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Scott Adams on How to Properly Manage Your Priorities in Life
#1

Scott Adams on How to Properly Manage Your Priorities in Life

This passage from Scott Adam's "How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big" really struck a chord with me. I mean, there are so many choice quotes I could pull from this book (read it if you haven't already).

In this chapter, he goes on to discuss how your priorities in life should be organized (note that I typed it out, so any typos are probably mine).

Quote:Quote:

It's useful to think of your priorities in terms of concentric circles, like an archery target. In the center is your highest priority: you. If you ruin yourself, you won't be able to work on any other priorities. So taking care of your health is job one.

The next ring - and your second-biggest priority - is economics. That includes your job, your investments, and even your house. You might wince at the fact that I put economics ahead of your family, your friends, and the rest of the world, but there's a reason. If you don't get your personal financial engine working right, you place a burden on everyone from your family to the country.

Once you are both healthy and financially sound, it's time for the third ring: family, friends, and lovers. Good health and sufficient money are necessary for a base level of happiness, but you need to be right with your family, friends, and romantic partners to truly enjoy life.

The next rings are your local community, your country, and the world, in that order. Don't bother trying to fix the world until you get the inner circles of your priorities under control.

He goes on to admit how these are all interwined, so the choice isn't always a clearcut one, and offers some advice on how to make flexible decisions using this basic framework.

The two big standouts for me here were:

1) Economics being second after health.

I've struggled with this, but he's right and the way he puts it really rings true for me.

So many things in my life are off because I don't get my work done and keep the cash flowing. Bottom line is that if you don't keep your finances in order you don't have the peace of mind or means to fully enjoy and add value to the other places in your life. And if there are things in your life that are in a state of chaos, I'd be willing to bet that they're either caused by your less than stellar health or less than stellar finances.

I honestly don't have any problems in my life right now that better finances couldn't solve. I don't say that because I think money is everything; I'm fortunate to have few unsolveable problems. But the fact still stands.

2) The idea about not bothering to fix the world if your own life is out of control.

So true.

The more you work on yourself, the more you have to offer others. In other parts of the book he talks about how it's almost a natural result of getting rich that you go through a phase of wondering "what else" and then start feeling the urge to donate or take part in world-changing projects.

He admits it's not true for everyone but tends to be generally true for most people.

So again, by working on your finances (and other top priorities), you better prepare yourself to add more value to the world at large.

Beyond All Seas

"The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe.
To be your own man is a hard business. If you try it, you'll be lonely often, and sometimes
frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself." - Kipling
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#2

Scott Adams on How to Properly Manage Your Priorities in Life

Good advice.

Dwelling on the big picture is useless because you can do little to change it. You certainly won't change it if you can't even change the negative things about yourself.

Gaining knowledge of worldly affairs can be a distraction and a huge waste of time.

If you're the type that is keen to learn and eager to know the truth about things, learning new things makes you feel like you have accomplished something.
The problem is, it's incredibly easy to do that. And the information you gain often has absolutely no value to you personally.

This is a problem for me. For 2016 I'm going to put my blinders on to block out shit that doesn't matter and focus on the inner circle of "me".
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#3

Scott Adams on How to Properly Manage Your Priorities in Life

Also recommend his book. Adams is no bullshit.

Quote:Quote:

2) The idea about not bothering to fix the world if your own life is out of control.

James Altucher says the same thing, asking his readers to think of an airplane emergency. Place oxygen mask over your own mouth before helping others. You can't help someone else if you pass out.
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#4

Scott Adams on How to Properly Manage Your Priorities in Life

^ I remember Altucher saying that. Very apt metaphor.

Here's another add-on from Adams, taken from the same chapter in the book:

Quote:Quote:

When I speak of priorities I don't mean that in terms of what you love the most. You can love your family more than you love your job and still spend all day working so your family has food and opportunities. Priorities are the things you need to get right so the things you love can thrive.

Beyond All Seas

"The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe.
To be your own man is a hard business. If you try it, you'll be lonely often, and sometimes
frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself." - Kipling
Reply
#5

Scott Adams on How to Properly Manage Your Priorities in Life

Interesting article. Even though we live in the materialist West, the question of money is still seen as a dirty subject.

For too long, I thought like this, favouring the idea of an honest day's work.

It helped me to start viewing money as a unit of energy and work done which should be measured as a Joule as opposed to a dollar or euro or pound etc.

For example, if a man wants to build a house which is his and his family's basic human need, he has two options:

1. Do the architectural, construction and labour work himself using his own intellect and labour energies, or

2. Transfer the work to be done by others and use their energies. Unless they are slaves, he transfers the energy to give the others the power to do the work through the medium of currency. The current transfers electrical power.

This is all that money should be, a means to transfer power and energy so that work can be done to provide a good or service. This is why usury was seen as the worst of sins because it extracts energy from hosts with no corresponding work being done. It is therefore anti-work and non-productive. What is the Matrix but a means to extract human currency from batteries which store energy?

Perhaps this will help others to accept why money ergo power and energy should be the first element to a man's life for without it, he can do no work.

Where is your energy and power (J) going? To the usurer, to the harlot, to the barman? This is why women are attracted to money, it represents masculine energy, power with corresponding work. Where your power goes to will disempower, emasculate you, if you don't receive any work in return.
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#6

Scott Adams on How to Properly Manage Your Priorities in Life

Quote:Quote:

This is why usury was seen as the worst of sins because it extracts energy from hosts with no corresponding work being done. It is therefore anti-work and non-productive.

If usury refers to interest charged on debt, it is absolutely necessary and can enhance productivity. For example, business loans. If you mean "unethical or immoral monetary loans that unfairly enrich the lender" (Wikipedia), no arguments here.

Fun fact: the government bond originated in Florence as a means to finance war. The upper class was forced to lend money to the city-state in lieu of property taxes. Known as prestanze, these forced loans paid interest. It wasn't considered usury since the loans were obligatory. Pretty funny loophole if you ask me. Learned this from The Ascent of Money by Niall Ferguson, which I'm currently reading.
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#7

Scott Adams on How to Properly Manage Your Priorities in Life

Quote: (12-27-2015 04:57 AM)N°6 Wrote:  

Where is your energy and power (J) going? To the usurer, to the harlot, to the barman? This is why women are attracted to money, it represents masculine energy, power with corresponding work. Where your power goes to will disempower, emasculate you, if you don't receive any work in return.

I skimmed over parts of this post earlier but there are some fascinating ideas there.

Beyond All Seas

"The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe.
To be your own man is a hard business. If you try it, you'll be lonely often, and sometimes
frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself." - Kipling
Reply
#8

Scott Adams on How to Properly Manage Your Priorities in Life

Quote: (12-27-2015 05:19 AM)Peregrine Wrote:  

Quote:Quote:

This is why usury was seen as the worst of sins because it extracts energy from hosts with no corresponding work being done. It is therefore anti-work and non-productive.

If usury refers to interest charged on debt, it is absolutely necessary and can enhance productivity. For example, business loans. If you mean "unethical or immoral monetary loans that unfairly enrich the lender" (Wikipedia), no arguments here.

Fun fact: the government bond originated in Florence as a means to finance war. The upper class was forced to lend money to the city-state in lieu of property taxes. Known as prestanze, these forced loans paid interest. It wasn't considered usury since the loans were obligatory. Pretty funny loophole if you ask me. Learned this from The Ascent of Money by Niall Ferguson, which I'm currently reading.

I'd wager that most of the compelling arguments against usury were made by guys who borrowed over their heads and never had any intention of paying it back.
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#9

Scott Adams on How to Properly Manage Your Priorities in Life

Quote: (12-27-2015 04:57 AM)N°6 Wrote:  

This is why women are attracted to money, it represents masculine energy, power with corresponding work.

lol, no. They are attracted to money because it provides comfort, ease and status.

It has SFA to do with money representing anything masculine...
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#10

Scott Adams on How to Properly Manage Your Priorities in Life

Quote: (03-18-2017 09:47 PM)JackinMelbourne Wrote:  

It has SFA to do with money representing anything masculine...

SFA = Sweet Fuck All. Avoid textspeak here. Forum rule #2: thread-13005.html
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#11

Scott Adams on How to Properly Manage Your Priorities in Life

I haven't read the book yet but a key theme in it is "systems versus goals" which I have implemented in my life.
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#12

Scott Adams on How to Properly Manage Your Priorities in Life

Quote: (03-18-2017 09:47 PM)JackinMelbourne Wrote:  

Quote: (12-27-2015 04:57 AM)N°6 Wrote:  

This is why women are attracted to money, it represents masculine energy, power with corresponding work.

lol, no. They are attracted to money because it provides comfort, ease and status.

It has SFA to do with money representing anything masculine...

Semantics

No 6 isn't wrong --- I see your point but not really something of contention, in my estimation.

Inheriting money and being a pussy is bad though, I'll agree with that.
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