The Tim Ferriss Show - #836: The 4-Hour Workweek Principles — 13 Mistakes to Avoid, The Art of Mini-Retirements, and Navigating the Dizziness of Freedom
Episode Date: November 19, 2025This time around, we have a bit of a different format, featuring the book that started it all for me, The 4-Hour Workweek. Readers and listeners often ask me what I would change or ...update, but an equally interesting question is: what wouldn’t I change? What stands the test of time and hasn’t lost any potency? This episode features three of the most important chapters from the audiobook of The 4-Hour Workweek. The audiobook, produced and copyrighted by Blackstone Publishing, is available wherever audiobooks are sold. You can find it on Audible, Apple, Google, Spotify, Downpour.com, or wherever you get your favorite audiobooks.This episode is brought to you by:Gusto simple and easy payroll, HR, and benefits platform used by 400,000+ businesses: https://gusto.com/timMomentous high-quality creatine for cognitive and muscular support: https://livemomentous.com/Tim Shopify global commerce platform, providing tools to start, grow, market, and manage a retail business: https://shopify.com/tim Coyote the card game, which I co-created with Exploding Kittens: https://coyotegame.comTIMESTAMPS[00:00:00] Start.[00:02:31] Mini-retirements: embracing the mobile lifestyle.[00:09:22] The birth of mini-retirements and the death of vacations.[00:11:03] The alternative to binge traveling.[00:16:14] Purging the demons: emotional freedom.[00:18:43] The financial realities: it just gets better.[00:24:24] Fear factors: overcoming excuses not to travel.[00:30:08] When more is less: cutting the clutter.[00:39:29] The Bora-Bora dealmaker.[00:43:11] Questions and actions.[00:44:22] Take an asset and cash-flow snapshot.[00:45:02] Fear-set a one-year mini-retirement in a dream location in Europe.[00:48:38] Prepare for your trip.[00:59:42] Adding life after subtracting work.[01:01:51] Depression and boredom: it's normal.[01:05:31] Frustrations and doubts: you're not alone.[01:12:01] The point of it all.[01:13:37] Learning unlimited: sharpening the saw.[01:17:24] Service for the right reasons.[01:20:05] Questions and actions.[01:22:46] Make an anonymous donation to the service organization of your choice.[01:24:05] Take a learning mini-retirement in combination with local volunteering.[01:28:42] The top 13 new rich mistakes.*For show notes and past guests on The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast.For deals from sponsors of The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast-sponsorsSign up for Tim’s email newsletter (5-Bullet Friday) at tim.blog/friday.For transcripts of episodes, go to tim.blog/transcripts.Discover Tim’s books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim:Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissYouTube: youtube.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/timferrissSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
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Hello, boys and girls, ladies and germs. This is Tim Ferriss. Welcome to another episode of The Tim Ferriss Show. This time around, we have a different experimental format featuring the book that started it all for me, the four-hour work week. And even though it was published in 2007, it was one of Amazon's top 10 most highlighted books of all time. Last I checked around 2017. So this is a bit of a foreshadowing of a point I want to make. A lot of people, readers,
and listeners ask me what I would change or update in the four-hour work week or in other books,
but especially the four-hour work week. An equally interesting question, I think a very compelling
question, is what wouldn't I change? What stands the test of time and hasn't lost any potency?
What would I absolutely not touch? And perhaps there are a few minor tweaks here and there,
but by and large, what has stood the test of time for almost 20 years. This episode features three
timeless chapters from the audiobook of the four-hour work week, a chapter on taking many
retirements, which challenges everything about the deferred life plan, the slave, save, retire
approach, and shows you how to distribute adventure and retirement throughout life instead of
saving it all for the end. The chapter titled Filling the Void, which addresses navigating
the dizziness of freedom and handling unexpected emotional and philosophical challenges.
that you can run into, not just after reading the four-hour work week, but if you are an
entrepreneur of any type, really, but especially one following the tenets of lifestyle design.
And last but not least, the 13 mistakes of the new rich, where I outline the most common
pitfalls I've seen in people encounter, stumble over when implementing the book's principles.
These are all narrated by the great voice actor Ray Porter, and if you are interested in
checking out the rest of the audiobook, which is produced and copyrighted by Blackstone
publishing. You can find it on
audible, Apple, Google, Spotify,
downpore.com, or wherever you find your favorite
audiobooks. Until the next
long-form interview, please
enjoy. At this altitude, I can run
flat out for a half mile before my hands
start shaking. Can I answer your personal
question? Now I would have seen
an appropriate time.
What if I did the algorithm? I'm a cybernetic
organism, living tissue over a metal
endoskelet.
14. Mini Retirements. Embracing the mobile lifestyle. Before the development of tourism,
travel was conceived to be like study, and its fruits were considered to be the adornment of the mind
and the formation of the judgment. Paul Fussell, abroad. The simple willingness to improvise is more
vital in the long run than research. Rolf Potts, vagabonding. If you've gone through the previous
steps, eliminating, automating, and severing the leashes that bind you to one location, it's time to
indulge in some fantasies and explore the world. Even if you have no ache for extended travel,
or think it's impossible, whether due to marriage or mortgage, or those little things known as
children, this chapter is still the next step. There are fundamental changes I and most others
put off until absence or preparation for it forces them. This chapter is your final exam in
Muse's design. The transformation begins in a small Mexican village, in a parable that's been
shared in various forms around the world. Fables and Fortune Hunters
An American businessman took a vacation to a small coastal Mexican village on doctor's orders.
Unable to sleep after an urgent phone call from the office the first morning,
he walked out to the pier to clear his head.
A small boat with just one fisherman had docked,
and inside the boat were several large yellowfin tuna.
The American complimented the Mexican on the quality of his fish.
How long did it take you to catch them?
The American asked.
Only a little while, the Mexican replied.
Why don't you stay out longer and catch more fish?
The American then asked.
I have enough to support my family and give a few to friends,
the Mexican said as he unloaded them into a basket.
But what do you do with the rest of your time?
The Mexican looked up and smiled.
I sleep late, fish a little, play with my children,
take a siesta with my wife, Julia, and stroll into the village each evening where I sip
wine and play guitar with my amigos. I have a full and busy life, senor. The American laughed and
stood tall. Sir, I'm a Harvard MBA and can help you. You should spend more time fishing and with
the proceeds buy a bigger boat. In no time you could buy several boats with the increased
haul. Eventually you would have a fleet of fishing boats. He can
continued. Instead of selling your catch to a middleman, you would sell directly to the consumers,
eventually opening your own cannery. You would control the product, processing, and distribution.
You would need to leave this small coastal fishing village, of course, and move to Mexico City,
then to Los Angeles, and eventually New York City, where you could run your expanding enterprise with proper management.
The Mexican fisherman asked,
But, senor, how long will all this take?
To which the American replied,
15, 20 years, 25 tops.
But what then, senor?
The American laughed and said,
That's the best part.
When the time is right,
you would announce an IPO
and sell your company's stock to the public
and become very rich.
You would make millions.
Millions, signor?
Then what?
Then you would retire, and move to a small coastal fishing village where you would sleep late,
fish a little, play with your kids, take a siesta with your wife,
and stroll to the village in the evenings where you could sip wine and play your guitar with your amigos.
I recently had lunch in San Francisco with a good friend and former college roommate.
He will soon graduate from a top business school and return to investment.
banking. He hates coming home from the office at midnight, but explain to me that if he works
80-hour weeks for nine years, he could become a managing director and make a cool three to 10 million
dollars per year. Then he would be successful. Dude, what on earth would you do with three to 10 million
dollars per year, I asked. His answer? I would take a long trip to Thailand. That just about sums up
one of the biggest self-deceptions of our modern age,
extended world travel as the domain of the ultra-rich.
I've also heard the following.
I'll just work in the firm for 15 years,
then I'll be partner, and I can cut back on hours.
Once I have a million or two in the bank,
I'll put it in something safe like bonds,
take $80,000 a year in interest,
and retire to sail in the Caribbean.
I'll only work in consulting until I'm 35,
then retire and ride a motorcycle across China.
If your dream, the pot of gold at the end of the career rainbow,
is to live large in Thailand, sail around the Caribbean,
or ride a motorcycle across China, guess what?
All of them can be done for less than $3,000.
I've done all three.
Here are just two examples of how far a little can go.
The dollar figures in this chapter are all from a period immediately following
President Bush's re-election in 2004, which correlated to the worst dollar exchange rates of the last
20 years. $250 U.S.
Five days on a private Smithsonian Tropical Research Island with three local fishermen who caught
and cooked all my food and also took me on tours of the best hidden dive spots in Panama.
$150, U.S.
Three days of chartering a private plane in Mendoza,
a wine country in Argentina and flying over the most beautiful vineyards around the snow-capped
Andes with a personal guide.
Question.
What did you spend your last $400 on?
It's two or three weekends of nonsense and throw away forget the work week behavior in most U.S. cities.
$400 is nothing for a full eight days of life-changing experiences.
But eight days isn't what I'm recommending at all.
Those were just interludes in a much larger production.
I'm proposing much, much more.
The birth of many retirements and the death of vacations.
There is more to life than increasing its speed, Mohandas Gandhi.
In February of 2004, I was miserable and overworked.
My travel fantasy began as a plan to visit Costa Rica in March 2004 for four weeks of Spanish
and relaxation. I needed a recharge, and four weeks seemed reasonable by whatever made-up
benchmark you can use for such a thing. A friend familiar with Central America dutifully pointed
out that it would never work as Costa Rica was about to enter its rainy season. Torrential downpours
weren't the uplifting jolt I needed, so I shifted my focus to four weeks in Spain.
It's a long trip over the Atlantic, though, and Spain was close to other countries I'd always
wanted to visit. I lost reasonable somewhere shortly thereafter and decided that I deserved
a full three months to explore my roots in Scandinavia after four weeks in Spain. If there
were any real-time bombs or pending disasters, they would certainly crop up in the first
four weeks, so there really wasn't any additional risk in extending my trip to three months.
Three months would be great. Those three months turned into fifteen, and I started to ask
myself, why not take the usual 20 to 30 year retirement and redistribute it throughout life
instead of saving it all for the end? The alternative to binge traveling.
Thanks to the interstate highway system, it is now possible to travel from coast to coast without seeing anything.
Charles Kuralt, CBS News Reporter
If you are accustomed to working 50 weeks per year, the tendency, even after creating the mobility to take extended trips,
will be to go nuts and see 10 countries in 14 days and end up a wreck.
It's like taking a starving dog.
to an all-you-can-eat buffet, it will eat itself to death.
I did this three months into my 15-month vision quest,
visiting seven countries and going through at least 20 check-ins and check-outs
with a friend who had negotiated three weeks off.
The trip was an adrenaline-packed blast, but like watching life on Fast Forward.
It was hard for us to remember what had happened in which countries, except Amsterdam.
I refer, of course, to the amazing bike-riding opportunities and famous pastries.
We were both sick most of the time, and we were upset to have to leave some places
simply because our pre-purchased flights made it so.
I recommend doing the exact opposite.
The alternative to binge travel, the mini-retirement, entails relocating to one place for one to six months
before going home or moving to another locale.
It is the anti-vacation in the most positive sense.
Though it can be relaxing, the mini-retirement is not an escape from your life,
but a re-examination of it, the creation of a blank slate.
Following elimination and automation, what would you be escaping from?
Rather than seeking to see the world through photo-ops between foreign but familiar hotels,
we aim to experience it at a speed that lets it change us.
This is also different from a sabbatical.
Sabbaticals are often viewed much like retirement as a one-time event.
Savor it now while you can.
The mini-retirement is defined as recurring.
is a lifestyle. I currently take three or four mini-retirements per year, and know dozens who do the
same. Sometimes these sojourns take me around the world. Oftentimes, they take me around the
corner, Yosemite, Tahoe, Carmel, but to a different world psychologically, where meetings,
email, and phone calls don't exist for a set period of time.
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purging the demons emotional freedom
perfection of a man, to find out his own imperfection.
St. Augustine, 354 AD to 4.30 AD.
True freedom is much more than having enough income and time to do what you want.
It is quite possible, actually the rule rather than the exception, to have financial and
time freedom, but still be caught in the throes of the rat race.
One cannot be free from the stresses of a speed and size-obsessed culture
until you are free from the materialistic addictions,
time, famine, mindset,
and comparative impulses that created it in the first place.
This takes time.
The effect is not cumulative and no number of too weak,
also called T-O-O-W-E-A-K, coined by Joel Stein of the L.A. Times,
sightseeing trips can replace one good walkabout.
By all means, go ahead and take a post office celebratory trip and go nuts for a few weeks.
I know I did. Rock on.
Ibiza and Glowsticks, here I come.
Have some absinthe and drink lots of water.
Following that, sit down and plan an introspective mini-retirement.
In the experience of those I've interviewed, it takes two to three months just to unplug from obsolete routines
and become aware of just how much we distract ourselves with constant motion.
Can you have a two-hour dinner with Spanish friends without getting anxious?
Can you get accustomed to a small town where all businesses take a siesta for two hours in the afternoon
and then close at 4 o'clock p.m.
If not, you need to ask why.
Learn to slow down.
Get lost intentionally.
Observe how you judge both yourself and those around you.
Chances are that it's been a while.
Take at least two months to disincorporate old habits
and rediscover yourself without the reminder of a looming return flight.
The financial realities. It just gets better. The economic argument for many retirements is the icing on the cake. Four days in a decent hotel or a week for two at a nice hostel costs the same as a month in a nice posh apartment. If you relocate, the expenses abroad also begin to replace, often at much lower cost, bills you can then cancel stateside.
Here are some actual monthly figures from recent travels.
Highlights from both South America and Europe are shown side by side to prove that luxury is limited
by your creativity and familiarity with the locale, not gross currency devaluation in developing
countries. It will be obvious that I did not survive on bread and begging. I lived like a rock star,
and both experiences could be done for less than 50% of what I spent.
My goal was enjoyment and not austere survival.
Airfare.
Free, courtesy of Amex Gold Card and Chase Continental Airlines MasterCard.
Muses are low maintenance, but often expensive in one or both of two tactical areas,
manufacturing and advertising.
Shop for providers of both that are willing to accept credit cards as paying,
and negotiate this up front, if necessary, by saying,
rather than trying to negotiate you down on pricing,
I just ask that you accept payment by credit card.
If you can do that, we'll choose you over competitor X.
This is yet another example of a firm offer and not a question
that puts you in a stronger negotiating position.
For a detailed explanation of how I multiply points for traveling
using concepts like piggybacking and recycling, search for both terms on 4-hourblog.com.
Housing. Penthouse apartment on the equivalent of New York's 5th Avenue in Buenos Aires,
including house cleaners, personal security guards, phone, energy, and high-speed internet,
$550 U.S. per month.
Enormous apartment in the trendy, Soho-like Prenz-Lauerberg district,
of Berlin, including phone and energy.
$300 U.S. per month.
Meals.
Four or five-star restaurant meals twice daily in Buenos Aires.
$10 U.S. $300 U.S. per month.
Berlin, $18.
U.S. $540 U.S. per month.
Entertainment.
VIP table and unlimited champagne for eight people.
at the hottest club, Opera Bay in Buenos Aires, $150 U.S. $18.75 per person times four visits per month
equals $75 U.S. per month per person.
Cover, drinks, and dancing at the hottest clubs in West Berlin, $20 U.S. per person per night
times four equals $80 U.S. per month.
Education
2 hours daily of private Spanish lessons in Buenos Aires 5 times per week
$5.3 per hour times 40 hours per month
equals $200 U.S. per month.
Two hours daily of private tango lessons with two world-class professional dancers
$8.33 cents U.S. per hour times 40 hours per month
equals $33.30.20 U.S. per
month. Four hours daily of top-tier German language instruction in Nolendorf-Plotz, Berlin,
$175 U.S. per month, which would have paid for itself even if I had not attended classes,
as the student ID card entitled me to over 40% discounts on all transportation.
Six hours per week of mixed martial arts, MMA training, at the Top Berlin Academy,
free in exchange for tutoring in English two hours per week.
Transportation.
Monthly subway pass and daily cab rides to and from tango lessons in Buenos Aires,
$75 U.S. per month.
Monthly subway, tram, and bus pass in Berlin with student discount, $85 U.S. per month.
Four week total for luxury living.
Buenos Aires?
$1,533.20, including round-trip airfare from JFK, with a one-month stopover in Panama.
Nearly one-third of this total is from the daily one-on-one instruction from world-class teachers in Spanish and tango.
Berlin, $1,180, including round-trip airfare from JFK, and a one-week stopover in London.
How do these numbers compare to your current domestic monthly expenses, including rent, car insurance, utilities, weekend expenditures, partying, public transportation, gas, memberships, subscriptions, food, and all the rest?
Add it all up and you may well realize, like I did, that traveling around the world and having the time of your life can save you serious money.
Fear factors.
coming excuses not to travel.
Traveling is the ruin of all happiness.
There's no looking at a building here after seeing Italy.
Fanny Bernie, 1752 to 1840, English novelist.
But I have a house and kids.
I can't travel.
What about health insurance?
What if something happens?
Isn't travel dangerous?
What if I get kidnapped or mugged?
But I'm a woman.
Traveling alone would be.
dangerous. Most excuses not to travel are exactly that. Excuses. I've been there, so this isn't a
holier than thou sermon. I know too well that it's easier to live with ourselves if we cite an external
reason for inaction. I've since met paraplegics and the deaf, senior citizens and single mothers,
homeowners and the poor, all of whom have sought and found excellent life-changing.
reasons for extended travel instead of dwelling on the million small reasons against it.
Most of the concerns above are addressed in the Q&A, but one in particular requires a bit of
preemptive nerve calming. It's 10 o'clock p.m. Do you know where your children are?
The prime fear of all parents prior to their first international trip is somehow losing a child
in the shuffle. The good news is that if you are comfortable taking your kids to New York,
San Francisco, Washington, D.C., or London, you will have even less to worry about in the starting
cities I recommend in the Q&A. There are fewer guns and violent crimes in all of them
compared to most large U.S. cities. The likelihood of problems is decreased further when
travel is less airport and hotel hopping among strangers and more relocation to a second
home, a mini-retirement. But still, what if? Jen Eriko, a single mother who took her two
children on a five-month world tour, had a more acute fear than most, one that often woke
her at two o'clock a.m. in a cold sweat. What if something happens?
to me. She wanted to prime her kids for worst-case scenario, but didn't want to scare them
to death, so, like all good mothers, she made it a game. Who can best memorize the itineraries,
hotel addresses, and mom's phone number? She had emergency contacts in each country whose numbers
were loaded into the speed dial of her cell phone, which had global roaming. In the end,
nothing happened now she's planning to move to a ski chalet in europe and send her kids to school in
multilingual france success begets success she was most afraid in singapore and in retrospect it was
where she had the least reason to be worried she took her kids to south africa among other
places she was scared because it was the first stop and she was unaccustomed to travel
with her kids. It was perception, not reality.
Robin Molinsky Rummel, who spent a year traveling through South America with her husband and
seven-year-old son, was warned by friends and family not to visit Argentina after their
devaluation riots in 2001. She did her homework, decided that the fear was unfounded,
and proceeded to have the time of her life in Patagonia. When she told locals that she
was originally from New York, their eyes widened and jaws dropped. I saw those buildings blow up
on TV. I would never go to such a dangerous place. Don't assume that places abroad are more
dangerous than your hometown. Most aren't. Robin is convinced, as are other NR parents, that people
use children as an excuse to stay in their comfort zones. It's an easy excuse not to do something
adventurous. How to overcome the fear? Robin recommends two things. One, before embarking on a long
international trip with your children for the first time, take a trial run for a few weeks.
Two, for each stop, arrange a week of language classes that begin upon arrival and take advantage
of transportation from the airport if available. The school staff will often handle apartment
rentals for you and you will be able to make friends and learn the area before setting off on
your own. But what if your concern isn't so much losing your children, but losing your mind
because of your children? Several families interviewed for this audiobook recommended the oldest
persuasive tool known to man, bribery. Each child is given some amount of virtual cash,
$0.25 to 50 cents for each hour of good behavior. The same amount is subtracted from their accounts
for breaking the rules. All purchases for fun, whether souvenirs, ice cream, or otherwise,
come out of their own individual accounts. No balance? No goodies. This often requires more self-control
on the part of the parents than the children.
When More is Less
Cutting the Clutter
Human beings have the capacity to learn to want
almost any conceivable material object
Given then the emergence of a modern industrial culture
capable of producing almost anything,
the time is ripe for opening the storehouse of infinite need.
It is the modern Pandora's box and its play
are loose upon the world.
Jules Henry.
To be free,
to be happy and fruitful,
can only be attained through sacrifice
of many common but overestimated things.
Robert Henry.
I know the son of one deca millionaire,
a personal friend of Bill Gates,
who now manages private investments and ranches.
He has accumulated an assortment of beautiful homes
over the last decade, each with full-time cooks, servants, cleaners, and support staff.
How does he feel about having a home in each time zone?
It's a pain in the ass. He feels like he's working for his staff who spend more time in his
homes than he does. Extended travel is the perfect excuse to reverse the damage of years
of consuming as much as you can afford. It's time to get rid of clutter disguised as
necessities before you drag a five-piece Samsonite set around the world. That is hell on
earth. I'm not going to tell you to walk around in a robe and sandals, scouting at people who have
televisions. I hate that kashi-crunching, holier than thou stuff. Turning you into a possession-less
scribe is not my intention. Let's face it, though, there are tons of things in your home and life
that you don't use, need, or even particularly want.
They just came into your life as impulsive flotsam and jetsam and never found a good exit.
Whether you're aware of it or not, this clutter creates indecision and distractions,
consuming attention and making unfettered happiness a real chore.
It is impossible to realize how distracting all the crap is,
whether porcelain dolls, sports cars, or ragged t-shirts,
until you get rid of it.
Prior to my 15-month trip,
I was stressed about how to fit all of my belongings
into a 14-by-10-foot rental storage space.
Then I realized a few things.
I would never reread the business magazines I'd saved.
I wore the same five shirts and four pairs of pants
90% of the time. It was about time for new furniture, and I never used the outdoor grill
or lawn furniture. Even getting rid of things I never used proved to be like a capitalist
short circuit. It was hard to toss things I had once thought were valuable enough to spend
money on. The first ten minutes of sorting through clothing was like choosing which child of
mine should live or die. I hadn't exercised my throwing out muscles in some time.
It was a struggle to put nice Christmas clothing I'd never worn into the go pile and just
as hard to separate myself from worn and ragged clothing I had for sentimental reasons.
Once I'd passed through the first few tough decisions, though, the momentum had been built,
and it was a breeze. I donated all of the seldom worn.
clothing to goodwill. The furniture took less than 10 hours to offload using Craigslist,
and though I was paid less than 50% of the retail prices for some and nothing for others,
who cared? I'd used and abused them for five years and would get a new set when I landed back in the
U.S. I gave the grill and lawn furniture to my friend who lit up like a kid at Christmas. I had made his
month. It felt wonderful, and I had an extra $300 in pocket change to cover at least a few weeks
of rent abroad. I created 40% more space in my apartment and hadn't even grazed the surface.
It wasn't the extra physical space that I felt most. It was the extra mental space. It was as if I had
20 mental applications running simultaneously before, and now I had just one or two. My thinking was
clearer, and I was much, much happier. I asked every vagabond interviewee in this audio book
what their one recommendation would be for first-time extended travelers. The answer was
unanimous. Take less with you. The overpacking impulse is hard to resist.
The solution is to set what I call a settling fund.
Rather than pack for all contingencies,
I bring the absolute minimum
and allocate $100 to $300 for purchasing things
after I arrive and as I travel.
I no longer take toiletries or more than a week's worth of clothing.
It's a blast.
Finding shaving cream or a dress shirt overseas
can produce an adventure in and of itself.
Pack as if you were coming back.
back in one week.
Here are the bare essentials listed in order of importance.
One.
One week of clothing appropriate to the season, including one semi-formal shirt and a pair of pants
or skirt for customs.
Think T-shirts, one pair of shorts, and a multi-purpose pair of jeans.
Two, backup photocopies or scanned copies of all important documents, health insurance,
passport, visa, credit cards, debit cards, etc.
3. Debit cards, credit cards, and $200 worth of small bills in local currency.
Traveler's checks are not accepted in most places and are a hassle.
4. Small cable bike lock for securing luggage while in transit or in hostels.
A small padlock for lockers, if needed.
5.
electronic dictionaries for target languages book versions are too slow to be of use in conversation
and small grammar guides or texts six one broad strokes travel guide that's it
just a quick thanks to our sponsors and we'll be right back to the show not to be a salty old dog
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The Bora Bora Dealmaker
Baffin Island, Nunavut. Josh Steinitz, founder of
Nileproject.com, stood at the edge of the world and stared in amazement.
He dug his boots into the six feet of sea ice, and the unicorns danced.
Ten narwhals, rare cousins of the beluga, came to the surface and pointed their six-foot-plus spiral
tusks toward the heavens. The pod of three thousand-pound whales then fell into the depths once
again. The narwhals are deep divers, more than 3,000 feet in some cases, so Josh had at least
20 minutes until their reappearance. It seemed appropriate that he was with the narwhals.
Their name came from Old Norse and referred to their mottled white and blue skin.
Noveler. Corpse Man. He smiled, as he had done often in the last few years.
years. Josh himself was a dead man walking. One year after graduating from college, Josh found out that he had
oral squamous carcinoma. Cancer. He had plans to be a management consultant. He had plans to be
lots of things. Suddenly none of it mattered. Less than half of those who suffered from this
particular type of cancer survived. The Reaper didn't discriminate and came without warning.
It became clear that the biggest risk in life wasn't making mistakes, but regret, missing out on
things. He could never go back and recapture years spent doing something he disliked.
Two years later and cancer-free, Josh set off on an indefinite.
global walkabout, covering expenses as a freelance writer. He later became the co-founder of a
website that provides customized itineraries to would-be vagabonds. His executive status didn't
lessen his mobile addiction. He was as comfortable cutting deals from the overwater bungalows
of Bora Bora as he was in the log cabins of the Swiss Alps. He once took a call from a client
while at Camp Muir on Mount Rainier.
The client needed to confirm some sales numbers
and asked Josh about all the wind in the background.
Josh's answer?
I'm standing at 10,000 feet on a glacier
and this afternoon the wind is whipping us down the mountain.
The client said he'd let Josh get back to what he was doing.
Another client called Josh while he was leaving a Balinese temple
and heard the gongs in the background.
The client asked Josh if he was in church.
Josh wasn't quite sure what to say.
All that came out was, yes?
Back among the narwhals, Josh had a few minutes before heading to base camp to avoid polar bears.
24-hour daylight meant that he had much to share with his friends back in the land of cubicles.
He sat down on the ice and produced his satellite phone and laptop from a waterproof.
bag. He began his email in the usual way. I know you're all sick of seeing me have so much
fun, but guess where I am.
Q&A. Questions and actions. It is fatal to know too much at the outcome. Boredom comes as quickly
to the traveler who knows his route as to the novelist who is over certain of his plot.
Paul Theroux, to the ends of the earth.
If this is your first time considering a commitment to the mobile lifestyle and long-term
adventuring, I envy you. Making the jump and entering the new worlds that await is like upgrading
your role in life from passenger to pilot. The bulk of this Q&A will focus on the precise steps
that you should take and the countdown timeline you can use when preparing for your first
mini-retirement. Most steps can be eliminated or condensed once you get one trip under your
belt. Some of the steps are one-time events, after which subsequent mini-retirements will
require a maximum of two to three weeks of preparation. It now takes me three afternoons.
Grab a pencil and paper. This will be fun. One, take an asset and cash flow snapshot. Set two
sheets of paper on a table. Use one to record all assets and corresponding values, including
bank accounts, retirement accounts, stocks, bonds, home, and so forth. On the second, draw a line
down the middle and write down all incoming cash flow, salary, muse income, investment
income, etc., and outgoing expenses, mortgage, rent, car payments, etc. What can you eliminate that is
either seldom used, or that creates stress or distraction without adding a lot of value.
2. Fear set a one-year mini-retirement in a dream location in Europe. Use the questions from
Chapter 3 to evaluate your worst-case scenario fears, and evaluate the real potential consequences.
Except in rare cases, most will be avoidable, and the rest will be reversible.
Three. Choose a location for your actual mini-retirement. Where to start? This is the big question. There are two options that I advocate. A, choose a starting point and then wander until you find your second home. This is what I did with a one-way ticket to London, vagabonding throughout Europe until I fell in love with Berlin, where I remained for three months.
B. Scout a region and then settle in your favorite spot. This is what I did with a tour of
Central and South America, where I spent one to four weeks in each of several cities, after which
I returned to my favorite, Buenos Aires, for six months. It is possible to take a mini-retirement
in your own country, but the transformative effect is hampered if you are surrounded by people who
carry the same socially reinforced baggage. I recommend choosing an overseas location that will seem
foreign, but that isn't dangerous. I box, race motorcycles, and do all sorts of macho things, but I draw
the line at favelas, Brazilian shanty towns. See the movie City of God, Cidade de Dios, to get a
taste of how fun these are. Civilians with machine guns, pedestrians with machetes, and social strife.
Cheap is good, but bullet holes are bad.
Check the U.S. Department of State for Travel Warnings before booking tickets.
Travel.State.gov.
Here are just a few of my favorite starting points.
Feel free to choose other locations.
The most lifestyle for the dollar is stressed.
Argentina.
Buenos Aires, Cordova.
China.
Shanghai, Hong Kong, Taipei.
Japan, Tokyo, Osaka, England, London, Ireland, Galway, Thailand, Bangkok, Chiang Mai, Germany, Berlin, Munich, Norway, Oslo, Australia, Sydney, New Zealand, Queensland, Queenstown, Italy, Rome, Milan, Florence, Spain, Madrid, Valencia, Sevilla, and Holland, Amsterdam.
In all of these places, it is possible to live well while spending little.
I spend less in Tokyo than in California because I know it well.
Hip, recently gentrified artist areas, not unlike the Brooklyn of ten years ago,
can be found in almost all cities.
The one place I can't seem to find a decent lunch for less than $20 U.S., London.
Here are a few exotic places I don't recommend for vagabonding virgins.
though veterans can make them all work.
All countries in Africa, the Middle East, or Central and South America,
excepting Costa Rica and Argentina,
Mexico City, and Mexican border areas are also a bit too kidnap happy
to make it onto my favorites list.
Four.
Prepare for your trip.
Here's the countdown.
Three months out.
Eliminate.
Get used to minimalism before the department.
departure, here are the questions to ask and act upon, even if you never plan to leave.
What is the 20% of my belongings that I use 80% of the time?
Eliminate the other 80% in clothing, magazines, books, and all else. Be ruthless.
You can always repurchase things you can't live without.
Which belongings create stress in my life? This could relate to maintenance costs,
money and energy, insurance, monthly expenses, time consumption, or simple distraction.
Eliminate, eliminate, eliminate.
If you sell even a few expensive items, it could finance a good portion of your mini-retirement.
Don't rule out the car and home.
It's always possible to purchase either upon your return, often losing no money in the process.
Check current health insurance coverage for extended overseas travel.
Get the wheels in motion to rent, swap, or sell your home.
Renting out is most recommended by serial vagabonds,
or end your apartment lease and move all belongings into storage.
In all cases where doubts crop up, ask yourself,
if I had a gun to my head and had to do it, how would I do it?
It's not as hard as you think.
Two months out.
Automate.
After eliminating the excess, contact companies,
including suppliers that bill you regularly and set up auto payment with credit cards that have
reward points.
Telling them that you will be traveling the world for a year often persuades them to accept
credit cards rather than chase you around the planet like Carmen San Diego.
For the credit card companies themselves and others that refuse, arrange automatic debit
from your checking account, set up online banking and bill payment, set up all companies
that won't take credit cards or automatic debit as online payees.
Set these scheduled checks for $15 to $20 more than expected
when dealing with utilities and other variable expenses.
This will cover miscellaneous fees,
prevent time-consuming billing problems,
and accrue as a credit.
Cancel paper, bank, and credit card statement delivery.
Get bank-issued credit cards for all checking accounts.
generally one for business and one for personal, and set the cash advances to zero dollars
to minimize abuse potential. Leave these cards at home, as they are just for emergency overdraft
protection. Give a trusted member of your family and or your accountant, power of attorney,
which gives that person authority to sign documents, tax filings, and checks, for example,
in your name. This is a serious step and should not be taken with those you do
not trust. In this case it helps because your accountant can then sign tax documents or checks
in your name instead of consuming hours and days of your time with faxes, scanners, and
expensive international Fed-Xing of documents. Nothing screws up foreign fund faster than having
to sign original documents when faxes are unacceptable. One month out. Speak to the manager
of your local post office and have all mail forwarded to a friend,
family member or personal assistant, who will be paid $100 to $200 per month to email you brief
descriptions of all non-junk mail each Monday. There are also services like earthclassmail.com,
which will receive, scan, and email all of your non-junk mail to you as PDFs.
Get all required and recommended immunizations and vaccinations for your target region.
Check the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
CDC.gov forward slash travel.
Note that proof of immunizations is sometimes required to pass through foreign customs.
Set up a trial account with GoToMy PC or similar remote access software
and take a dry run to ensure that there are no technological glitches.
This would be used if you leave your computer at home or in someone else's home while traveling.
step can be skipped if you bring your computer, but that is like a recovering heroin addict
bringing a bag of opium to rehab. Don't tempt yourself to kill time instead of rediscovering it.
If resellers or distributors still send you checks, the fulfillment house should handle customer
checks at this point, do one of three things. Give the resellers direct bank deposit information,
ideal, have the
Fulfillment House handle these checks,
second choice,
or have the resellers pay via PayPal
or mail checks to one of the people
you are trusting with power of attorney.
Far, third.
In the last case,
give the person with power of attorney deposit slips
so he or she can sign
or stamp and mail in the checks.
It is convenient to become a member of a large bank,
Bank of America, Wells Fargo,
Washington Mutual, City Bank, etc., with branches near the person assisting you
so that they can drop off the deposits while running other errands.
No need to move all accounts to this bank if you don't want to.
Just open a single new account that is used solely for these deposits.
Two weeks out.
Scan all identification, health insurance, and credit-debit cards into a computer
from which you can print multiple copies,
several to be left with family members
and several to be taken with you in separate bags.
Email the scanned file to yourself
so that you can access it while abroad
if you lose the paper copies.
If you are an entrepreneur,
downgrade your cell phone to the cheapest plan
and set up a voicemail greeting that states,
I am currently overseas on business.
Please do not leave a voicemail
as I will not be checking it while gone.
please send me an email at blank atblank.com if the matter is important. Thank you for your
understanding. Then set up email auto-responders that indicate responses could take up to seven days
or whatever you decide for frequency due to international business travel.
Find an apartment for your ultimate mini-retirement destination or reserve a hostel or hotel
at your starting point for three to four days.
Reserving an apartment before you arrive is riskier and will be much more expensive than using
the latter three to four days to find an apartment. I recommend hostels for the starting point
if possible, not for cost considerations, but because the staff and fellow travelers are more
knowledgeable and helpful with relocations. Get foreign medical evacuation insurance if needed
for peace of mind. This tends to be redundant if you are in a developed country,
and can buy local insurance to augment your own, which I do.
And it is useless if you are a 10-hour flight from civilization.
I had evacuation insurance in Panama, as it's a two-hour flight from Miami,
but I didn't bother elsewhere.
Don't freak out about this.
It's just as true if you're in the middle of nowhere, in the middle of the U.S.
One week out.
Decide on a schedule for routine-batched tasks such as e-mail,
online banking, et cetera, to eliminate excuses for senseless pseudo-work procrastabating.
I suggest Monday mornings for checking email and online banking.
The first and third Mondays of the month can be used for checking credit cards
and making other online payments, such as affiliates.
These promises to yourself will be the hardest to keep,
so make a commitment now and expect serious withdrawal cravings.
Save important documents, including the scan of your identification, insurance, and credit
debit cards to a small, handheld storage device that plugs into a computer USB port.
Move all things out of your home or apartment into storage.
Pack a single small backpack and carry-on bag for the adventure, and move in briefly with a family
member or friend.
Two days out.
Put remaining automobiles into storage or a friend's garage.
Put fuel stabilizer like Stabil in the gas tanks, disconnect the negative leads from batteries
to prevent drain, and put the vehicles on jack stands to prevent tire and shock damage.
Cancel all auto insurance except for theft coverage.
Upon arrival, assuming you have not booked an apartment in advance.
First morning and afternoon after check-in, take a hop-on, hop-off bus tour of the
city, followed by a bike tour of potential apartment neighborhoods.
First, late afternoon, or evening, purchase an unlocked cell phone with a SIM card that can
be recharged with simple prepaid cards. Unlocked means that it is recharged with prepaid
cards instead of being on a monthly payment plan with a single carrier such as O2 or Vodafone.
This also means that the same phone can be used with carriers in other countries, assuming the
frequency is the same, with a simple switch of the SIM memory card for $10 to $30 U.S. in most
cases. Some U.S. compatible quad-band phones can use SIM cards.
Email apartment owners or brokers on craigslist.com and online versions of local newspapers
for viewings over the next two days.
Second and third days. Find and book an apartment for one month. Don't commit to more than one
month until you've slept there. I once prepaid two months only to find that the bus stop
downtown was on the other side of my bedroom wall. Move in day. Get settled and purchase local health
insurance. Ask hostile owners and other locals what insurance they use. Resolve not to buy
souvenirs or other take-home items until two weeks prior to departure. One week later, eliminate
all the extra crap you brought but won't use often. Either give it to someone who needs it more,
mail it back to the U.S. or throw it out.
Fifteen. Filling the void. Adding life after subtracting work.
To be engrossed by something outside ourselves is a powerful antidote for the rational mind,
the mind that so frequently has its head up its own ass. Anne Lamott, bird by bird,
There is not enough time to do all the nothing we want to do.
Bill Watterson, creator of the Calvin and Hobbs cartoon strip.
Kings Cross London
I stumbled into the deli across the cobblestone street and ordered a prosciutto sandwich.
It was 10.30 a.m. now.
The fifth time I'd checked the time, and the 20th time I'd asked myself,
What the bleep am I going to do today?
The best answer I'd come up with so far,
was, get a sandwich. Thirty minutes earlier, I had woken up without an alarm clock for the first
time in four years, fresh off arriving from JFK the night before. I had so been looking forward
to it, awakening to musical bird song outside, sitting up in bed with a smile, smelling the
aroma of freshly brewed coffee, and stretching out overhead like a cat in the shade of a Spanish
Villa. Magnificent. It turned out more like this. Bolt upright as if blasted with a foghorn,
grab clock, curse, jump out of bed in underwear to check email, remember that I was forbidden
to do so, curse again, look for my host and former classmate, realized that he was off to work
like the rest of the world, and proceed to have a panic attack. I spent the rest of the day in a
haze, wandering from museum to botanical garden to museum, as if on rinse and repeat, avoiding
internet cafes with some vague sense of guilt. I needed a to-do list to feel productive and so
put down things like, eat dinner. This was going to be a lot harder than I had thought.
Postpartum depression. It's normal.
Man is so made that he can only find relaxation from one kind of labor by taking up another.
Anatole France, author of The Crime of Sylvester Bonnard.
I've got more money and time than I ever dreamed possible.
Why am I depressed?
It's a good question, with a good answer.
Just be glad you're figuring this out now and not at the end of life.
The retired and ultra-rich are often unethical.
unfulfilled and neurotic for the same reason. Too much idle time. But wait a second. Isn't more time
what we're after? Isn't that what this book is all about? No, not at all. Too much free time is no
more than fertilizer for self-doubt and assorted mental tail-chasing. Subtracting the bad does not
create the good. It leaves a vacuum. Decreasing income-driven work isn't the end goal.
Living more and becoming more is.
In the beginning, the external fantasies will be enough, and there is nothing wrong with this.
I cannot over-emphasize the importance of this period.
Go nuts and live your dreams.
This is not superficial or selfish.
It is critical to stop repressing yourself and get out of the postponement habit.
Let's suppose you decide to dip your toe in dreams like relocating to the Caribbean for island hopping,
or taking a safari in the serengetti.
It will be wonderful and unforgettable, and you should do it.
There will come a time, however, be it three weeks or three years later,
when you won't be able to drink another pinocalada
or photograph another damn red-assed baboon.
Self-criticism and existential panic attacks start around this time.
But this is what I always wanted.
How can I be bored?
board. Don't freak out and fuel the fire. This is normal among all high performers who downshift
after working hard for a long time. The smarter and more goal-oriented you are, the tougher
these growing pains will be. Learning to replace the perception of time famine with appreciation of
time abundance is like going from triple espresso's to decaf. But there's more. Retirees get depressed for
second reason and you will too. Social isolation. Offices are good for some things.
Free, bad coffee and complaining thereof. Gossip and commiserating. Stupid video clips via email
with even stupid or comments and meetings that accomplish nothing but kill a few hours with a few
laughs. The job itself might be a dead end, but it's the web of human interactions, the social
environment that keeps us there. Once liberated, this automatic tribal unit disappears,
which makes the voices in your head louder. Don't be afraid of the existential or social challenges.
Freedom is like a new sport. In the beginning, the sheer newness of it is exciting enough to
keep things interesting at all times. Once you have learned the basics, though, it becomes
clear that to be even a half-decent player requires some serious practice. Don't fret. The
greatest rewards are to come, and you're ten feet from the finish line. Frustrations and
doubts. You're not alone. People say that what we are seeking is a meaning for life. I don't
think this is what we're really seeking. I think what we're seeking is an experience of being alive.
Campbell, The Power of Myth.
Once you eliminate the nine to five and the rubber hits the road, it's not all roses and white
sand bliss, though much of it can be. Without the distraction of deadlines and co-workers,
the big questions, such as what does it all mean, become harder to fend off for a later
time. In a sea of infinite options, decisions also become harder. What the hell should I do with
my life. It's like senior year in college all over again. Like all innovators ahead of the
curve, you will have frightening moments of doubt. Once past the kid in a candy store phase,
the comparative impulse will creep in. The rest of the world will continue with its nine to five
grind, and you will begin to question your decision to step off the treadmill. Common doubts and
self-flagellation include the following. One, am I really? Am I really?
really doing this to be more free and lead a better life, or am I just lazy?
Two, did I quit the rat race because it's bad, or just because I couldn't hack it?
Did I just cop out?
Three, is this as good as it gets?
Perhaps I was better off when I was following orders and ignorant of the possibilities.
It was easier at least.
Four, am I really successful, or just kidding myself?
Five. Have I lowered my standards to make myself a winner? Are my friends who are now making twice as much as three years ago really on the right track?
Six. Why am I not happy? I can do anything and I'm still not happy. Do I even deserve it?
Most of this can be overcome, as soon as we recognize it, for what it is. Outdated comparisons using the more is better and money as success mindsets that got a
into trouble to begin with. Even so, there is a more profound observation to be made.
These doubts invade the mind when nothing else fills it. Think of a time when you felt
100% alive and undistracted, in the zone. Chances are that it was when you were completely
focused in the moment on something external, someone or something else. Sports and sex are
two great examples. Lacking an external focus the mind turns inward on itself and creates problems
to solve, even if the problems are undefined or unimportant. If you find a focus, an ambitious goal
that seems impossible and forces you to grow, these doubts disappear. Abraham Maslow, the American
psychologist, famous for proposing Maslow's hierarchy of needs, would term this goal a peak
experience. In the process of searching for a new focus, it is almost inevitable that the
big questions will creep in. There is pressure from pseudo-philosophers everywhere to cast aside
the impertinent and answer the eternal. Two popular examples are, what is the meaning of life,
and what is the point of it all? There are many more, ranging from the introspective to the
ontological, but I have one answer for almost all of them.
don't answer them at all. I'm no nihilist. In fact, I've spent more than a decade investigating
the mind and concept of meaning, a quest that has taken me from the neuroscience laboratories of
top universities to the halls of religious institutions worldwide. The conclusion after it all is
surprising. I am 100% convinced that most big questions we feel compelled to face,
handed down through centuries of overthinking and mistranslation,
use terms so undefined as to make attempting to answer them a complete waste of time.
There is a place for cones and rhetorical meditative questions,
but these tools are optional and outside the scope of this audiobook.
Most questions without answers are just poorly worded.
This isn't depressing.
It's liberating.
Consider the question of questions.
What is the meaning of life?
If pressed, I have but one response.
It is the characteristic state or condition of a living organism.
But that's just a definition, the questioner will retort.
That's not what I mean at all.
What do you mean, then?
Until the question is clear, each term in it defined,
there is no point in answering it.
The meaning of life question.
question is unanswerable without further elaboration. Before spending time on a stress-inducing
question, big or otherwise, ensure that the answer is yes to the following two questions.
One, have I decided on a single meaning for each term in this question? Two, can the answer to
this question be acted upon to improve things? What is the meaning of life? Fails the first?
and thus the second. Questions about things beyond your sphere of influence like
what if the train is late tomorrow fail the second and should thus be ignored. These are not
worthwhile questions. If you can't define it or act upon it, forget it. If you take just this
point from this audiobook, it will put you in the top 1% of performers in the world and keep
most philosophical distress out of your life.
Sharpening your logical and practical mental toolbox is not being an atheist or unspiritual.
It's not being crass, and it's not being superficial.
It's being smart and putting your effort where it can make the biggest difference for yourself and others.
The point of it all.
Drumroll, please.
What man actually needs is not a tensionless state,
but rather the striving and struggling for a worthwhile goal, a freely chosen task.
Victor E. Frankel, Holocaust Survivor, author of Man's Search for Meaning.
I believe that life exists to be enjoyed and that the most important thing is to feel good about yourself.
Each person will have his or her own vehicles for both, and those vehicles will change over time.
For some, the answer will be working with orphans.
And for others, it will be composing music.
I have a personal answer to both.
To love, be loved, and never stop learning.
But I don't expect that to be universal.
Some criticize a focus on self-love and enjoyment as selfish or hedonistic,
but it's neither.
Enjoying life and helping others,
or feeling good about yourself and increasing the greater good,
are no more mutually exclusive than being agnostic and leading a moral.
life, one does not preclude the other. Let's assume we agree on this. It still leaves the question,
what can I do with my time to enjoy life and feel good about myself? I can't offer a single
answer that will fit all people, but, based on the dozens of fulfilled N.R. I've interviewed,
there are two components that are fundamental, continual learning and service.
Learning Unlimited
Sharpening the Saw
Americans who travel abroad for the first time are often shocked to discover that
despite all the progress that has been made in the last 30 years
many foreign people still speak in foreign languages
Dave Barry
To live is to learn I see no other option
This is why I felt compelled to quit or be fired from jobs
within the first six months or so.
The learning curve flattens out and I get bored.
Though you can upgrade your brain domestically,
traveling and relocating provides unique conditions
that make progress much faster.
The different surroundings act as a counterpoint
and mirror for your own prejudices,
making weaknesses that much easier to fix.
I rarely travel somewhere without deciding first
how I'll obsess on a specific skill.
Here are a few examples.
Connemara, Ireland.
Gaelic Irish, Irish flute, and hurling, the fastest field sport in the world.
Imagine a mix of lacrosse and rugby, played with axe handles.
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Brazilian Portuguese and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.
Berlin, Germany, German, and Locking, a form of upright breakdancing.
I tend to focus on lowly.
language acquisition and one kinesthetic skill, sometimes finding the latter after landing overseas.
The most successful serial vagabonds tend to blend the mental and the physical.
Notice that I often transport a skill I practice domestically, martial arts, to other countries
where they are also practiced, instant social life and camaraderie.
It need not be a competitive sport. It could be hiking, chess, or almost anything that keeps your
knows out of a textbook and you out of your apartment. Sports just happened to be excellent for
avoiding foreign language stage fright and developing lasting friendships while still sounding like
Tarzan. Language learning deserves special mention. It is, bar none, the best thing you can do
to hone clear thinking. Quite aside from the fact that it is impossible to understand a culture
without understanding its language.
Acquiring a new language makes you aware of your own language,
your own thoughts.
The benefits of becoming fluent in a foreign tongue
are as underestimated as the difficulty is overestimated.
Thousands of theoretical linguists will disagree,
but I know from research and personal experimentation
with more than a dozen languages
that, one, adults can learn languages
much faster than children when constant 9 to 5 work is removed, and that, too, it is possible to
become conversationally fluent in any language in six months or less. At four hours per day,
six months can be whittled down to less than three months. It is beyond the scope of this
audiobook to explain applied linguistics and the 80-20 of language learning, but resources and
complete how-to guides can be found under
Language at 4hourblog.com.
I learned six languages after failing Spanish
in high school, and you can do the same with the right tools.
Gain a language and you gain a second lens
through which to question and understand the world.
Cursing at people when you go home is fun too.
Don't miss the chance to double your life experience.
Service for the right reasons.
to save the whales or kill them and feed the children.
Morality is simply the attitude we adopt toward people we personally dislike.
Oscar Wilde.
One would expect me to mention service in this chapter, and here it is.
Like all before it, the twist is a bit different.
Service, to me, is simple, doing something that improves life besides your own.
This is not the same as philanthropy.
philanthropy. Philanthropy is the altruistic concern for the well-being of mankind, human life.
Human life has long been focused on the exclusion of the environment and the rest of the food chain.
Hence, our current race to imminent extinction.
Serves us right. The world does not exist solely for the betterment and multiplication of mankind.
Before I start chaining myself to trees and saving the dart frogs, though,
I should take my own advice, do not become a cause snob.
How can you help starving children in Africa when there are starving children in Los Angeles?
How can you save the whales when homeless people are freezing to death?
How does doing volunteer research on coral destruction help those people who need help now?
Children, please. Everything out there needs help, so don't get baited into my cause can beat up your cause.
arguments with no right answer. There are no qualitative or quantitative comparisons that
make sense. The truth is this. Those thousands of lives you save could contribute to a famine
that kills millions, or that one bush in Bolivia that you protect could hold the cure for
cancer. The downstream effects are unknown. Do your best and hope for the best. If you're
improving the world, however you define that, consider your job well done.
Service isn't limited to saving lives or the environment either. It can also improve life.
If you are a musician and put a smile on the faces of thousands or millions, I view that as
service. If you are a mentor and change the life of one child for the better, the world has
been improved. Improving the quality of life in the world is in no fashion inferior to
adding more lives. Service is an attitude. Find the cause or vehicle that interests you most
and make no apologies. Q&A. Questions and actions. Adults are always asking kids what
they want to be when they grow up because they are looking for ideas. Paula Poundstone.
The miracle is not to walk on water.
The miracle is to walk on the green earth, dwelling deeply in the present moment and feeling
truly alive.
Tick not Han.
But I can't just travel, learn languages, or fight for one cause for the rest of my life.
Of course you can't.
That's not my suggestion at all.
These are just good life hubs, starting points that lead to opportunities and experiences that
otherwise wouldn't be found. There is no right answer to the question, what should I do with my life?
Forget should altogether. The next step, and that's all it is, is pursuing something. It matters
little what that seems fun or rewarding. Don't be in a rush to jump into a full-time, long-term
commitment. Take time to find something that calls to you, not just the first acceptable
form of surrogate work.
That calling will, in turn, lead you to something else.
Here is a good sequence for getting started that dozens of NR have used with success.
1. Revisit ground zero.
Do nothing.
Before we can escape the goblins of the mind, we need to face them.
Principle among them is speed addiction.
It is hard to recalibrate your internal clock.
without taking a break from constant over-stimulation.
Travel and the impulse to see a million things can exacerbate this.
Slowing down doesn't mean accomplishing less.
It means cutting out counterproductive distractions and the perception of being rushed.
Consider attending a short silence retreat of three to seven days,
during which all media and speaking is prohibited.
Learn to turn down the status.
of the mind so you can appreciate more
before doing more
the Art of Living Foundation
Course 2 International
Art of Living.org
Spirit Rock Meditation Center in California
Spiritrock.org
Crippaloo Center for Yoga
and Health in Massachusetts
Crippaloo.org
Skylake Lodge
in New York.
Sky-dashlake.org
2. Make an anonymous donation to the service organization of your choice.
This helps to get the juices flowing and disassociate feeling good about service with getting credit for it.
It feels even better when it's pure.
Here are some good sites to get started.
Charity Navigator.
Charitynavigator.org
This independent service ranks more than 5,000 charities using criteria you select.
Create a personalized page of favorites and compare them side by side, all free of charge.
Firstgiving. Firstgiving.com
Firstgiving.com allows you to create an online fundraising page.
Donations can be made through your personal URL.
I have used first giving in coordination with a nonprofit called Room to Read to build schools in both Nepal and Vietnam.
with more countries pending.
If you specifically want to help animals, for example,
you can click on a related link and access websites
for hundreds of different animal charities
and then decide which one you want to donate to.
The UK version of the website is
JustGiving.com.
Three, take a learning mini-retirement
in combination with local volunteering.
Take a mini-retirement, six months or more, if possible,
to focus on learning and serving.
The longer duration will permit a language focus
which in turn enables more meaningful interaction
and contribution through volunteering.
For the duration of this trip,
note self-criticisms and negative self-talk
in a journal.
Whenever upset or anxious,
ask why, at least three times,
and put the answers down on paper.
Describing these doubts in writing
reduces their impact twofold,
First, it's often the ambiguous nature of self-doubt that hurts most.
Defining and exploring it in writing, just as with forcing colleagues to email, demands clarity of thought, after which most concerns are found to be baseless.
Second, recording these concerns seems to somehow remove them from your head.
But where to go, and what to do?
There is no one right answer to either.
Use the following questions and resources to brainstorm.
What makes you most angry about the state of the world?
What are you most afraid of for the next generation, whether you have children or not?
What makes you happiest in your life?
How can you help others have the same?
There is no need to limit yourself to one location.
Remember Robin, who traveled through South America for a year with her husband
and seven-year-old son.
The three of them spent one to two months
doing volunteer work in each location,
including building wheelchairs in Bonos, Ecuador,
rehabilitating exotic animals in the Bolivian rainforest
and shepherding leatherback sea turtles in Suriname.
How about doing archaeological excavation in Jordan
or tsunami relief on the islands of Thailand?
These are just two of the dozens of foreign relocation
and volunteering case studies in each issue of Verge magazine.
Reader-tested resources include
Hands-on Disaster Response, H-O-D-R.org,
Project Hope, Project Hope.org.
Relief International,
R-I.org.
International Relief Teams, I-R-teams.org.
Airline Ambassadors International,
Airline-A-M-B-D-org.
Ambassadors for Children
Ambassadors for Children.org
ReliefRiders International
Reliefriders International.com
Habitat for Humanity Global Village Program
Habitat.org
Planeta
Global listings for practical ecotourism
Planeta.com
4
Revisit and reset dream lines
Following the mini-retirement, revisit the dream lines set in definition and reset them as needed.
The following questions will help.
What are you good at?
What could you be the best at?
What makes you happy?
What excites you?
What makes you feel accomplished and good about yourself?
What are you most proud of having accomplished in your life?
Can you repeat this or further develop it?
What do you enjoy sharing or experiencing with other people?
Five, based on the outcomes of steps one through four,
consider testing new part- or full-time vocations.
Full-time work isn't bad, if it's what you'd rather be doing.
This is where we distinguish work from a vocation.
If you have created a muse or cut your hours down to next to nothing,
consider testing a part-time or full-time vocation, a true calling or dream occupation.
This is what I did with this audiobook.
I can now tell people I'm a writer rather than giving them the two-hour drug dealer explanation.
What did you dream of being when you were a kid?
Perhaps it's time to sign up for space camp or intern as an assistant to a marine biologist.
Recapturing the excitement of childhood isn't impossible.
In fact, it's required.
There are no more chains or excuses to hold you back.
16.
The top 13 new rich mistakes.
If you don't make mistakes, you're not working on hard enough problems, and that's a big mistake.
Frank Wilcheck, 2004 Nobel Prize winner in physics.
Ho imperato
Che niente and impossiblee.
Eanche ce quasi niente
and faciele.
I've learned that nothing is impossible
and that almost nothing is easy.
Articolo 31
Italian rap group
Un Orlo
Mistakes are the name of the game
in lifestyle design.
It requires fighting impulse
after impulse from the old world
of retirement-based life deferral.
Here are the slip-ups you will make.
Don't get frustrated.
It's all part of the process.
1. Losing sight of dreams and falling into work for work's sake, W-4-W.
Please re-listen to the introduction and next chapter of this audiobook whenever you feel yourself falling into this trap.
Everyone does it, but many get stuck and never get out.
Two, micromanaging and emailing to fill time.
Set the responsibilities, problem scenarios, and rules, and limits of autonomous decision-making.
Then stop for the sanity of everyone involved.
Three, handling problems your outsourcers or co-workers can handle.
Four, helping outsourcers or co-workers with the same problem.
problem more than once or with non-crisis problems. Give them if-then rules for solving all but
the largest problems. Give them the freedom to act without your input. Set the limits in writing
and then emphasize in writing that you will not respond to help with problems that are
covered by these rules. In my particular case, all outsourcers have at their discretion the ability
to fix any problem that will cost
less than $400.
At the end of each month or quarter,
depending on the outsourcer,
I review how their decisions have affected profit
and adjusts the rules accordingly,
often adding new rules based on their good decisions
and creative solutions.
Five.
Chasing customers, particularly unqualified
or international prospects,
when you have sufficient cash flow
to finance your non-financial
pursuits.
6.
Answering email that will not result in a sale or that can be answered by a faq or autoresponder.
7.
Working where you live, sleep, or should relax.
Separate your environments.
Designate a single space for work and solely work.
Or you will never be able to escape it.
8. Not performing a thorough 80-20 analysis
every two to four weeks for your business and personal life.
9. Striving for endless perfection rather than great or simply good enough, whether in your
personal or professional life. Recognize that this is often just another W-4-W excuse. Most
endeavors are like learning to speak a foreign language. To be correct, 95% of the time,
requires six months of concentrated effort, whereas to be correct, 98% percent,
of the time requires 20 to 30 years. Focus on great for a few things and good enough for the
rest. Perfection is a good ideal and direction to have, but recognize it for what it is,
an impossible destination.
10. Blowing minutia and small problems out of proportion as an excuse to work.
11. Making non-time-sensitive issues urgent.
in order to justify work.
How many times do I have to say it?
Focus on life outside of your bank accounts,
as scary as that void can be in the initial stages.
If you cannot find meaning in your life,
it is your responsibility as a human being to create it,
whether that is fulfilling dreams
or finding work that gives you purpose and self-worth.
Ideally, a combination of both.
12.
Viewing one product, job, or project as the end-all and be-all of your existence.
Life is too short to waste, but it is also too long to be a pessimist or nihilist.
Whatever you're doing now is just a stepping stone to the next project or adventure.
Any rut you get into is one you can get yourself out of.
Doubts are no more than a signal for action of some type.
When in doubt, or overwhelmed, take a break, and 80-20 both business and personal activities and relationships.
13. Ignoring the social rewards of life.
Surround yourself with smiling, positive people who have absolutely nothing to do with work.
Create your muses alone if you must, but do not live your life alone.
Happiness shared in the form of friendship.
and love is happiness multiplied.
Hey guys, this is Tim again.
Just one more thing before you take off,
and that is Five Bullet Friday.
Would you enjoy getting a short email from me
every Friday that provides a little fun before the weekend?
Between one and a half and two million people
subscribe to my free newsletter,
my super short newsletter, called Five Bullet Friday.
Easy to sign up, easy to cancel.
It is basically a half page that I send out
every Friday to share the coolest things
I've found or discovered or have started exploring over that week. It's kind of like my diary of
cool things. It often includes articles I'm reading, books I'm reading, albums perhaps, gadgets, gizmos,
all sorts of tech tricks and so on that get sent to me by my friends, including a lot of podcast
guests and these strange esoteric things end up in my field and then I test them and then I share
them with you. So if that sounds fun, again, it's very short, a little tiny bite of goodness before
you head off for the weekend, something to think about. If you'd like to try it out, just go to
Tim.blog slash Friday. Type that into your browser. Tim.comlog slash Friday, drop in your email
and you'll get the very next one. Thanks for listening. I asked millions of you about Gusto on
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