful:
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1. Follow the 40% rule
David Goggins' 40% rule is simple: When your mind tells you that you can't go on, you’re only actually 40% done.
“When we get uncomfortable, our brain gives us a way out — quitting or taking the easier route," he says.
Frank Abagnale was an airline pilot, a doctor, a U.S. Bureau of Prisons agent, a sociology professor & an attorney — all before he was 21.
He put on a uniform & earned the trust of the people in charge.
"Some books are judged by their covers — and I was a best-seller."
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Following his parents' devastating divorce, Abagnale ran away from home at age 16 and became one of the most famous impostors ever, claiming to have assumed no fewer than eight identities.
He escaped from police custody twice — once from a taxiing airliner and once from prison.
Abagnale cashed over $2.5M in forged checks, donned a pilot's uniform and co-piloted a Pan Am jet, and he practiced law without a license.
Known by the police of 26 foreign countries and all 50 states as "The Skywayman," Abagnale lived a life on the run.
At school, he experienced bullying and racism. At home, he suffered physical and emotional abuse at the hands of his own father.
Here's how he gained control over his own body, mind, and life.
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By the time Goggins was in his early 20s, he had asthma, a learning disability, a stutter, & crushingly low self-esteem.
He was earning less than $1,000 a month spraying for cockroaches.
One night, he got a 42-ounce shake from Steak and Shake and sat down in front of the TV.
Goggins stumbled upon a documentary on the U.S. Navy SEALs that changed the trajectory of his life.
"I saw this show on the Discovery Channel, and it was just guys going through Hell Week. They were freezing,” he says. “So at 297 pounds, I decided to try to be a Navy SEAL.”
From the outside, things seemed perfect for Dean Cummings, the former world extreme skiing champion: he had a family, a successful biz & unending adventure. Now, he faces a possible 19 and a half years in prison. (@outsidemagazine)
As it stands today, 7,500 creators are making at least $100,000 per year on the Spotify platform. Now, Spotify founder and CEO Daniel Ek wants to grow those numbers — and fast (@ashleyrcarman)
Stephen Hawking led a fascinating life, showing us that there is no boundary to human endeavor and that the human spirit can overcome even the most debilitating blows.
Here's what we can learn 👇
When he was 21, doctors told Hawking that he only had a few years left to live.
He was diagnosed with early-onset ALS, which would gradually paralyze every part of his body.
Hawking would defy the odds and live another 55 years since the day he was given a death sentence.
"When you are faced with the possibility of an early death, it makes you realize that life is worth living and that there are lots of things you want to do," he said.