Lessons from David Brook’s “Life Reports” essays of people over 70
In October, NY Times op-ed columnist, David Brooks, put out a call for readers over 70 to send him essay reports of their life so far, what they did well or not so well, and lessons learned. Those essays have become this great collection of “Life Reports” in his column.
A few days ago, he topped off his column with a distillation of life lessons from these essays. Lots of good nuggets in there, many contrary to what we’ve been taught as children.
Divide your life into chapters. The unhappiest of my correspondents saw time as an unbroken flow, with themselves as corks bobbing on top of it. A man named Neil lamented that he had been “an Eeyore not a Tigger; a pessimist, not an optimist; an aimless grasshopper, not a purposeful ant; a dreamer, not a doer; a nomad, not a settler; a voyager, not an adventurer; a spectator, not an actor, player or participant.” He concluded: “Neil never amounted to anything.”
The happier ones divided time into (somewhat artificial) phases. They wrote things like: There were six crucial decisions in my life. Then they organized their lives around those pivot points. By seeing time as something divisible into chunks, they could more easily stop and self-appraise. They had more control over their fate.
Beware rumination. There were many long, detailed essays by people who are experts at self-examination. They could finely calibrate each passing emotion. But these people often did not lead the happiest or most fulfilling lives. It’s not only that they were driven to introspection by bad events. Through self-obsession, they seemed to reinforce the very emotions, thoughts and habits they were trying to escape.
Many of the most impressive people, on the other hand, were strategic self-deceivers. When something bad was done to them, they forgot it, forgave it or were grateful for it. When it comes to self-narratives, honesty may not be the best policy.
You can’t control other people. David Leshan made an observation that was echoed by many: “It took me twenty years of my fifty-year marriage to discover how unwise it was to attempt to remake my wife. … I learned also that neither could I remake my friends or students.”
On the other hand, some of the most inspiring stories were about stepparents who came into families and wisely bided their time, accepting slights and insults until they were gradually accepted by their new children.
Lean toward risk. It’s trite, but apparently true. Many more seniors regret the risks they didn’t take than regret the ones they did.
Measure people by their growth rate, not by their talents. The best essays were by people who made steady progress each decade. Regina Titus grew up shy and sheltered on Long Island. She took demeaning clerical jobs, working with people who treated her poorly. Her first husband died after six months of marriage and her second committed suicide.
But she just kept growing. At 56, studying nights and weekends, she obtained a college degree, cum laude, from Marymount Manhattan College. She moved to Wilmington, Del., works as a docent, studies opera, hikes, volunteers and does a thousand other things. She acknowledges, “I did not have the joy of holding my baby in my arms. I did not have a long and happy marriage.” But hers is a story of relentless self-expansion. I wonder how we can measure that capacity.
Be aware of the generational bias. Many of the essayists have ambivalent attitudes toward their parents. Almost all have worshipful attitudes toward their children. I’m not sure how to explain this pattern, but I don’t think it’s pure egotism. Many writers mentioned that given their own flaws, they are astounded that their kids turned out so well.
Work within institutions or crafts, not outside them. For a time, our culture celebrated the rebel and the outsider. The most miserable of my correspondents fit this mold. They were forever in revolt against the world and ended up sourly achieving little.
People get better at the art of living. By their 60s many contributors found their zone. Metaphysics is dead; very few of the writers hewed to a specific theology or had any definite conception of a divine order, though vague but uplifting spiritual experiences pepper their reflections.
It’s OK to move on. We are told to live for others. But one savvy retiree writes, “Don’t stay with people who, over time, grow apart from you. Move on. This means do what you think will make you feel okay — even if that makes others feel temporarily not okay.”
(via Jay Parkinson)
Source: The New York Times
Neat Tricks to Learn About Your Body
- If your throat tickles, scratch your ear.
“When the nerves in the ear are stimulated, it creates a reflex in the throat that can cause a muscle spasm… This spasm relieves the tickle.” - Your right ear is better than your left at following the rapid rhythms of speech (good tip for spies!) The left ear is better at picking up music tones.
- Feel no pain
Coughing during an injection can lessen the pain of the needle stick. - Clear your stuffed nose
Forget Sudafed. An easier way is by alternately thrusting your tongue against the roof of your mouth, then pressing between your eyebrows with one finger. - Cure your toothache without opening your mouth
Just rub ice on the back of your hand, on the V-shaped webbed area between your thumb and index finger… reduces toothache pain by as much as 50 percent - Make your heart stand still
Trying to quell first-date jitters? Blow on your thumb. The vagus nerve, which governs heart rate, can be controlled through breathing… It’ll get your heart rate back to normal. - If your hand falls asleep while you’re driving or sitting in an odd position, rock your head from side to side. It’ll painlessly banish your pins and needles in less than a minute.
Reminds me of a trick I read that physicians use. When they confront a patient who is possibly faking deafness, there’s a test that can confirm or deny deafness. Stand near the patient and drop a quarter onto the floor. A hearing person will involuntarily twitch.
(via sporkorfoon via stupidinboston via livesophia vua lickystickypicky)
Source: lickypickystickyfree
16 Things that Took Me Over 50 Years to Learn
by Dave Barry, columnist and author
- Never, under any circumstances, take a sleeping pill and a laxative on the same night.
- If you had to identify, in one word, the reason why the human race has not achieved, and never will achieve, its full potential, that word would be ‘meetings.’
- There is a very fine line between ‘hobby’ and ‘mental illness.’
- People who want to share their religious views with you almost never want you to share yours with them.
- You should not confuse your career with your life.
- Nobody cares if you can’t dance well. Just get up and dance.
- Never lick a steak knife.
- The most destructive force in the universe is gossip.
- You will never find anybody who can give you a clear and compelling reason why we observe daylight savings time.
- You should never say anything to a woman that even remotely suggests that you think she’s pregnant unless you can see an actual baby emerging from her at that moment.
- There comes a time when you should stop expecting other people to make a big deal about your birthday. That time is age eleven.
- The one thing that unites all human beings, regardless of age, gender, religion, economic status or ethnic background, is that, deep down inside, we ALL believe that we are above average drivers.
- A person, who is nice to you, but rude to a waiter, is not a nice person. (This is very important. Pay attention. It never fails.)
- Your friends love you anyway.
- Never be afraid to try something new. Remember that a lone amateur built the Ark. A large group of professionals built the Titanic.
- Thought for the day: Men are like fine wine. They start out as grapes, and it’s up to the women to stomp the crap out of them until they turn into something acceptable to have dinner with.
(via thillythenny via spacelola)
Source: rachelc
Here’s a bootstrapper’s/marketer’s/entrepreneur’s/fast-rising executive’s effort diet. Go through the list and decide whether or not it’s worth it. Or make up your own diet. Effort is a choice, at least make it on purpose:
- Delete 120 minutes a day of ‘spare time’ from your life. This can include TV, reading the newspaper, commuting, wasting time in social networks and meetings. Up to you.
- Spend the 120 minutes doing this instead:
- Exercise for thirty minutes.
- Read relevant non-fiction (trade magazines, journals, business books, blogs, etc.)
- Send three thank you notes.
- Learn new digital techniques (spreadsheet macros, Firefox shortcuts, productivity tools, graphic design, html coding)
- Volunteer.
- Blog for five minutes about something you learned.
- Give a speech once a month about something you don’t currently know a lot about.
- Spend at least one weekend day doing absolutely nothing but being with people you love.
- Only spend money, for one year, on things you absolutely need to get by. Save the rest, relentlessly.
If you somehow pulled this off, then six months from now, you would be the fittest, best rested, most intelligent, best funded and motivated person in your office or your field. You would know how to do things other people don’t, you’d have a wider network and you’d be more focused.
from Seth Godin: Is Effort a Myth?
(via superamit)
Source: superamit
Popular Mechanics’ 100 Skills Every Man Should Know
- Handle a blowout
- Drive in snow
- Check trouble codes
- Replace fan belt
- Wax a car
- Conquer an off-road obstacle
- Use a stick welder
- Hitch up a trailer
- Jumpstart a car
- Perform the Heimlich
- Reverse hypothermia
- Perform hands-only CPR
- Escape a sinking car
- Carve a turkey
- Use a sewing machine
- Put out a fire
- Home brew beer
- Remove bloodstains from fabric
- Move heavy stuff
- Grow food
- Read an electric meter
- Shovel the right way
- Solder wire
- Tape drywall
- Split firewood
- Replace a faucet washer
- Mix concrete
- Paint a straight line
- Use a French knife
- Prune bushes and small trees
- Iron a shirt
- Fix a toilet tank flapper
- Change a single-pole switch
- Fell a tree
- Replace a broken windowpane
- Set up a ladder, safely
- Fix a faucet cartridge
- Sweat copper tubing
- Change a diaper
- Grill with charcoal
- Sew a button on a shirt
- Fold the flag
- Treat frostbite
- Treat a burn
- Help a seizure victim
- Treat a snakebite
- Remove a tick
- Shine shoes
- Make a drum-tight bed
- Drop and give the perfect pushup
- Run rapids in a canoe
- Hang food in the wild
- Skipper a boat
- Shoot straight
- Tackle steep drops on a mountain bike
- Escape a rip current
- Build a fire in the wilderness
- Build a shelter
- Find potable water
- Survive floods
- Survive tornados
- Survive extreme cold
- Survive extreme heat
- Avoid Lightning
- Teach your kids to cast a line
- Teach your kids to lend a hand
- Teach your kids to change a tire
- Teach your kids to throw a spiral
- Teach your kids to fly a stunt kite
- Teach your kids to drive a stick shift
- Teach your kids to parallel park
- Teach your kids to tie a bowline
- Teach your kids to tie a necktie
- Teach your kids to whittle
- Teach your kids to ride a bike
- Install a graphics card
- Take the perfect portrait
- Calibrate HDTV settings
- Shoot a home movie
- Ditch your hard drive
- Master the Drill driver
- Master the grease gun
- Master the coolant hydrometer
- Master the socket wrench
- Master the test light
- Master the brick trowel
- Master the framing hammer
- Master the wood chisel
- Master the spade bit
- Master the circular saw
- Master the sledgehammer
- Master the hacksaw
- Master the torque wrench
- Master the air wrench
- Master the infrared thermometer
- Master the sandblaster
- Master the crosscut saw
- Master the hand plane
- Master the multimeter
- Master the feeler gauges
(via popularmechanics.com)
Pattern Tap organizes collections of similar UI elements (and lets you create your own sets as well). Awesome!
This website just made the Smashing Magazine blog obselete.
(via gtmcknight)
Source: gtmcknight
Table listing the recurring elements from each Coen Brothers' movie
- An overwhelmed hero
- The double-cross
- Overbearing authority figures
- A relentless villain who embodies fate
- Stolen goods and/or people
- Bad hair!
- Unlikely weapons
Great friends are people who…
- Remember your preferences for food/drink stuff and always make your coffee the way you like it
- Send you little fun stuff in the mail for no reason
- Remember things that are going on in your life and ask you about them
- Have some magic ability to give advice when you want it and not when you don’t
- Adjust to your level of feeling like you need a friend so if you’re in a bad place, they’re helpful and available, and if you’re busy they’re not overly needily trying to get some of your time
- Have their own lives and friends that enrich yours
- Don’t talk smack about all their other friends making you wonder if they talk that way about you when you’re not around
- Introduce you to other people they think you might like, but also make time to spend time with you one on one
- Have a general sense of your family situation and may ask about it without being obtrusive or stalkery
- Say nice things for no reason. One of my minor adjustments for me trying to be a good friend is to make a real effort to compliment and also accept compliments gracefully
- Don’t dredge up old bad situations and go over them endlessly. Good friends forgive or at least pretend to forget.
- Turn the heat up when you are visiting
- Are good talkers and listeners and are decent at adjusting when you are feeling like you need to be more one way than the other
- Are proud of you and your accomplishments and say so
- Don’t always expect 1:1 reciprocation for everything and don’t put you “on the clock” as soon as you ask a question or need advice in their professional specialty
- Do things that require effort sometimes like give rides to the airport or helping move
- Try to say yes instead of saying no, but can say no without it making you feel bad
- Introduce you to new things without pushing you way outside your comfort zone [unless that’s the sort of thing you like]
- Can just hang out without there always being some sort of planned activity
(via jessamyn at MetaFilter)
A list of the names of the gangs of London
A lot of these would make fine names for bands or your Tuesday night pub trivia team.
- Cromer Street Massive
- N9 Chopstiks Gang
- Legends of Stokie
- Cheez Gang
- NorthSide Chuggy Chix
(via themorningnews.org)
To Everyone Entering College This Fall
Tips that I’ve learned:
- College is a chance to reinvent yourself. Do things you normally wouldn’t and see how it works out. There’s some parts of yourself you can’t change overnight, but there are clever workarounds. Nobody knows or cares about what you did in high-school, so put the letter jacket into storage for the next few years.
- Have an elevator-pitch about yourself; it doesn’t even have to be that cool. I’m the “Philosophy Major Res Hall Dude”. But be aware of how that defines you and consciously subvert it. Don’t turn it into an obnoxious schtick.
- Find a diverse bunch of amazing people and hang out with them. Of course, the trick is for them to find you interesting in some way as well so that they’ll agree to do the same. That’s where #1 and #2 come in. Being around incredible people means that some of their awesomeness rubs off on you. That’s a GOOD THING.
- Once you’ve made friends, make more friends by introducing them to your friends. People in college are lonelier than you’d think, and they’ll be grateful for being introduced to others. Figure out your friends’ elevator-pitches to make this easier.
- Campuses have the wackiest activities. DO THEM. K-State has a parachute club that I joined to skydive a few times my freshman year. It’s crazy fun that I couldn’t have had in high-school, and makes for a great anecdote to share with others later.
- You will probably have a crazy roommate sometime over the course of your college experience. Mine that experience for some good crazy roommate stories.
- When in doubt on a small-talk topic, default to bitching about the campus newspaper. It’s the “So how about that weather?” of our generation.
- Nobody really knows what they’re doing, so don’t be scared when you don’t.
Brilliant advice. I’ll be sending this to my cousin who starts college in fall.
Source: gregbrown
Esquire's 75 Things Every Man Should Do
Here’s my favorites from the list:
- Make a list of seventy-five things you to do before you die.
- Drive the Great Ocean Road in Australia. Or the Pacific Coast Highway.
- Make a perfect omelet.
- Recognize the accomplishments of others.
- Cultivate a reputation.
- Carry a totem in your pocket. A watch, a badge, a medal, a poker chip, a silver certificate — for one year. Then give it away.
- Help someone dig out.
- Live outside the homeland.
- Choose a word or phrase and actively work to never use it again.
- Eat mussels in Bruges. One of my favorite foods.
- Cook the same thing over and over again until you are known for it. The hardest part is picking something that’s versatile yet memorable. Stews, roasts, and comfort foods would work well.
- Get very good at a sport that isn’t a sport. Discuss this with no one. Use it when the time comes. Rest assured, the time will come. When it does, don’t take over, don’t push others around. Just execute and dominate.
- Write someone else’s life story without mentioning yourself. Makes a pretty good gift.
- Sell everything you don’t need once.
- Take a vow. Keep it. Whatever you choose, it should be hard and it should be obvious. Measure your own habits carefully; a good vow should put you in deep tension with them.
- Eat a six-course meal that you prepared.
- Spend some time working for tips.
- Make a movie, even a short one.
- Make beer, wine, or moonshine.
- Pull something off the street or the dump and fix it up.
- Sleep outside for a week. Backcountry or back porch. Keep the electronics at home or turned off.
- Go to Paris. Tell no one where you are. Stay there for two weeks. Paris is pricey nowadays but I think this would be applicable to anywhere in South America, lesser-traveled Europe, and Asia.
Roundup of Avatar Tools
- Face Your Manga
- South Park
- The Simpsons
- Wild Zoo Creature by NY Zoo and Aquariums
Any I missed?
Jason Calacanis' Guide to Presenting a New Company or Product
- Show your product within the first 60 seconds. Don’t spend five or ten minutes “setting the stage” or “giving the background.” If you don’t have a product to show. don’t take the meeting.
- Take less than five minutes to demo. All the tiny little features, you don’t have to show them. Larry and Sergey wouldn’t open up the advanced search .
- Leave people wanting more. It’s up to you to make such a compelling core product that they are intrigued enough to explore it.
- Talk about what you’ve done, not what you’re going to do. Steve Jobs doesn’t waste time on what Apple’s going to do. Weak startup leaders immediately start talk about “what’s next.” What really matters is the core functionality.
- Understand your competitive landscape—current and historical I’ve had three or four companies pitch me on [products that unknowingly re-implemented] Third Voice—the controversial “Web annotation” service from Web 1.0.
- Short answers are best. Answer questions with the most concise answer. [Then stop talking!]
- PowerPoint bullet slides are death. Slides that are not boring include charts, product shots, feature set tables and the like.
- How to use this new device called the phone. When presenting over the phone use a handset and a land-line only! Mobile phones and speakerphones sound horrible, disrespectful.
- How to handle questions you don’t know the answer to. No one has an answer for everything, except b.s. artists. Feel free to say you don’t know.
- Always confirm the time of your meeting/call, and always be 15 minutes early. [Start off on the right foot.] Send a simple email saying “Looking forward to seeing you tomorrow at your offices at 123 Main Street at 3pm. If anything changes you can reach me on my mobile at 310-555-1212.” Show respect by being in their lobby or on hold on the conference call five to 15 minutes ahead of time.
French molecular gastronomist, Hervé This' "10 Elements of Basic Kitchen Knowledge"
- Salt dissolves in water.
- Salt does not dissolve in oil.
- Oil does not dissolve in water.
- Water boils at 100 C (212 F).
- Generally foods contain mostly water (or another fluid).
- Foods without water or fluid are tough.
- Some proteins (in eggs, meat, fish) coagulate.
- Collagen dissolves in water at temperatures higher than 55 C (131 F).
- Dishes are dispersed systems (combinations of gas, liquid or solid ingredients transformed by cooking).
- Some chemical processes - such as the Maillard Reaction (browning or caramelizing) - generate new flavors.
(via kottke.org)
Stefan Sagmeister’s 20 maxims
- Helping other people helps me.
- Having guts always works out for me.
- Thinking that life will be better in the future is stupid. I have to live now.
- Organising a charity group is surprisingly easy.
- Being not truthful always works against me.
- Everything I do always comes back to me.
- Assuming is stifling.
- Drugs feel great in the beginning and become a drag later on.
- Over time I get used to everything and start taking for granted.
- Money does not make me happy.
- My dreams have no meaning.
- Keeping a diary supports personal development.
- Trying to look good limits my life.
- Material luxuries are best enjoyed in small doses.
- Worrying solves nothing.
- Complaining is silly. Either act or forget.
- Everybody thinks they are right.
- If I want to explore a new direction professionally, it is helpful to try it out for myself first.
- Low expectations are a good strategy.
- Everybody who is honest is interesting.
