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Beating Yesterday

Public • 16 • Free

4 contributions to Beating Yesterday
Novel New Year’s Strategy Part 1 (Project Spark)
I am working on a couple strategies for improving how we approach New Year’s resolutions. There’s more to come, but here’s where we begin: You want to create better habits. It’s New Year’s, and you want to start something new. You know most New Year’s resolutions fail within weeks. Change is hard. There’s resistance. There’s effort required. How do we make it easier to get the ball rolling? Momentum is everything. Pick something extremely small and trivial. Something you have are so confident in your ability to do that it might sound embarrassing to tell people. It’s the first step in your New Year’s plan. It could be something like brushing your teeth twice a day, taking your vitamins, deleting Netflix, etc. Very small, very achievable. Now we take this and we make a contract to do it consistently for two weeks. 14 days. Less than 4% of the year. Anyone can do something once, but change takes place when habits are formed. The purpose of this exercise is to demonstrate to yourself that you have the capacity for discipline. To be consistent. To make change. It’s like a warm-up. A stretch before a workout. If you tried to set a PR as your first set of the day, you'd know it's a terrible idea. You'd either get hurt or fail. So don’t try to enact and elaborate New Year’s resolution that requires discipline planning before you stretch that muscle. Finish the two weeks by whatever means necessary. Timers, phone reminders, sticky notes. During that time, feel how a habit forms, what conscious and concentrated effort feels like, and how good it feels to do hard things. Then we can start on the real shit. Comment below what you guys are choosing as your spark. Mine is deleting my personal Instagram profile off of my phone!
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New comment 9d ago
Novel New Year’s Strategy Part 1 (Project Spark)
1 like • 9d
Instagram also gone! Going social media free for January and then evaluate after the month to see if its something I even want to bring back! Instagram was my last form of social media so it should be very achievable.
The Alchemist by Paulo Coehho
This is one of my favorite books of all time. I've read it once so far, but I think it will be great to revisit. It is great for people who are searching for challenge or adventure in life, but who are afraid to leave the safety of normalcy. The symbolism creates the magic of the story itself, but leaves the reader with the feeling of courage and inspiration to take on the world. Has anybody else read The Alchemist, and if so what did you think? I am considering doing in depth video book reviews of some of my favorites, from personal finance to fiction. Let me know if you guys would find this helpful, and feel free to request book reviews for your favorites!
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New comment 22d ago
The Alchemist by Paulo Coehho
1 like • 23d
This book was given to me at the beginning of 2024 by Jordan himself as he sensed it was something up my alley. 11 months later, I have read it twice and listened to it once. It is an easy read so it can just work its way into and out of your book stack quickly. There is no piece of literature that has had a greater impact on how I view the world (48 Law of Power a close 2nd). I have recommended this book to countless people in the past year throughout travels and everyday life as well as gifted two copies to different friends. This will forever remain in the rotation - thank you Jordan
Random Wisdom
A quote that was dropped on me from a customer when I told him the reason I hadn't returned his call in over a week was because I was doing a solo travel adventure. His first and only text back reads: "Not till we are lost, in other words, not till we have lost the world, do we begin to realize where we are and the infinite extend of our relations". Something to chew on -Henry David Thoreau -Robert from DANNAR "
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New comment 22d ago
2025
We’re getting to that time of year where everyone starts saying they’re going to lose 20 lbs or quit sugar or read 20 books next year. Those are resolutions, and without specificity they are statistically likely to fail. I’m making 2025 plans… A map of what outcomes I’m aiming for and how I’ll make them happen. I’m going to spend a few hours at a coffee shop tomorrow and put pen to paper. I’m curious to know what everyone is aiming for next year… what plans are you making?
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New comment 22d ago
2 likes • 23d
Spiritual, physical, financial. In that order
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Justin Lego
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13points to level up
@justin-lego-9771
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Active 2d ago
Joined Nov 18, 2024
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