I literally just copy pasted this off a twitter thread. LOL!
- Be quiet, work hard, and stay healthy. It’s not ambition or skill that is going to set you apart but sanity.
- The thing that’s wrong about imposter syndrome is that for
the most part, no one is thinking about you at all. They’re too busy with their
own doubts and their own work.
- Find canvases for other people to paint on.
Come up with ideas to hand over to your boss. Find what nobody else wants to do
and do it. Find inefficiency, waste, and redundancies. The person who clears the
path controls its direction, just as the canvas shapes the painting.
- Very rarely have I ever let anyone go because
they did not have the skills to do their job. It’s almost always their
unwillingness to learn those skills or their inability to take feedback.
- The boss/mentor/biz can’t want you to succeed
more than you want it. You have to be the driver of your own
life/career/advancement.
- When you’re lacking motivation, remind
yourself: discipline now, freedom later. The labor will pass, and the rewards
will last.
- Lengthen your timeline. Opening my bookstore,
The Painted Porch (delayed a year by COVID) taught me that it always takes
longer than you think it’s going to take. That’s Hofstadter’s law. And even
when you take the law into account, you’re still surprised.
- All success is a lagging indicator… all the good stuff
(and bad stuff) is downstream from choices made long before.
- Lyndon Johnson said that the way to get
things done was to get close to those who are at the center of things.
- @RobertGreene's metaphor for mastery is being on the inside
of something.When we start a new job, we’re on the outside. As we put in the
work, familiarize ourselves with every component, develop our intuitive field,
we make our way inside.
- Focus on effort, not outcomes. Just try to
make contact with the ball. Give your best effort, make contact with the ball.
Let the rest take care of itself.
- I’ve learned the hard way that almost all my
mistakes and regrets come from not listening to my wife from the beginning. You
have to learn who knows you better than you know yourself, and you have to be
able to trust and defer to them.
- The trope that a day job takes away from your
art or your hustle is stupid. I wrote 3.5 books while I was at American
Apparel. I started my own marketing company while I was a writer. I have my
bookstore. A job for someone coming up is like a trust fund you’ve earned.
- When you’re building a business,
salaries/staff can feel expensive. But if you succeed, you’ll regret giving up
equity so cheaply.
- There's a story about an exchange between
Jerry Seinfeld and a young comedian. The comedian approaches Seinfeld and asks
him for advice about marketing and exposure. Exposure? Marketing? Seinfeld
asks. Just work on your act. Your work is the only thing that matters.
- Talking about what you’re going to do makes
you a lot less likely to actually do it. Keep your plans to yourself.
- From Peter Thiel: “Competition is for
losers.” When people compete, somebody loses. So go where you’re the only one.
Do what only you can do. Run a race with yourself.
- The idea of “F*ck Yes…or No” is far too
simple and has caused me quite a lot of grief. Dropping out of college, I was
maybe 51/49 on it. Leaving my corporate job to become a writer, maybe 60/40.
The certainty comes later. The truly life-changing decisions are never simple.
- If you can afford to, delegate it. If you
can’t yet afford to, automate it. Time is the most precious resource.
- If it makes you a worse person, it’s not
success. If starting a business tears your relationships apart, makes you
bitter or frustrated with people—then it doesn’t matter how much money it makes
or external praise it receives. That's not success.
- Be patient—evaluate later. The thing about
leveling up in your career is that you really only realize that it happened in
retrospect. Don’t kick yourself now because you think you’re stuck. You might
be the opposite of stuck and just not know it.
- Having now been in pro locker rooms and
boardrooms and briefing rooms with special forces operators and the Senate
dining room—all very different worlds—they’re all basically thinking about the
same core mental skill: Resilience. Creativity. Focus. Collaboration.
- A friend of mine just left a very important job that a lot of people would kill for. When he left I said, “If you can’t walk away, then you don’t have the job…the job has you.”

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