10 Tips for Living the Life of Your Dreams
Why Are You Here?
When I ask this question, I'm not inquiring why you are in the location you're in, or why you are in the city you're in, or even why you are in whatever country you're in data hk.
I ask the question, because I'm
wondering why you exist at all?
In the fall of 2003, I released a
book I wrote called The Why Are You Here Café. It is a fiction story of a man
who wanders into an all night café and is surprised to find three questions on
a menu. Why Are You Here? Do You Fear Death? Are You Fulfilled?
I am not so arrogant now to think
that I have the answer to how anyone except for me should live their life. I do
know though, that there are certain things I've learned that help me think
about life in a different way. There are things that I wish I had learned
earlier in life, things that I reflect on often and that continually give me a
boost and help me on my journey to achieve the life of my dreams.
My hope is that in sharing those
things with you, they will in some way assist you on your journey to live the
life of your dreams.
1. Know your Purpose For Existing
(PFE), or at least be looking
Your Purpose For Existing is exactly
what it says. It is the reason you exist, the reason you are alive. It is the
answer to the question I asked you at the start of this article. Why Are You
Here?
Your PFE is like your own personal
compass for life. Should you go to New York City and become a commodities
trader? Go back to your PFE. Why are you here? Should you travel the world as a
peace corp. volunteer? Go back to your PFE. Why are you here? Should you stay
in a relationship you've been questioning? Go back to your PFE. Why are you
here?
In addition to taking a great deal
of the stress out of decision making, it also takes a lot of the anxiety out of
everyday life. You don't have to justify to yourself or anyone else why you do
what you do. You know the answer. You meet someone and they say, "Hi, what
do you do?" You respond, "Oh, I teach yoga," or "I'm an
insurance salesperson," or "I'm a chiropractor."
"Interesting," they say, "what made you go into that line of
work. "Well, it helps fulfill my Purpose For Existing," you respond.
Wow! That is a powerful statement. You do what you do because it helps you
fulfill the exact reason you exist. It doesn't get much simpler, or more
powerful than that.
2. Fear is a terrible thing; don't
let it control your life.
Someone once told me a great quote
about trying something new. He said he had been battling with fear for a long
time until one day his friend told him, "Listen, realistically what's the
worst that could happen." I think that is great comment to remember. We
are often paralyzed into non-action by the concern that something drastic might
happen. But the reality is that almost any decision we make or action we take
can be changed if we don't like the outcome.
We can almost always go back to
whatever it was we were doing before we tried something new. Furthermore, what
are the odds that the "worst thing" will happen? It probably isn't
likely at all, and yet that remote chance keeps us from doing the things we
want to do.
My major "Aha" moment
which enabled me to get past my fears, came one day when I suddenly realized
that there are very few things that have not already been done by at least one,
and probably thousands of people. Certainly everything I was attempting, other
people had already tried and succeeded at. Well heck, I thought. If they could
do it, so can I.
It is likely that whatever you are
trying to accomplish in life, someone, at some point in history, at some spot
in the world, did it, and proved it could be done. If they could do it, so can
you.
3. Either we can live as a speck of
meaningless existence, or we can live a life of meaning
Have you ever been somewhere on a
very clear night when you could get a great look at the stars? You were in a
place nice and dark without any local lights distracting your eyes. How many
stars do you think you could see with your naked eye when you looked across the
whole sky? It seemed like millions I bet. The sky seemed just packed with
stars. Well, the reality is that the immense quantity of stars you see on a
totally clear night when there is no outside light is actually about 3,000.
To put that number in perspective,
keep in mind that in our galaxy alone, there are 100 billion stars. Now, our
star, which is the sun, has 9 planets and 54 moons that rotate around it. Using
our star as a proxy, that means there are 6.3 TRILLION stars, planets, and
moons floating around in our galaxy. So what you see on a perfectly clear
night, that immense amount of stars and space, is around .00000005% of
everything in our galaxy. Amazing isn't it. Now consider this. That is just our
galaxy. Do you know how many galaxies there are? Scientists estimate there are
over 500 million of them.
So with all that as perspective, how
important are our individual lives in comparison to the entire universe? It is
pretty easy to see how someone could think that they are just a speck of
meaningless existence. Certainly we are all just specks in the big picture. But
suppose we aren't meaningless. Suppose there is a specific purpose that each of
us is here, a reason that we exist right now that goes beyond just sperm met
egg and nine months later out popped a little you or me.
I believe there is a reason. I
believe we each have a specific Purpose For Existing, or PFE as I like to refer
to it. My suggestions is, find that purpose. Fulfill that purpose.
I've had people say to me, "But
what if you are wrong?" "What if I think I have a PFE, and I live my
life like I do, but I really am just a speck of meaningless existence?" My
reply to that is always the same. If we find what we think is our very purpose for
being alive, our purpose for existing, and we live a life to fulfill it, then
by default, we will have given meaning to our life. What has meaning, can no
longer be meaningless.
4. Realize something is fulfilling
because we decide it is fulfilling, not because someone else tells us it is.
There are a lot of people out there
trying to get you to buy things, and they will tell you almost anything to get
you to do it.
Do you know how much money was spent
on advertising in the United States last year? The answer is a staggering $124
billion dollars. The goal of those expenditures is to get you and me to buy
things, and advertisers are getting more and more savvy about how to do it.
For example, they have learned that
memory and emotion are significant factors in whether or not a customer has
brand loyalty to a product. So they review brain responses of test subjects who
are shown advertisements, to see if a particular advertisement invokes a
reaction from the emotion center or memory center of the test subject's brain.
That way they can tell if the advertisement will stimulate long term brand
loyalty for a particular product. Can't you just see that? Someone is walking
down the street, they pass a billboard, and suddenly have this tremendous,
compelling, yet unexplainable urge to buy lottery tickets.
Are we to that point yet? No, I
don't think so. Will we get to that point? I don't know. The point is,
marketers and marketing technology are, and will continue to, make it harder
and harder to sift through all the noise so that we can form our own
perspective on things.
The challenge is to realize
something is fulfilling not because someone tells us it is, but because we
individually determine it is fulfilling. Does love really come in the form of
diamond earrings, which say "You love her and would marry her all over
again"? Does self worth and empowerment truly lie in owning a particular
automobile? I personally don't think so in either case, but don't listen to me
anymore than you would listen to the advertisement. You decide.
5. Be thankful for and leverage the
advantages that come from living in this country
We have some amazing opportunities
at our fingertips simply because we live in this country. Now, I don't know
about you, but all I did to get these opportunities was pop out of the womb in
what turned out to be a very fortuitous spot.
Do you know how much the average
college graduate in Myanmar (formerly Burma) makes? They make 10,000 Kat per
month. That is about $12.00 U.S. How about the average college graduate in
China? How much do you think they make per month? That number is 1500 Yuen,
which is just under $200.00 U.S.
Now salaries of that magnitude are
enough for those people to function in their country's respective economies. In
all likelihood though, those people will never be able to travel and see the
world. They just can't afford it. But we can. We have the financial benefit of
a strong currency compared to the majority of the world.
In this country we can get an
education, and we can go out and get a decent paying job. We think unemployment
is really getting bad when it hits 6%. In places in South Africa it is over
40%.
As a country we have our fair share
of problems. When you get outside the borders and travel to other places, you
see things that make the U.S. look like paradise. We have freedom. We can say
what we want, buy what we want, become what we want, travel where we want, and
for the most part the only thing we did to get all this, is pop out of the womb
in the right geographical area. We shouldn't take it for granted.
6. Look at the little picture, but
with a big perspective
People often say, look at the big
picture. I say look at the little picture, but with a big perspective.
Do you know what life is? Life is
actually a day multiplied by about 27,500. Sometimes it is less, hopefully
more, but usually around 27,500. The easiest way to make sure we have a life we
enjoy is to make sure that each day we do something we enjoy. I'm sure this
sounds simple to you. It took me decades to figure this out.
Doing something you enjoy each day
is an example of looking at the little picture. But keep in mind the big
perspective, which is what is your PFE? What is it that you want out of life?
Why are you here?
Here is an example of little picture
and big perspective. Do you do some form of work for at least 20 minutes each
weekday? Do you go to a job, work from home, something? How about this. Do you
wake up each weekday and stretch for at least 20 minutes?
Ok, different question. What is more
important to you, health or money? Would you permanently trade the ability to
walk up a flight of stairs in exchange for money? Would you permanently trade
the ability to take a bike ride along the beach, garden, lift up a grandchild,
play sports, or go fishing in exchange for money?
Then be careful about how you spend
your time each day, because making the decision to head off to work 20 minutes
early, or spending an extra 20 minutes at work, instead of taking 20 minutes
per day to stretch, is a slow version of trading those abilities.
We have a propensity as a society to
spend all kinds of time on other things, and when we are good and tired and
barely have the energy to say hello, then we go interact with those who mean
the most to us, or spend time on ourselves. This is the fast track to finding
yourself feeling like a complete stranger with the people who mean the most to
you, and yourself.
7. Seek out near life experiences
At the age of 28 I began to have
near life experiences. Have you heard the term near death experience? That is
when people survive a heart attack, or almost get hit by a car and they get
this tremendous sense of lucidness about how short life is and how they should
give some thought to how they really want to live it before they don't have a
life to live.
Well, at 28 I started to have those
revelations without the potential for a trip to the emergency room. I started
to have near life experiences.
Near life experiences are the times
when you are doing exactly what you want. You are enjoying life, you are having
the exact experience you want out of life, and because of that you feel truly
fulfilled with the life experience. Near life experiences (NLE's) can come from
something as simple as hugging your significant other or as complex as
achieving a particularly difficult goal you set for yourself. They come when
you are fulfilling your PFE.
When you are having a near life
experience, you are absolutely and completely happy. It is the most amazing
feeling in the world.
Find those moments for yourself and
figure out how to get more of them into your life every day. Experience so many
of them that you get to the point where you insist on having a life full of
them, a life where you fulfill your PFE.
Have them as soon as possible,
because the fantastic thing about experiences, especially near life
experiences, is that the sooner in your life you have them, the longer you have
to reap the benefits. What you learn at 20, 35, or 50 can be applied for a lot
more time and to a lot more situations than what you learn at 85. Even better,
the experiences build upon each other. Once the insights start coming, they
create this fantastic foundation of knowledge upon which everything else rests.
8. Choose your own metric of success
in life
When you have spent time in other
countries, and then you come back to the U.S., you realize just how strongly
our culture equates success with money. How much do you make? What kind of car
do you drive? How big is your house? These are all money based metrics.
If we choose that as our metric,
that's fine, just so long as we make sure that we chose it. And when we are
deciding what our metric will be, we should keep in mind that money is not the
only one. The amount of time we spend each day doing what we want, our degree
of fulfillment with life, how happy we are, how much love is in our life, and
many others, are also metrics for success in life.
Evaluate them closely because the
metrics we choose become the driving force for our actions.
9. Act like your life depends on
your decisions, because it does
Have you ever been in a discussion
where you were debating what to do, and someone said, "Well what would you
do if your life depended on it?" It really puts things in a different
perspective doesn't it? Now all of a sudden it is more important. MY LIFE
DEPENDS ON IT!!!
Well, in reality, our life depends
on the decisions we make every day. Whether or not we achieve and experience
what we want out of life is entirely dependent on our daily decisions.
Have you ever heard the term
"The Big Five"? The big five is something that you hear all the time
when you are on safari in Africa. It stands for rhino, elephant, buffalo,
leopard, and lion. People are always asking, "Have you seen the big five?
How many of the big five did you see? Where were the big five?"...
I think we should adopt this term
for our lives. The Big Five for Life will be the five things we absolutely want
to do, see, or experience in our life. The things that on our deathbeds, we
will look back on and go, yeah, I did my Big Five for Life.
Wouldn't that be a great
conversation starter? "Hi, I'm John, and you are?..." "Nice to
meet you. So, what's on your Big Five for Life list and how can I help you
fulfill them?"
Although they can be, items on the
Big Five for Life list don't have to be things that are one time events. For
example, number one on my list is to have a lifelong loving relationship with
my wife. It is something with a non-defined end date. As long as I am here, it
is on the list.
The reason I think this would be so
fantastic is because we often forget to act like our life depends on our
decisions. We get into a pattern and pretty soon we have all these reasons why
we can't go do the things we want.
Make your daily decisions as if your
life depends on it, because it does.
10. Choose to work on things you are
passionate about and you will always be passionate about what you are working
on
Here is a statistic you may find
shocking. It shocked me. In an average week, including the two days of the
weekend, a person will spend over 52% of their awake life either at work,
getting to work, or on work related activities at home.
Over half of our awake life is spent
on work. Now that is something to keep in mind when we are making decisions
about what type of work we want to do. "I am choosing to give half of my
life to the pursuit of whatever this job is."
If you are going to spend 52% of your awake life on work related items each week, you might as well choose to work on something you are passionate about. I know this can be challenging. We live in this interesting world where people value experience at something over much more important skills like aptitude, general intelligence, drive and many more pengeluaran togel terlengkap.
Nonetheless, think of it this way.
If there is something else that you have always wanted to do, but lack
experience in, every day you don't go do it is a day less of experience you
will have. You might as well get started right away.
John Strelecky is the international
best selling author of 'The Why Are You Here Café.' In its first 10 months his
book had sold in 14 countries and set the world record for the fastest sales on
all seven continents. Through his book, articles, speeches, and appearances on
television and radio, he has positively impacted the lives of millions of
people.
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