34 Things Every 22-Year-Old Should Know
December 31, 2013 â„ 12:13âŻAM â
Alhamdulillah.
22 ! No more teenage title, haha few years ago, perhaps. Alhamdulillah, praise to Allah, I'm still here standing and breathe the freshness of air and continue this journey happily.
It's time for me to change and move forward to be more tough and stronger. Life gonna be more complex and challenging, though. Many lesson learned in past, yet I still have to discover more about this life of wheel. All of the responsibilities, finding work, settling down, family.... yes, I need to be more professional.
Luckily, I found this one great article about "
34 Things Every 22 Year Old Should Know" by Andrew LaCivita (Jan 2013) on my birthday. Special thanks to him who gave me permission to share his article from his blog
here. Thank you very much. :)
So readers, let's start from now and good luck !
1) Treat every day as if itâs the first day of the rest of your life
or career. I donât care if itâs not Monday or January 1st. The
other six days of the week or 364 days of the year work too. This means
you get to box up all your so-called failures as if they never happened.
Unfortunately, this means you box up your successes too. The great news is that
both of these actually cause strain which you can now let go. Every day
technically is a new beginning.
2) Time is NOT money. Time is time. Money is money. Lose one and you
can earn it back. Lose the other and itâs gone forever. Does that sound like
theyâre equal?
3) âFive-yearâ plans have ruined more present moments than all other distractions
combined. Youâll be far better off with fifteen-minute plans.
Not only will you be more accurate a far greater percentage of the time, but
youâll also rarely be disappointed in the outcome because youâll have far fewer
variables go awry. Stay present. You can only live life to the
fullest in the moment. The past and future are mere distractions.
Enjoy the job you have today. Youâll be happier and itâs a nice stepping
stone for your future.
4) Learn how to say NO at the right times. The faster you learn
this, the more happy days youâll live and the more productive your workdays
will become. Trust me.
Over time youâll make lots of mistakes and âfailâ⊠but, trust me,
everything you want is on the other side of fear.
5) Youâll make a lot of mistakes in your life. Youâre better off
making those errors of commission rather than omission. When you look
back, youâll be much sorrier for the things you didnât do as opposed to those
you did. Along those same lines, it wonât matter much the choices you
make as much as it will the conviction in which you make them. Be committed to
everything you do. Take the job you want even if itâs ârisky.â
6) Technically, I donât believe there is any such thing as failure.
Sure, the word itself is in the dictionary, but Iâve never noticed one in my
life. Perhaps itâs because I donât believe in what I look at. I
believe in how I see it. Even so, Iâll play alongâŠthe embarrassment of
failure is way easier than the responsibility that comes with success. If
you think you canât, you wonât. If you think you can, you will. Even if
they donât succeed, winners still think they did. Itâs not delusional.
Itâs called mastering your psyche. Never be afraid to try to new things.
Everything you want is on the other side of fear.
7) There is no such thing as failureâpart two. The only
exception to this rule is trying to please everyone. You will certainly
fail at that. That rule is bulletproof. No exceptions.
All I need to do is pay attention and work hard and Iâll find the success
Iâm looking for. Right?
8) Open your eyes and stretch your ears. Something happens
every moment. When youâre talking itâs impossible to experience the
moment. Itâs as if your brain shuts off when your mouth is moving.
The only exception is screaming on the downslide of a rollercoaster ride.
9) I tend to notice two types of peopleâthose that are disciplined and
everyone else. 100% of the people in the first group eventually
become successful. Some of the people in the second group do as well.
Remember, what you do everyday matters more than what you do once in a
while. Promotions donât happen because of one big success.
10) Hard work doesnât guarantee results. Smart work increases
the likelihood of good results. Concentrate on what you do along the way
and embrace the journey with no attachment to the outcome. Youâll enjoy
yourself more and likely have better results. Youâll also avoid
disappointments that could result from faulty expectations. Technically
speaking, any outcome that didnât occur the way you thought it would means you
had faulty expectations. Faulty expectations arise for two reasonsâyou
canât see the future and you developed those expectations without all the
necessary information. Donât expect people to buy the best product. Donât
expect your boss to be fair. Donât expect life to be fair.
11) Intelligence is overrated. Talent is really overrated. You only
need three things to be successfulâPassion, Vision, and Commitment. Contrary to
what people think, youâre not born with passion. Itâs grown. Vision
isnât seeing into the future. Itâs making the future happen the way you
want it to. Commitment is the most important item. It makes up for
any shortcomings of the other two. Live every workday to the
fullest. When itâs over think about how itâs moving you toward where you
want to be. At any moment, donât be afraid to change your career.
12) You can have endless dreams, but not endless priorities.
Itâs a great lesson for life, love, and upward management of your boss.
13) School does not equal education. Going to school helps you earn a
degree. You know you have one when you can ethically place the letters after
your name such as Andy LaCivita B.S.er of Everything. If you have to pay
for someone to teach you somethingâanythingâthatâs not education. Thatâs paying
for a degree or certification or whatever. Real education occurs when you do
something you love for free or by the good graces of some employer and get paid
for it. No one can teach you more than you. No one can teach you more than you.
It was worth saying twice.
14) Own your stuff. Take accountability. The world would be an
easier place to live if everyone did so. The word âfaultâ could be eliminated
from the dictionary. Thatâd make me smile because then no one would be trying
to assign it when they should first look in the mirror.
People make the world go âround. Sometimes you need them and sometimes
you donât. But, all the time, watch who you befriendâŠ
15) You donât need a mentor. No one cares about your life or
your career more that you do. You can outsource a lot of things, but
living your life isnât one of them. Managing your career isnât one
either.
16) Leaders build more leaders, not more followers. âAâ players
hire and develop âAâ players. âBâ players hire and donât develop âCâ
players. Protecting your turf might last for a while, but when your reign
is over youâll be far less developed for surrounding yourself with less
talent. If youâre the smartest person in the room, go find another room.
17) Keep everyoneâs phone numberâeven the people you dislike.
They might be helpful someday. If given the choice between knowing the right
person or having your MBA, remember that friends hire friends before they hire
credentials.
18) Never treat your subordinates poorly. I assure you someday they
will be working at company youâre trying to get into. Itâs also possible that
someday youâll be reporting to one of them.
19) Hereâs an average for you. You become the average of the five
people you spend the most time withâespecially at work. Think about that.
Even if you did nothing I previously mentioned, staying true to your
instinct and keeping a positive outlook and attitude will set you in the right
directionâŠ
20) Apply the transitive property often. It will lead you to valuable
deductions such as The More Things You Have In Your Life = The More Upkeep =
More Stress AND Just Enough To Make You Happy > Never Satisfied = More Days
Youâll Live Happily. Another one of my favorites is The More Bells &
Whistles Your Product Has = The More Complicated It Is To Operate = The Less
People That Buy It.
21) Always listen to your inner voice. Itâs smart. Itâs
correct far more times than the external voices you hear. If the business
deal sounds bad, it likely is. If it sounds good, but feels bad, it
likely is bad too.
22) Everything is as itâs supposed to be. The sooner you accept
that, the happier youâll be. Everything that happens in your personal and
work life caused you to do certain thingsâfor good reason. Donât believe me?
Look back at your life or your career. I guarantee there is a pattern that
connects the dots. If youâre not happy with the pattern, there are two things
to consider. First, youâre probably not looking hard enough. Second, your
future is spotless.
23) The more people who tell you something is wrong, the more right you
probably are. The degree to which something is right for you usually is
inversely proportional to the number of people who tell you itâs not.
Itâs also easier to believe a lie youâve heard a thousand times than the truth
youâve heard once. Never hesitate to follow your instinct and create a
path for your life and career. If it feels like a bad idea in your gut,
it is. Thereâs also no need to confirm your gut with anyone else. Never feel
the need to subscribe to one of societyâs pre-canned menu options for life or
work. We only grow as a society when people choose to be different. Youâll
never grow as a person without doing the same.
24) You will be happy because of what you think not what happens to
you. If youâre conditionally happy, youâll have less happy days. My way, youâre
happy every day. Happy people accomplish more, learn more, and are more fun to
be around. Someone once asked me, âHow can you be so happy so often?â I said,
âBecause I always think Iâm happy.â Iâm always right about that.
25) Experience doesnât always lead to good judgmentâgathering all the
facts and making completely informed decisions does. Listening to anotherâs
experience before you attempt something can be helpful. But, remember, when
they did that something they did it without your one constant variableâYOU.
Applying the transitive property that I love, this means that you canât
experience anything without actually experiencing it yourself. What makes you think
the outcome would ever be the same when you insert yourself into the playerâs
seat? Different variables lead to different outcomesâbetter and worse.
26) Life isnât always fair. Over the long run, however, the universe
is incredibly balanced. Karma also has no deadline.
27) Patience is not a virtue. Itâs learned. Donât ever confused
patience with being worn down or not caring. Theyâre not the same.
28) Thereâs no shame in quitting. Winners do it all the time. They
just know the right time to move on. Itâs usually right before things turn
really sour. Itâs also never before theyâre about to a make a breakthrough. In
that sense, timing might not be everything, but winners sure know how to set a
clock.
29) You get back what you give off. Sending good things out into the
universe and building a bank of goodwill is better than any checking account
with a seven figure balance.
30) Comparison is a recipe for mediocrity. If your goal is to be
âbetter thanâ someone else or you grade life on a curve, youâll never reach
your true potential because youâll feel youâve reached it when youâve surpassed
someone. Usually that only means youâre leaving something on the table.
Comparison kills.
31) When giving or receiving advice, remember that advice is
typically a person speaking to his or her younger self. For example, it
took 30 items for me to realize my 46-year-old self is dispensing advice to my
long-gone 22-year-old self. Oh. And, remember, free advice doesnât cost you
anything until you act on it.
32) Question everything. Not in an insubordinate but an inquisitive
way. Once you know the âWhy,â youâve increased your chance of fixing the
problem by 87695%.
33) Nothing is original. Iâm sure anything Iâve just written has been
written or dispensed before. Everything that needs to be said has already been
said. We just need it repeated because no one was listening the first time. I
think that happens because of this recurring dream I keep having. Iâm driving
down a highway and see the big green town road sign on the right as I zip past.
The sign says, âWelcome To The Town of NO ONE CARESâŠPopulation 7 Billion.â
34) If you never try youâll never know. Not knowing is my biggest
fear. Only those willing to go too far can actually know how far they can truly
go. Life was meant to be lived. Donât wait until itâs too late to start.
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| My necklace, forever twenty-one :) | | |
Labels: 22, 34 Things Every 22-Year-Old Should Know, life journey
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