
The truth does not vanish when it is forgotten or ignored.
You know how you can hear something a hundred times in a bunch of different ways before it finally gets through to you? The ten facts discussed here fall firmly into that category — timeless truths and lessons most of us likely learned years ago, and have been reminded of since, but for whatever reason we haven’t fully grasped them yet.
This, my friends, is my attempt at helping all of us, myself included, “get it” and “remember it” once and for all…
1. The average human life is relatively short.
We know deep down that life is short, and that death will happen to all of us eventually, and yet we are infinitely surprised when it happens to someone we know. It’s like walking up a flight of stairs with a distracted mind, and misjudging the final step. You expected there to be one more stair than there is, and so you find yourself off balance for a moment, before your mind shifts back to the present moment and how the world really is.
Let that reminder be your wake-up call to live your life today! Don’t ignore death, but don’t be afraid of it either. Be afraid of a life you never lived because you were too afraid to take action. Death is not the greatest loss in life. The greatest loss is what dies inside you while you’re still alive. And in life you can be comfortable or courageous, but not both at once. So be bold, be courageous… be scared to death, and then give yourself a chance to take the next step anyway.
2. To a great extent, you live the life you create for yourself.
Your life is yours alone. Others can try to persuade you, but they can’t decide for you. They can walk with you, but not in your shoes. So make sure the path you decide to walk aligns with your own intuition and desires, and don’t be scared to switch paths or pave a new one when it makes sense.
Remember, it’s always better to be at the bottom of the ladder you want to climb than the top of the one you don’t. Be productive and patient. And realize that patience is not about waiting; it’s the ability to keep a good attitude while working hard for what you believe in.
Yes, at the end of the day this is your life, and to a great extent it’s made up of your little recurring habits and choices. May your daily actions speak louder than your words. May your life preach louder than your lips. May your success be your noise in the end.
3. Being busy doesn’t mean being productive.
Busyness isn’t a virtue, nor is it something to respect. Though we all have seasons of crazy schedules, very few of us have a legitimate need to be busy all the time. We simply don’t know how to set boundaries, prioritize properly, and say no when we should.
Being busy rarely equates to productivity these days. Just take a quick look around. Busy people outnumber productive people by a wide margin. Busy people are rushing all over the place, and running late half of the time. They’re heading to work, conferences, meetings, social engagements, looking at their phones, creating TikToks, etc. They barely have enough free time for exercise and they rarely get enough sleep. Yet, text messages, emails, and social media updates are blasting out of their smart phones like rockets, and their day planners are jammed to the brim with obligations. Their busy schedule gives them an elevated sense of importance. But it’s all an illusion. They’re like hamsters running on a wheel.
Though being busy can make us feel more alive than anything else for a moment, the sensation is not sustainable long term. We will inevitably, whether tomorrow or on our deathbed, come to wish that we spent less time in the buzz of busyness and more time actually living a purposeful life.
4. Some kind of failure always occurs before success.
Most mistakes are unavoidable. Learn to forgive yourself. It’s not a problem to make them; it’s only a problem if you never learn from them.
If you’re too afraid of failure, you can’t possibly do what needs to be done to be successful. The solution to this problem is making friends with failure. You want to know the difference between a master and a beginner? The master has failed more times than the beginner has even tried. Behind every great piece of art there are dozens of failed attempts to make it, but these attempts are simply never shown to us.
Bottom line: Just because it’s not happening now, doesn’t mean it never will. Learning the way on the way is key. Sometimes things have to go very wrong before they can be right. (Read “The Success Principles”.)
5. Thinking and doing are two very different things.
Success never comes to look for you while you wait around thinking about it.
You are what you do, not what you say you will do. Knowledge is basically useless without action. Good things don’t come to those who wait; they come to those who work on meaningful goals. Ask yourself what’s really important and then have the courage and determination to build your daily life around your answer.
And remember, if you wait until you feel 100% ready to begin, you will likely be waiting the rest of your life.
6. You don’t have to wait for an apology to forgive.
Life gets much easier when you learn to accept the apologies you never received. The key is find some level of peace with every experience — positive or negative. In a way, it’s like taking a step back, letting go a little, and navigating each life experience with a open mind. It’s realizing that grudges from the past are a perfect waste of today’s growth and potential, and that holding one is like letting unwanted company live rent-free in your head.
Ultimately, forgiveness is a promise — one you want to keep. When you forgive you are making a promise not to hold the unchangeable past against your present self. It has nothing to do with freeing a past criminal of his or her crime, and everything to do with freeing yourself of the burden of being an eternal victim.
7. Some people are simply the wrong match for you.
You will only ever be as great as the people you surround yourself with, so be brave enough to let go of those who keep bringing you down. You shouldn’t force connections with people who constantly make you feel less than worthy.
If someone makes you feel uncomfortable and insecure every time you’re with them, for whatever reason, they’re probably not close friend material. If they make you feel like you can’t be yourself, or if they make you “less than” in any way, don’t pursue a daily connection with them. If you feel emotionally drained after hanging out with them or get a small hit of anxiety when you are reminded of them, listen to your intuition. You don’t have to exile them from your life, but you can give yourself space.
Set boundaries. Make yourself a priority. There are so many “right people” for you — those who energize you and inspire you to be your best self. It makes no sense to constantly force it with people who are the wrong match for you. (Note: Marc and I discuss this in more detail in the Relationships chapter of “1,000 Little Things Happy, Successful People Do Differently”.)
8. It’s not other people’s job to love and respect you, it’s yours.
It’s important to be nice to others, but it’s even more important to be nice to yourself. You really have to love and respect yourself to get anything done in the long run. So make sure you don’t start seeing yourself through the eyes of those who don’t value you. Know your worth, even if they don’t.
Today, let someone love you just the way you are — as flawed as you might be, as unattractive as you sometimes feel, and as incomplete as you think you are. Yes, let someone love you despite all of this, and let that someone be YOU.
9. What you own is not who you are.
Stuff really is just stuff, and it has absolutely no bearing on who you are as a person. Most of us can make a great life with much less than we think we need. That’s a valuable reminder, especially in a hugely consumer-driven culture that focuses more on material things than meaningful connections and experiences.
To paraphrase Terence McKenna, you have to create your own culture. Don’t watch too much TV or YouTube, don’t read every fashion tip online, and don’t consume too much of the evening news. Find the strength to fill your time with meaningful experiences. The space and time you are occupying at this very moment is LIFE, and if you’re worrying about Drake or Selena Gomez or some other famous face, then you are disempowered. You’re giving your life away to marketing and media trickery, which is created by big companies to ultimately motivate you to want to dress a certain way, look a certain way, and be a certain way. This is tragic, this kind of thinking. It’s all just Hollywood brainwashing. What is real is YOU and your friends and your family, your loves, your highs, your hopes, your plans, your fears, etc.
Too often we’re told that we’re not important, we’re just peripheral to what is. “Get a degree, get a job, get a car, get a house, and keep on getting.” And it’s sad, because someday you’ll wake up and realize you’ve been tricked. And all you’ll want then is to reclaim your mind by getting it out of the hands of the brainwashers who want to turn you into a drone that buys everything that isn’t needed to impress everybody that isn’t important.
10. Everything changes, every day.
Embrace change, and realize it happens naturally and it can be managed. It won’t always be easy at first, but in the end it will be worth it. Acceptance is the first step forward.
What you have today may become what you had by tomorrow. You never know. Things change fast, often spontaneously. People and circumstances come and go. Life doesn’t stop for anybody. It moves rapidly and rushes from calm to chaos in a matter of seconds, and happens like this to people every day. It’s likely happening to someone relatively nearby right now.
Sometimes the shortest split second in time changes the direction of our lives. A seemingly innocuous decision rattles our whole world like a meteorite striking Earth. Entire lives have been swiveled and flipped upside down, for better or worse, on the strength of an unpredictable event. And these events are always happening.
However good or bad a situation is now, it will change. That’s the one thing you can count on. So when life is good, enjoy it. Don’t go looking for something better every second. Happiness never comes to those who don’t appreciate what they have while they have it.
Now it’s your turn…
Yes, it’s your turn to forgive yourself if you’ve recently mishandled or forgotten one or more of the points above. Forgive yourself for the mistakes you’ve made, for the times you lacked clarity, for the missteps that created needless stress. Forgive yourself now, for being human. These are all vital lessons, and what matters most right now is your willingness to start growing from them.
But before you go, please leave Marc and me a comment below and let us know what you think of this essay. Your feedback is important to us. 🙂
Which one of the points above resonated the most today?
Finally, if you have not done so already, be sure to sign-up for our free newsletter to receive new articles like this in your inbox each week.
sara says
Thank you so much for sharing thee truths and ideas. I appreciate you. The point that resonated with me most was: “Happiness never comes to those who don’t appreciate what they have while they have it.” After losing a friend recently, I can relate more now than ever before.
Mika says
The ‘misjudging the last stair step’ metaphor is perhaps the best I have ever read regarding the volatile timing of death and change facing us all.
JJH says
Another great post. The one about experiencing failure before success is spot on for me today. Before I moved to my current apartment, I had to go through a valley of the worst period in my life (which I will keep private), and had feelings of doom looming over me. With a lot of help from various sources, I am now far more successful all parts of my life. It’s a been a journey to say the least.
Jane Wajja says
Oh! For Marc & Angel we got personal development partners. Thank you for this episode of life coaching. I am touched more so by the “don’t wait for an apology to forgive”. It’s a limitation that hinders healing to many of us. A lesson well learnt today.
Anna says
Number 1 hit the spot today for me. After a difficult couple years my baby steps are now in the toddler stage. Soon I’ll be walking with my head held high , boldly going forward and fully embracing my new life. Thank you so much… from the new me, living and loving.
Erika says
Thank you for this post. It’s truly inspiring and connects with me on a deeper level than most. Loved #2. It hit me hard to me as I’m still trying to find the path that I am destined to walk on. It’s always better to be at the bottom of the ladder I want to climb. I’m in that situation right now with a company that I’m not sure I want to pursue long term. The growth and excitement just isn’t there.
Thank you. I’m saving this post for future reference.
-Erika
Mollie says
This whole essay was excellent. The thing that resonated most with me (I am 78 ears old) is the statement at the beginning “The truth does not vanish when it is forgotten or ignored”. It caught me right away. For me, it means not to deny or hide your feelings or who you are. Because you will suffer discomfort and unease when you deny the truth. To be true to yourself and your own values and to stay anchored in that has been such a life lesson. I have a big family and many grandchildren. I am blessed. But I spent some years trying to be what everyone wanted and expected. So this statement is about having courage and trust in yourself….and giving that to the world.
Dalia Diaz says
Like most of your articles this one really resonated with me, reminding me that acknowledging my humanness is the first step to experiencing completeness. And how true it is that we tend to forget this simple fact.
As I was reading, I was reflecting on how so much of information floods us that ultimately reinforce what we already know innately, but have somehow forgotten. What causes it? Perhaps denial of our humanness. Perhaps excessive busyness. Perhaps succumbing to consumerist and competitive herd responses.
In any case, I appreciate these vital reminders. Loved reading. Sharing.
Violet V says
Thanks for another great post – I am 70 years old, and I’ve made a folder in which I save all of your posts there, to read anytime I need reassurance that I am the keeper of my own body, mind and soul. I’ve also invited my friend to subscribe. She’s going through a very difficult period in her life right now, and I know she will benefit from reading your amazing posts. Thank you Marc and Angel – for all you continue to do to help others.
Paul Lennon says
This is good stoic philosophy in general. Well stated, at least from my 78 years of experience and perspective. I like to see that there are others in their 70’s reading too.
MaryE2 says
Today’s list resonated because I have once again found myself too busy, and each item is something I need to change. I need daily peace at home. I need to reclaim fitness that I’ve lost due to caring for a friend and my husband. Some plates I have been juggling need to be returned to their owners. At 72 I am weary with too much and must filter what I choose to do for the next season. This list appears like a framework to begin..
eva andrew says
There were a few that truly resonated with me…
a. Just because it’s not happening now, doesn’t mean it never will.
b. Some people are simply the wrong match for you. I recently let go of a 30 year friendship because I realized just that. It wasn’t easy but as the days pass, I feel more and more at peace.
c. You are what you do and not what you say you will do. Lately I’ve been noticing so many people doing exactly that…all talk but no action…and I vow not to be one of them.
Thank you for your wisdom…I’m 67 and still learning.
Olga says
As always, thank you so much for an enlightening read. Your emails and posts always arrive in my inbox when I need them most. I continue to admire what you two stand for. Above all, this post reminded me that I have a choice. Only I can choose to change my life. Only I can LIVE my life moment to moment. In the chaos of the daily grind I often forget to choose MYSELF.
And this post as a whole reminded me of this quote from your 1000 Things book, which I love and have in my phone’s notes:
“You don’t get to choose how you are going to die, or when. You can only decide how you are going to live, right now. Every day is a new chance to choose. Choose to change your perspective. Choose to flip the switch in your mind from negative to positive. Choose to turn on the light and stop fretting about with insecurity and doubt. Choose to do work that you are proud of. Choose to see the best in others, and to show your best to others. Choose to truly LIVE, today!”
Marcia Anderson says
Marc and Angel, I can relate to every point you mentioned but it is your concluding statement that resonates the most for me. Now, it my turn to forgive myself. I am so hard on myself about so many things. Thank you for sharing this. Much love and gratitude.
Love the other comments shared too. So many of us are on the path together.
Carol says
What resonated most with me was to forgive myself. I truly need too. I’ve grown but I haven’t let go of my wrongs. Thank you for this reminder.
M.C. says
Every point resonates with me esp. learning to forgive one’s self – I feel more at peace now than ever. Thank you and God bless.
Carol Ann says
Great post!
Karen says
Being a senior, reading your posts is the best part of my day or night! How quickly we tend to forget things we learned years ago.
From the bottom of my heart, thank you for reminding me.
Richard Kina says
Perfectly said. This article needs to read and re-read. It doesn’t get old.
Thank you.
David Cleroux says
A great and precise essay.
May your daily actions speak louder than your words.
May your life preach louder than your lips. May your success be your noise in the end.
Busy people outnumber productive people by a wide margin.
Learning the way on the way is key. Are simply great quotes.
Also “When you forgive you are making a promise not to hold the unchangeable past against your present self.” Redeemed!
Betty says
Re #2 — “to a great extent, you live the life you create.” This isn’t meant as negative criticism but this statement seems to be too broad in meaning for the average person — alto you did write the qualifier “to a great extent”. What I understood you to mean was limited in context by the word choices of “walk with” and “persuade you”. I agree that a person most likely can succeed against these 2 stumbling blocks on his own but what I’ve always found to be true is negative activity caused by others — hateful words/actions, subturfuge-type socializing, jealousies. These things are usually almost impossible for any individual to supervise and win against. In this respect, people don’t really have a choice about their life activities/path but must always respond to and survive against whatever their environment holds.
Sonia says
Wow! I’ve had a tab open with this article for awhile now, and because I am sick today with nothing to do but rest, I finally read it. POWERFUL MESSAGES! Thank you for reminding us what we so desperately need to remember! 3, 5, 6, and 8 really got to me. I needed this today!