Listening to our personal little "advisors" ๐ Issue #57
Plus: Rules for a better life and better hot sauce.
Happy Friday๐
Whatโs up? ๐ผ๐ฟ
This week I was supposed to tell you about the third exercise of the Leadership Step by Step book, but I think I failed by not giving it a real try. You see, the third chapter is all about your inner monologue, the voice only you can hear, and often portrayed by a little angel and a little demon on Saturday-morning cartoons.
The book provides a little trick to help you identify what is, and what is not inner monologue:
Comparing your inner monologue with how you might answer โWhat are you thinking?โ helps clarify it. A typical answer like โIโm thinking about what to eatโ is what youโre thinking about rather than what youโre thinking. Your inner monologue is what youโre thinking at the word level. It goes more like this: โIโm hungry... wonder what Iโll eat. Is it 12:30 yet? Oh no, itโs only noon, itโs too early to eat now... but Iโm hungryโฆ. Man, Iโve been eating too much latelyโฆโ
The challenge for us is to be as aware as possible, and dare I say as little as needed, of that ongoing dialogue in order to:
understand when we are being led off the rails by it;
investigate our motives to see what we are really about;
The exercise was to write these inner dialogues a few times a day for some days. You would be able to compare what you โsaidโ in different situations and times of the day.
The reason, that Iโm convincing myself, why I didnโt do it is that every time I became aware of the monologue I immediately crashed the train of thought and reminded myself of this exercise. Like โIโm hungry... wonder what Iโll eatโฆ Wait! I should be writing this. Oh no!โ
The real reason, I suspect, is that this is too uncomfortable to complete. Itโs the mix of having something to write with at all times and that doesnโt distract you, with the weird feeling of writing what the tiny cartoons are saying.
In the end, I replaced the exercise with this tiny reflection about it. Hope itโs ok.
And now on to what were the best things I found on the Internet this week.
New to me ๐ก
100 Very Short Rules for a Better Life | 5 min read
๐ฏ A few great, non-obvious, ones: โPractice the art of negative visualization.โ, โBelief in yourself is overrated. Generate evidence.โ and โMake haste, slowly.โ.
How to build a great life (17 things Iโve learned)(Thread) | 5 min read
๐ Everyone can win every day if the goals are adjusted: โ13/ Baby steps + compounding apply to everything. Even the biggest of goals can be broken into a series of small steps. Play the long game, making small daily deposits & progress will add up faster than you think. Even on bad days, you'll take comfort in taking just 1 baby step.โ
Huy Fong's Sriracha hit revenue of $150m+ a year...with no sales team, no trademark and $0 in ad spend. (Thread) | 4 min read
๐ถ๏ธ Imagine buying a sketchy hot sauce from the back of a van of some random guy: โHe filled recycled baby jars and sold product out of a Blue Chevy Van, making $2.3k the first month.โ Think about that next time you think some idea doesnโt what it takes to work.
Please help me grow this newsletter! Iโd love if you shared it with your more curious friends.
A most motivating tweetย ๐
This week in a gif ๐บ
High note โก
This issue cover picture comes from here.
Last issue most clicked link was Why Tacit Knowledge is More Important Than Deliberate Practice
I hope you enjoyed these last minutes as much as me putting this together.
You can also show some love by clicking that tiny โค๏ธ at the top of the email. It would help spread the word. Or you can provide candy bars ๐ซ.
If you are one of those friends and someone shared this with you, you are in luck, buy them a beer next time you are together, and meanwhile, you can subscribe toย This Weekโs Worthย here:
Until next week,
Filipe