Todaydream

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The world of tomorrow, as seen through today’s lens.
To daydream. Today dream. Today…dream.


I wake up around 7. I come back from the dream world naturally, without panic or stress. A few years ago I moved on from the incessant buzzing and ringing that I would reset every 8 minutes for 1.5 hours until I felt worthless and lazy. No use starting the day with disappointment. Now I listen to my body like my wife listens to Taylor Swift.

I leave a kiss on the forehead that is gently laid across my chest. I slowly move her head to the pillow while she asks me, “Where are you going?” as if this didn’t happen every day. I still answer like it’s the first time. 

I walk to the kitchen in search of a glass of water. The floor is cold on my feet as I walk without the cushion of socks. My senses slowly stretch their arms as they awaken to a new day. I make my way to the couch, grab a blanket and pillow for unneeded security, and take a peek out the window to enjoy that day’s weather with the light switch still in the ‘off’ position. There’s an intimacy and peace watching nature go through its existence simultaneously awake and asleep.

Breathe. Breathe. Breathe. Sometimes I forget.

I get off the couch, turn the warm glow of the kitchen lights on very dim, just enough to see. I have a bite to eat because I always wake up hungry. Probably some granola, oat milk, and fresh blueberries. I walk to the cupboard, open it up, and grab the bag of coffee beans that I bought in Mexico City because I liked the label. I’m a coffee convert since the pandemic in 2020. I open the bag and take a whiff. Then another. Sometimes I’ll take a third just for good luck. I like the smell. Sue me. I pour the beans in the grinder, dump them in the french press creating a faint echo as I tap the side bing bing bing bing bing. I slowly pour the water in circles while trying to act like I know what I’m doing, even though I have literally no clue and I’m the only one in the room. My imposter syndrome seeps into my barista identity. I like the ritual.

Around 11:00, I walk 5 minutes from my home to my art studio that I share with 4 creative and energetic friends. I sit on the couch with my coffee from home, still full in the thermos that somehow seems to make liquids hotter by the minute so that I can only touch it to my lips for the next 3 hours taking caution to avoid a scalding sip. My friends might already be on the couch, or I’ll just wait for them to arrive while I read a book. Before dropping into work we all come to the couch for 30 minutes to catch up on our lives, share stories, and be present with each other. I used to thoughtlessly jump from bed to work without any human interaction. No more. You’d be surprised how fulfillment finds you when you find time for others.

I then go into my section of the studio. I’ve partitioned it enough to provide privacy and quiet while still inviting air, light, and friends to flow if they so desire. I put my headphones on, most of the time with no music, and begin to create. Each day may be a different project: writing, music, painting, art installation, investments, business. I sit here uninterrupted for about 2 hours before I break. I wander the studio and take a look at what others are working on. We chat and I tell them about what I’ve been doing. We might decide to keep collaborating, or we might go our separate ways again after just 10 seconds. 

I leave the studio, hop on the Vespa and ride 9 minutes down the street to the boutique hotel my wife owns. She’s usually in the lobby lounge talking to guests, vendors, or staff. You can hear her laugh from down the street. It makes me smile without even realizing it. I walk inside and try my best not to interrupt the intimate bond that my wife can form in minutes, turning a first interaction into a best friend as if they had known each other since birth. She peels away, promising her new best friend she’ll see them again soon. She won’t break the promise. We walk back home to grab some lunch and catch up on our days so far. Good, bad, struggles, wins. 

Breathe. Breathe. Breathe. Sometimes we forget.

I live on a multi-unit collective with four of my closest friends, their partners, and their newly forming families. A strong foundation is forming for our version of “extended family”. We are far enough from the city so that the fact we have a “yard” isn’t seen as pretentious. Still close enough that a late night Uber is tempting, but not mandatory. We each have our own separate spaces but share a kitchen, lounge, garden, and common chores. Everything we “have” doesn’t need to be kept for ourselves. If our living situation can be just a fraction of what you hear small villages are like in the Italian countryside, then it will be a life well lived. 

A few years ago we all tired of our apartment buildings full of people and amenities, yet empty of spontaneous human interaction. We were putting more effort into avoiding an elevator ride with a neighbor than in calling our grandmother to say hello. A knock on the front door used to be an invitation to hide until the intrusive knuckle pounder gave up and left. The millennial version of a knock knock joke just stops at the “Knock knock”. We’d rather not know, “Who’s there?”

Life was beginning to feel like those times when you’ve been doom scrolling for 1 hour and to get over the shock and disappointment of how long you’ve been on social media, you have to doom scroll for 1 more hour because stopping to accomplish just 50% of a daily task is worse that not even starting it. At least if you didn’t start it you can’t fail. Right? Finally, the hole you’ve purposely dug is getting so deep that the sunlight is getting harder and harder to see. I’ve been climbing out ever since. Slipping too. But mostly climbing. It’s easier to climb when you have a hand to pull you up on the tough parts. A hand that’s not yours. A hand that expects nothing but your hand in return. 

Tuesday nights are Listening Hours. The community gathers for our version of an open mic. It’s not a pitch competition or a plea for Instagram followers. Just listen. There are no expectations other than to share you as you are today. Perform your songs that only have 20 seconds completed. Pass around the sculpture of a hummingbird that is just a rectangular block of clay you bought earlier that day. Put forth a plan for letting go of “only I can do it,” so your startup team can grow from 1 to 2. Preview the rough cut of your new documentary trailer. Present the life lessons that were shared by the stray cat you met on the street near the laundromat. Just listen. And support. And rejoice. Your confidence in sharing adds another layer to each of the listener’s defense against, “I’m not good enough”. Perfection is its current form. 

When I lay down to sleep, I’m not even worried if I have dreams or not. I’ll wake up to my dream.

Breathe. Breathe. Breathe. Goodnight.

Perfection, the imperfect measuring stick

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I have been in perfectionist hell for much too long. I am only just realizing it and I am trying to break free.

In almost everything I have done I have had a fear of sharing with others until I felt I had perfected whatever it was I needed to complete. There are some elements of Imposter Syndrome that cause this in me, but we explore that in another post.

I had a breaking point recently where a lot of my fears, insecurities, and weaknesses were thrown in my face. Although seeing your weaknesses is daunting, it is even more gratifying and refreshing to start uncovering the positive opportunities that are tangled.

A few weeks ago my wife shared a newsletter with me from Holisticism. The first sentence gave me enough inspiration to write for 30 minutes straight with no stops. Here are some of the key points as I am starting to explore my internal fears that lead me to use perfection as my imperfect measuring stick.

Have you had similar experiences, fears, or effects of trying to be “perfect”?

It’s impossible to be perfect (drats.), and when you realize that fact you can unclench your butthole and make more things with less preciousness. (bc perfectionism keeps us in a riptide of stasis)

~Holisticism newsletter

Time to unclench that butthole.

A “riptide of stasis” has been my home for awhile now.

The consequences of perfectionism for me seem to be:

  • Waiting to share / build community until reaching a certain level of achievement
  • Difficulty acknowledging and celebrating small wins
  • Cycle of burnout and loss of consistent joy
  • Over-preparing to avoid a weak appearance
  • The feeling of being in debt to anyone that shows me recognition or interest

I’ll break down a couple of these.

Waiting to share until reaching a certain level of achievement

As a first step to sharing, here are things I am working on. Let me know if you want to collaborate:

  • Giving Bag
  • Creating a fashion line
  • Repurposing packaging into art
  • Content creation
  • Music production and performance
  • Poker and Risk
  • Charitable work
  • Financial education/investing
  • Learning Farsi
  • Birds
  • Open a secretive lounge or bar. Shhh!
  • Making fresh juice in the morning
  • Wandering cobblestone streets
  • Turning my house into a rental
  • Going to Alaska
  • Practicing yoga and meditation

These activities bring me joy, but many times I let my joyful experiences get clouded by over-protecting myself from outside influence.

Whether it has been conscious or not, it seems I have felt that the outside influence when talking about my interests will be detrimental to the end product since I’m not an expert, when in reality the influence of others is more likely to enhance productivity and joy. I isolate interests and passions from others and as a result I rarely get to a point where I can share anything at all. Even my closest friends would be surprised by some of this list.

When I actually get to a point where I feel comfortable sharing it is far later than it should be and I’m already at or past a point of burnout.

I want to start collaborating with people who have similar interests. I no longer want to do everything on my own like before.

Burnout

I’ve hit burnout roughly 6 times in my life. All have been related to work, but only about half were from my full-time job. The rest of the burnout experiences came directly form my side-hustles and personal interests that I kept to myself, as described above. I pressured myself to “work” and perform, rather than allowing myself to invite in consistent joy.

It is a simple change of reference. The actions I take on a daily basis are not drastically different, but my mindset flips from performance standards to finding moments of joy and gratitude.

The term “burnout” came from an American psychologist named Herbert Freudenberger who said burnout was the consequence of severe stress and high ideals (National Library of Medicine).

Psychology Today mentions that, “The cynicism, depression, and lethargy that are characteristic of burnout most often occur when a person is not in control of how a job is carried out, at work or at home, or is asked to complete tasks that conflict with their sense of self.” Bolded for extra emphasis.

The confusing part, although I work extremely hard during my full-time jobs and have high quality output, I still have been able to achieve positive work life balance. During my time at TINT, I had high respect for each of my “bosses” and felt truly cared about. I rarely felt out of control.

There must be a different boss that is controlling how I am living my life. I am that boss. I am putting the pressure on myself. There are some deep seated beliefs and insecurities somewhere in my brain that I’m just starting to acknowledge and recognize.

I put so much energy into my jobs to obtain a sense of achievement (based on my “paycheck measuring stick”) that I have so little energy left over for my other passions. This is the problem. I overachieve for others and then am forced to underachieve on my personal interests. There’s something going on with my sense of self worth or ego that is prioritizing putting too much energy into endeavors where I get immediate approval from others.

There’s nothing wrong with doing things that are not your passion. We have to do that to survive in this world. And it’s good to be of service to others. But I need to better control how I save energy for my personal passions.

Losing control of this energy distribution spirals into disappointment, demotivation, and depression. Which then creates large peaks of productivity and the deep valleys of exhaustion, both while isolating myself from broader communities, thus creating a perpetuating cycle.

The Joy Report Card

I am slowly starting to change my life “report card” from money-based to joy-based. Measuring achievement based on joy is difficult because you cannot just look at your bank account to see how much joy you have earned in the past month.

I have memories of the joy I’m trying to invite in more. Many of them revolve around the removal of work stress, adventuring, exploring new places, not having to think and stress about money. I also find joy and energy from being around kind, inspiring people that are motivated to be their best self.

  • Exploring Thailand on a scooter
  • Sitting at the hidden Fabrique Bakery in Hoxton
  • Burning Man
  • Blanco White concerts
  • Hearty laughter with friends

How does the Joy Report Card work? Well like all things, it is not perfect but I will share (go me!).

Step 1: Write down a list of 5 things that bring you joy on a weekly basis. You can add more if you would like but it is helpful to start simple. For example it could be:

  • Eating dinner with your partner
  • Moving my body for 10 minutes
  • Reading a book
  • Making a smoothie
  • Calling a friend
  • Turning your phone off

It can be anything that allows you space to find joy and reduce any type of weight that might be on you. I have found that a larger goal like “moving to a new city” is not the most helpful on your report card. Focus on the smaller steps that can get you there.

Step 2: After you have your list, do a quick review of how often you currently do them in a normal week. That’s your baseline.

Step 3: Every morning, look at your list and see if there are any pockets of time that you can add in the activities that bring you a bit more joy. One key is to try and be kind to yourself if you are not able to consistently add in items from your list.

You want to avoid having the activities that bring you joy, start to to become “activities that stress me out because I am not doing them”. It is okay to go months with just looking at the list and not doing any of them. But over time your brain will rewire to find pockets of time for you and your joyful activities. It is extremely helpful to remind yourself of what makes you joyful because many times we spend our entire day just thinking of the stressful things we have to do.

An object in motion stays in motion. 

Find ways to stay in motion, even if it’s super small.

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p.s. It’s always a work in progress. I should have published this post weeks ago but I kept adjusting.

My $100 Challenge – Donate To Stop Saying “Umm”​

Ummmso I like kinda have a confession….I’ve given conference keynotes, been on panels, presented in front of classes, and generally feel confident with public speaking. But since starting an experiment to create a YouTube channel, I’ve been surprised by just how many times I say filler transition words (“Um”, “Like”, “So”, “Kinda”).

I developed a plan to remove those words and have more clear speech.

Scroll to the bottom and give me a comment with your most used filler word AND any of your public speaking strategies. Then scroll back up and read the rest, ha 🙂

When I’m recording a 10 minute video, I probably have about 30-45 minutes of footage that I end up editing. And after posting my 7th video on QuinnTalksMoney this year and realizing the unbelievable amount of filler words I use, I thought of a plan.

Donate to charity to stop saying the filler words!

I decided that I would record the videos in one take AND any time I used Um, Like, So, or Kinda, I would donate $1 to a charity. Once I hit $33 I would choose a charity and donate the money. This would force me to slow down, be more intentional with the words I chose and put me in a situation where I would truly know the extent of my “Um” problem.

I would do this three times until I hit $100 to charity. This should take me a while…right?

WRONG!

1st Attempt – I recorded a video on recommendations for online investing platforms. It was a topic I felt confident completing in one take.

While I was recording, I tried to keep track of the Um, Like, So, and Kinda uses.

At the end, I was proud because in my head I had counted 3 and thought to myself, “It’s going to take me awhile to get to $33 at this pace.”

NOT SO FAST!https://www.linkedin.com/embeds/publishingEmbed.html?articleId=7838523517715464332

Let’s just say that I must be really bad at counting too.

As I rewatched the footage, I kept a tally. Within the first minute or so I had already passed 3…

Then it was 10…

15…

20…

25…

30…

THIRTY THREE!!!!

I could not believe it! In the first video, the one I had so much confidence in, I said the filler words 33 times. That was $33 toward a charity (see charities chosen below).

Hitting the $100 mark

7 videos later, I have exceeded the mark! There’s a good chance I even missed some when counting during the editing.

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Here are the stats:

  • Attempt 1 (Investing Apps): $33 for 33 filler words
  • Attempt 2 (Extra Income Ideas): $9 for 9 filler words
  • Attempt 3 (Investing Mistakes): $15 for 15 filler words
  • Attempt 4 (Charlie Munger): $15 for 15 filler words
  • Attempt 5 (GameStop Part 1): $10 for 10 filler words
  • Attempt 6 (GameStop Part 2): $12 for 12 filler words
  • Attempt 7 (GameStop Part 4): $8 for 8 filler words

*Some of these I ended up not being able to do in one-take. I counted the filler words while editing.

Maintaining perfection

It would be great if maintaining perfection was as easy as that, but I know I’ll continue saying filler words every now and then. Although I’ve definitely reduced my filler words, it will take a conscious effort to change this habit.

Practice is the best I can do, and I vow to continue bringing clarity to my content and speaking 🙂

Charities I’ve Chosen

I am overjoyed to have been able to donate $33 to each of these amazing charities:

  • Lunch on Me – After spending the month of December in Los Angeles, I found this incredible organization. They bring nutritious meals to skid row and serve 10,000 people per month. They have an awesome bodega, LaRayia’s Bodega that is an extension of the non-profit. If you are in LA, please go check it out. Buy a kombucha, some sea moss, a crystal, and support/volunteer.
  • Got Green Seattle – Another great org in Seattle that is helping to raise voices and break down the “green ceiling” that keeps low income communities from finding benefits in the green economy. And check out that great website art.
  • Good Cheer Food Bank – This is a local non-profit in my community that runs a food bank and thrift store to help support the community on South Whidbey Island in Washington.

In addition, I’m joining a Toastmasters group to continue learning and growing.

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Thanks for getting all the way down here 🙂 I think you’re awesome! If you liked this article, drop me a like or comment!

4 Steps to Make Progress on Side Hustles

I’ve found something interesting this past week. Each action we take in life, each goal, hobby, business we start has the same structure as a startup.

I restarted a side YouTube Channel, QuinnTalksMoney, that I work on during my nights and weekends. By trying to hit 200 subscribers by the end of January, I realized that my strategy should be the same that you’d expect for a high growth Silicon Valley startup.

↓ I’ve detailed the 4 steps below ↓

Tell me what similar experiences have you had that relate to the life of a startup in the comments.

——————————————-

1. Define your niche and solve a problem.

I’ve been lucky enough to spend the last 6 years at TINT. Not only has this experience been the time of my life, but I’ve understand the necessity of defining your market early on, and ensuring that you are solving a problem and bringing value to customers.

This goes for any side hustle that you hope to start. No matter how small or seemingly insignificant it might be.

Spend time figuring out where are able to bring value, and then validate this with people in your network to ensure that you are able to provide what people are expecting.https://www.linkedin.com/embeds/publishingEmbed.html?articleId=9135492551403321720

2. Create a product that brings value

In my case, I’m creating videos and content. They are FAR from being Hollywood production quality (as you can see above), but the content and what I’m saying is my product. If I am not bringing value, then the audience will leave and my “startup” will fail. So the top priority is to bring useful insights via YouTube videos. The studio lighting can come next month!

I’m fully in experimentation mode right now and just having fun while I get into a routine and groove with creating content at nights and on the weekend. The video above I created in 2 hours after getting my invite to Clubhouse App.

This should be similar with your life as well. As a sales person, or a customer success manager, or a chief of staff, if you are not bringing value to the customer, your company, or your executive team, you will likely see less success. Define what challenges exist, and find ways to fill that void and provide a solution.

3. Friends and Family Round! Build loyalty and confidence.

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For almost all startups and businesses, you have to start with a friends and family round. There is a very obvious reason for this. They know you, they trust you, and….they want to see you succeed. Also, they usually willing to put their money and efforts behind you…before you have anything to show for it. They take a risk in you.

Too many times in my life I have tried to do things alone building a side hustle or achieving a goal. Not only does this decrease the likelihood of success, but it wastes valuable time.

Engage your friends and family to get feedback, and give you the confidence and traction you need to have a slightly more legitimate offering.

For my few videos I would ask my wife to leave our house while I filmed because I was so embarrassed about messing up. All I was doing was talking to a camera in an empty room, but it was so difficult (and still is).

After I posted my 10th video, you start to get comfortable speaking into a camera. Step out of your comfort zone a bit and your confidence will continue to grow and snowball.

4. Expand your reach and grow

Once you’ve tapped all your friends and family (and have thoroughly annoyed them!) it’s time to broaden your reach.

I’m not quite at this stage yet, but next steps will include:

  • Expand to other social networks – Every social network has different content forms. I’ll find ways to bring value on other platforms like Instagram, Facebook, and maybe even TikTok.
  • Collaborations – Find other creators that are in a complimentary niche. Collaborate on content to tap into each other’s networks.
  • Review analytics and make adjustments – Don’t worry about this too much before Step 4. Get in your groove, put content out there, and then review analytics to find trends and improvement areas.
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Pivot and Iterate

Yes, this will be inevitable. As we get started with anything there are a million pieces of information that we just cannot know right now. So always be open to adjusting your model to find what works.

If you make 10 pitches to a client and no one wants to learn more about your product, well it might be time to change your script. If I make 50 videos and the only people watching them are my wife and mother, well then I might need to adjust my content to have a wider appeal 😛

————————————–

My main takeaway from this short journey so far has been that enjoying the process with patience is essential. There is absolutely NO WAY that I will be able to hit my goal of 100 videos posted to my channel in 2021 if I am burning myself out, talking about topics that bore me, or focusing too much on view, likes, etc. etc.

Yes, I ask people to like and comment in my videos, but that is honestly the least of my worries. My biggest concern is that I’ll sit in my cold garage into the dead of night creating videos that I don’t care about, and that my audience (tiny right now) has no interest in.

So let’s have fun and build our life goal startups!

And because Step 3 is important…here’s the link to my YouTube channel, QuinnTalksMoney, so you can subscribe haha!

I spend 10 hours/day learning to code

My life adventures have included mountain climbing, world travel, and a half ironman. I’m only 2 weeks into my latest adventure and it is far harder than all of those combined.

My latest adventure includes sitting in a chair for hours on end, staring into a screen of gibberish until you’re about to fall asleep, and going through a roller coaster of thoughts ranging from “I understand this perfectly,” to five minutes later, “I know absolutely nothing about anything in the world,” to “What is a brain? Why don’t I have one?”

This adventure is a 15 week intensive software engineering program at Flatiron School. I’m doing this along with continuing work at TINT/Filestack. My days are jam packed (typically starting about 5am) and exhausting, but I’ve actually been able to have higher output focusing on the most important tasks that allow me to be successful in each endeavor.

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I chose to go to coding school for a few reasons:

  1. My experiences are all over the place: hotels, startups, marketing, digital signage, finance, business development. One glaring area I found missing was technology. I have a high level understanding of technical concepts, but applying those concepts into useful outputs was a gap I wanted to fill. 
  2. TINT was acquired in September. I was a bit burnt out from 4 years at a startup and needed to make sure I was giving myself the best shot at continued happiness and growth. I’m grateful for our new parent company’s willingness to allow me learn a new skillset while still working.
  3. I like building things. I’ve always loved putting things together without instructions. I’ve tried this method of “no instructions” with coding, but have been unsuccessful. I needed an in-person, full-time bootcamp to immerse myself and allow myself to suffer through hours on end of brute forcing my way to solutions.

Why Flatiron School?

I chose Flatiron School because it had a great reputation, but more importantly, I chose this over some other programs because Flatiron made me realize that I wasn’t just a client, I was a part of a family.

This was a main decision factor because of my time at TINT and the culture that our three cofounders Tim, Nik, and Ryo created. I am proud to have been a part of such a special culture and honored that I was given the opportunity to be a part of it seeing the many highs and a few lows of the company through it’s acquisition. Three similarities I see between TINT and Flatiron School are:

  • Feel cared for
  • Transparency
  • Shared enthusiasm

It is hard to put into words how positively my life was affected at TINT and I owe so much of who I am today to that experience. If my experience becoming a software engineer at Flatiron School is 10% as good, it will be a huge success. So far, the culture and experience have not disappointed.

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When I told some people that I was planning to go to coding school I was mostly met with confusion by people outside of my family. People didn’t think I was a coder and couldn’t see why I didn’t put my time to other tasks. A few people recommended I rethink my decision. 

However, for the people that knew me most and know my ambitions and interests, it was a predictable step. Up until 5 years ago, I spent a lot of my academic life enjoying math, physics, and STEM. I originally wanted to be an engineer before randomly finding a magazine that talked about a college in Switzerland, realizing that school only offered Hotel Management as a major, and then proceeding to research and fall in love with the hospitality industry. “Bye for now STEM”.

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Now that I’ve had my taste of hospitality and a few other experiences (hey Giving Bag), worked around the world at amazing hotels, and enjoyed every second of my current career, I’m looking for my next challenge and growth area. Software engineering is that adventure!

What’s next?

Not a clue! There are a lot of options that I’m continuing to explore. Some include starting my own company, going back to previous roles with my new skills, becoming a Chief of Staff, being a full time software engineer, or most likely a combination of all those! 

My mind is open to possibilities. I am a naturally curious and intellectually hungry individual. I anticipate that the skills I learn will continue to excite me and continue to open up new areas that I’ll want to explore.

loop do

puts “Keep on smiling”

end

I read 83 books in 2 years. Here are the results.

I never planned to start reading books at such a pace. There were a few unplanned things that happened that helped get this going.

I lived in NYC (moved out in June) where you sit on a subway for 1-2 hours per day. Some people sit there on their phones playing Candy Crush.  I didn’t want to be idle and found myself finishing 1-2 books per week.

My brother bought me a Kindle. This gave instant access to thousands of books. They were either inexpensive, or free (public library’s have Kindle books). The Kindle let me use small pockets of time that we typically fill with pointless scrolling and staring. With the Kindle, I could read for the 5 minutes I stood in the grocery line (or 30 minutes at Trader Joe’s).

TINT had a book club where I read Gentleman in Moscow. This got me back into Fiction and History which I had previously put off as lacking value for my immediate life.

This is my reflection on the books I read:

I wanted to read Computer Science, Rocket Science, Neuroscience, Science Fiction – yes lots of science – Biographies, Self-improvement, History, and books on many other topics. 

So my journey with books began…

Top 5 Books

  • Gentleman in Moscow
  • Nexus Trilogy
  • Man’s Search for Meaning
  • My Life and Work – Henry Ford Biography
  • The Snowball: Warren Buffett and the Business of Life

Favorite Biographies

  • Benjamin Franklin
  • Elon Musk
  • Henry Ford
  • Warren Buffet

Favorite Self-Help Books

  • Chop Wood and Carry Water
  • Man’s Search for Meaning
  • Who Moved my Cheese
  • 4 Hour Work Week

Most Tedious Book to Read

  • Howard Hughes: His Life and Madness

Favorite New Genre

  • Science Fiction

Hardest Genre to Find Decent Books

  • Self-improvement

Surprisingly Decent Book

  • The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat

Most Unexpectedly Practical Book

  • My Life and Work – Autobiography of Henry Ford. This made me realize so much about Tesla’s potential.

Most Interesting Topic to Read About

  • Body Machine Interfaces- Combining computers into humans. We do it already with all types of technology, but there are more innovations to come.

Top Excerpts That Taught Me The Most

“It became, at least in retrospect, humorous as well as revealing of Leonardo’s unwillingness to fulfill commissions that bored him.” ~Leonardo da Vinci by Walter Isaacson

“Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms—to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.” ~Man’s Search for Meaning by Viktor E. Frankl

“He had to admit that the biggest inhibitor to change lies within yourself, and that nothing gets better until you change.” Who Moved My Cheese by Spencer Johnson and Ken Blanchard.

“What Musk has developed that so many of the entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley lack is a meaningful worldview.” Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future by Ashlee Vance.

“What opened up the world for him, were the books themselves: picture books, adventure stories, novels, books on philosophy, and, most of all, anything about the physical world and men’s attempts to find out how it worked. He became a seeker of truth…supplement reading with the ‘living discourse of a wise, learned and well-qualified teacher.'” ~Faraday, Maxwell, and the Electromagnetic Field by Nancy Forbes and Basil Mahon.

The Snowball: Warren Buffett and the Business of Life – “But birds in the bush were expensive because interest rates were low. Fewer people wanted cash—the bird in the hand—at such low rates. So investors were paying unheard-of prices for those birds in the bush.”

“It’s far better to buy a wonderful company at a fair price than a fair company at a wonderful price.”

My Life and Work by Henry Ford – “Almost any one can think up an idea. The thing that counts is developing it into a practical product.”

“No work with interest is ever hard.”

“Life is not a battle except with our own tendency to sag with the downpull of ‘getting settled.'”

“Time spent in fighting competition is wasted; it had better be spent in doing the work.”

“They listened to the 5 percent, the special customers who could say what they wanted, and forgot all about the 95 percent who just bought without making any fuss.”

———-

As I continue to read more books, I’ve learned more about my passions, hopes, and dreams. I am more motivated than ever to find ways to change my life in a way that will bring me closer to my passions. I’ve learned new topics that informed positive personal, professional, and investment decisions.

What other books should I be reading?

———-

Full List of Books Read

  • 1984
  • A Gentleman in Moscow (x2)
  • Abraham Lincoln: A Concise History of the Man Who Transformed the World
  • An American Life: Benjamin Franklin
  • Anti-Fragile
  • Apex (The Nexus Trilogy)
  • Beautiful Boy
  • Benito Mussolini: A Short History
  • Bitcoin for Dummies
  • Boomerang
  • Brave New World
  • Chop Wood and Carry Water
  • Congress and the shaping of the Middle East
  • Crux (The Nexus Trilogy)
  • Cryptoassets
  • Customer Success
  • David and Goliath
  • Dead on Arrival
  • Devil Take the Hindmost
  • Elon Musk and the Quest for a Fantastic Future
  • Faraday, Maxwell, and the Electromagnetic Field: How Two Men Revolutionized Physics
  • Flash Boys
  • George Washington: The American Presidents Series
  • How Money Got Free
  • Howard Hughes: His Life and Madness
  • Inheritance
  • Leonardo da Vinci
  • Liar’s Poker
  • Life, the universe, and everything
  • Made to Stick
  • Making Humans Multi-Planetary (Elon Musk)
  • Man’s Search for Meaning
  • Manifesting Change
  • Moneyball
  • More than human
  • My Life and Work
  • Neuralink and the Brain’s Magical Future
  • Nexus (The Nexus Trilogy)
  • Only the Paranoid Survive
  • Origin
  • Out of My Later Years: The Scientist, Philosopher, and Man Portrayed Through His Own Words
  • Physics of the Future
  • Quantum Reality
  • Robber Barons
  • Rose Water
  • Rules of Civility
  • Sentient Machines
  • Snowball: Warren Buffett
  • Soft Wired
  • Stress Test
  • TED TALKS: The Official Guide to Public Speaking
  • The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
  • The Art of Invisibility
  • The Art of War
  • The Big Short
  • The Chip
  • The Destiny Forumula
  • The Fall of Heaven
  • The Fear Index
  • The Four Hour Workweek
  • The Future of the Mind
  • The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
  • The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat
  • The Minimalist Mindset
  • The One
  • The Outliers
  • The Restaurant at the End of the Universe
  • The Third Door
  • The Tipping Point
  • The Undoing Project: A friendship that changed our minds
  • The Wizard of Menlo Park
  • Theodore Roosevelt: A Life From Beginning to End
  • Things I wish I’d known before we got married
  • Thinking, Fast and Slow
  • Vietnam War: A Short History
  • What the Dog Saw
  • When Breath Becomes Air
  • When to Jump
  • Who Moved My Cheese?
  • Will China Dominate the 21st Century?
  • Winston Churchill: A Short History
  • Zero to One