Life is tricky and sometimes you need to learn the tricks to manage it
Dr. Travis Bradberry is a
fantastic writer and an inspirational teacher. If you want to improve your life
buy his most popular books and spent some time reading it and making some
changes in your life. Recently I read in one of his articles in which he
describes some pinpointed approaches to improve one’s life.
He starts his article with Hans
Christian Andersen’s fable The
Red Shoes, where a young girl longs for a pair of pretty red shoes.
She ultimately tricks the blind woman who cares for her into buying her a pair.
Her love for the red shoes causes her to give them priority over the more
important things in her life, and, as often happens in fables, karma is not on
her side. The shoes become firmly stuck to her feet and force her to dance
non-stop, to the point where she almost dies from exhaustion and starvation.
Bradberry mentions that we may scoff at the little girl’s
foolishness, but, in real life, we often do the same thing—we chase after the
things that we think will make us happy and don’t realize
that we’re heading down a dangerous path.
He talks about a study that found, the people who experience the
greatest job satisfaction aren’t the ones in the big, fancy offices; they’re
the ones who approach their work as a calling, even when that work involves
menial labor.
Another study found that simply seeing fast-food logos makes
people impatient. It’s not that there’s some intrinsic characteristic of fast
food that makes people impatient; it’s the habits we’ve come to associate with
fast food, such as always being on the run, eating on the go, and never slowing
down enough to enjoy a healthy meal, that bring out our impatience.
According to him we have to be very careful in choosing our
pursuits, because our habits make us. Cultivating the habits that follow will
send you in the right direction. They’ll help you to lead a more meaningful and
fulfilling life, whereby you cultivate the best within yourself.
The following are the ten
points that he suggests to improve one’s life:
1. Stay away from people who
erode your quality of life. If merely seeing a logo
for a fast-food company can make you feel impatient, just think how much more
impact a toxic person can have on your life. They might be unhappy about your
decision to stay away from them, and they might tell you very loudly just how
unhappy they are, but isn’t avoiding them worth the cumulative effects of years
of their negative influence? There are always going to be toxic people who have
a way of getting under your skin and staying there. Each time you find yourself
thinking about a coworker or person who makes your blood boil, practice being
grateful for someone else in your life instead. There are plenty of people out
there who deserve your attention, and the last thing you want to do is think
about the people who don’t matter.
2. No more phone, tablet, or
computer in bed. This is a big one, which
most people don’t even realize harms their sleep and productivity.
Short-wavelength blue light plays an important role in determining your mood,
energy level, and sleep quality. In the morning, sunlight contains high
concentrations of this blue light. When your eyes are exposed to it directly,
it halts production of the sleep-inducing hormone melatonin and makes you feel
alert. In the afternoon, the sun’s rays lose their blue light, which allows
your body to produce melatonin and this starts making you sleepy. By the
evening, your brain doesn’t expect any blue light exposure and is very sensitive
to it. Most of our favorite evening devices—laptops, tablets, and mobile
phones—emit short-wavelength blue light brightly and right in your face. This
exposure impairs melatonin production and interferes with your ability to fall
asleep, as well as with the quality of your sleep once you do nod off. As we’ve
all experienced, poor nights’ sleep has disastrous effects. The best thing you
can do is to avoid these devices after dinner (television is OK for most
people, as long as they sit far enough away from the set).
3. Appreciate the here and now. Gratitude is fundamental to peace and happiness—not wealth,
glamour, adventure, or fast cars, but simple appreciation for what you have.
Just because you can’t afford champagne and caviar doesn’t mean that you never
enjoy a meal. Hot dogs and beer on the back deck with your friends taste just
as good. So, don’t fool yourself into thinking that you need something that you
don’t currently have in order to be happy, because the truth is that if you
can’t appreciate what you have now, you won’t be able to appreciate the “good
life” if you ever get it.
4. Realize that things aren’t
always as you perceive them to be. This goes along with appreciating the here and now. That person
you envy because they seem to have the perfect life might be dealing with all
kinds of problems behind closed doors. That “perfection” could be a total
mirage. Your employer’s decision to move the office might seem like a huge
hassle when you first hear about it, but it could end up being one of the best
things that ever happens to you. You’re not omniscient and you’re not a
fortune-teller, so be open to the possibility that life might have some
surprises in store, because what you see is not always what you get.
5. Get started, even though you
might fail. Most writers spend
countless hours brainstorming their characters and plots, and they even write
page after page that they know they’ll never include in the books. They do this
because they know that ideas need
time to develop. We tend to freeze up when it’s time to get started because we
know that our ideas aren’t perfect and that what we produce might not be any
good. But how can you ever produce something great if you don’t get started and
give your ideas time to evolve? Author Jodi Picoult summarized the importance
of avoiding perfectionism perfectly: “You can edit a bad page, but you can’t
edit a blank page.”
6. Get organized. People joke about new ideas being in short supply, but I think
that the one resource that’s really scarce is spare time. Do you know anybody
who has some? Yet we waste so much of it by not being organized. We touch
things two or three times before we do something with them (like tossing the
mail down on the counter then moving it to the table so we can cook dinner) and
once we’ve put them away, we spend even more time looking for them. Have a
place for all of those little things you need to take care of when you get a
minute, whether it’s your child’s permission slip for a field trip or an
overdue bill, and then get to them in a timely manner; otherwise you’ll be
searching through a huge stack of stuff for the one thing you need.
7. Start a collection of the
things that truly resonate with you. Have you ever come across a quote or a meme that so perfectly summed up
your feelings that you wanted to keep it forever? You know that it’s in one of
those coats you wore five winters ago, and you really hope it’s not the one you
gave to Goodwill. When you come across something that resonates with
you—whether it’s something that expresses who you are or who you want to
be—have a central place to keep those gems. It doesn’t matter whether it’s a
spiral notebook, a leather binder, or a folder on Evernote, have a place to
collect the things that matter so that you can revisit them regularly.
8. Do something that reminds
you who you are. We all joke about having
“me” time, but what is that, really? It’s making time for those activities that
we feel most authentically ourselves doing, when all the masks are off and we
can just be. Whether it’s going for a run or dancing around with your 80s
favorites blaring at top volume, make time for those moments. They’re
incredibly rejuvenating.
9. Say no. Research conducted at the University of
California in Berkeley shows that the more difficulty that you have saying no,
the more likely you are to experience stress, burnout, and even depression, all
of which erode self-control. Saying no is indeed a major self-control challenge
for many people. “No” is a powerful word that you should not be afraid to
wield. When it’s time to say no, emotionally intelligent people avoid phrases
like “I don’t think I can” or “I’m not certain.” Saying no to a new commitment
honors your existing commitments and gives you the opportunity to successfully
fulfill them. Just remind yourself that saying no is an act of self-control now
that will increase your future self-control by preventing the negative effects
of over commitment.
10. Stick to realistic goals. How many people start January by proclaiming, “I’m going to lose
30 pounds by March!”? Big, scary, crazy goals can be incredibly inspiring—until
you fall short, and then, instead of inspiration, you’re left with
disappointment and guilt. I’m certainly not suggesting that you stop setting
goals that push and challenge you, just that you try to stick within the bounds
of reality.
As a conclusion, he tells us
that our character is determined by our attitude and how we spend our time, and
so is happiness. Stop chasing the things that we think will make us happy, and
start realizing that our peace and happiness are entirely up to us.
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