Categories
Reminder to self

Good day

Slept reasonably well, did the usual morning routine. (Seneca was a bit hard to follow, so maybe that means finding another version. Or maybe it’s just my head. Or where I am in the book.)

The family is happy. I am, to use the Words of Today’s World, in the moment. Massive tasks ahead yet I am calm.

Maybe struggling through Seneca helped. I keep in mind his life story and marvel. Up to now I have been mostly a Marcus Aurelius fanboy but Seneca’s work is growing on me. It’s my second reading of Letters, not counting random dives into the book from time to time.

I am writing this to remind myself, next time I’m in hell, that I have not always been in hell and there is a path out of hell. It is a fast path.

Relentless, by Tim Grover: vapid or valuable?

I’m talking about Tim Grover’s Relentless. I finished it last night. Purchased because two people recommended it, I had to see for myself what they saw in it.

The message seems to be:

  • Everyone (not just a few people) have what he calls the dark side. This is the inner you. This is the source you need to tap into, the place you need to be. It is the place of instinct. It is the place of true emotion.
  • Only a very few people, however, live in their dark side. He doesn’t give numbers but maybe the usual 90/9/1 split is a start.
  • The prodigious achievements of the few (he calls them Cleaners) come from a prodigious work ethic.
  • Extreme hard work is necessary, but not sufficient. Willingness to work extremely hard, in fact, is the physical filter that separates the Cleaners from everyone else. They seek, relish the difficult path.
  • There is a mental condition or state that the Cleaners live in, fueled by their dark side. The ability to maintain this physical state is the mental filter that separates the Cleaners from everyone else. And while in theory everyone can work physically hard, at least for a while, only a few can maintain this connection to their dark side over years and decades.

Relentless is an exhortation. That’s not a bad thing.

I will take a second read now to see what is there besides the exhortation. At 1/3 of the way through the book, I was electrified. By the end of the book I was puzzled.

Is every person capable of achieving Cleaner-level results? I think not. I think he is calling into action those who are Cleaners or incipient Cleaners. The others, he dismisses as not with his time. (I am more than fine with that unwillingness to waste time on doomed ventures.) “You, too, can achieve greatness.” “Nah, I’m going to watch Law & Order reruns again.”

How does someone who aspires to great achievement tap into and stay in his personal dark side? This is a topic the author explicitly disavows.

Is staying in the dark side self-destructive and destructive of others? Yes, it can be, says the author. This is not a good thing, given my history with a few self-detonations in it. Life is good now. Don’t fuck it up with ego-driven quests.

Overall, I wonder whether this book is modern mental cotton candy or whether it contains truth. Compared to another modern author (Taleb) Relentless is trivial.

But let’s see if I can pull out some important truths with a second read. I don’t need action steps. The answers to those questions (“What do I do next?”) come from within, and then from helpful people around you.

I want to know whether the author is just an exceptional person telling me how to pick the numbers he used the win the lottery. I want to know if Tim Grover is saying wet roads cause rain.

There is so much within me that resonates with his description of the Cleaner. I identify. That’s why it is important to reread this book. Either he is showing a portal to another world, or he has written a work that’s like a magazine quiz (“Do you have ADHD?” for instance) that everyone is guaranteed to get a score of 7/10? Basically astrology.

Actually I am wrong about practical guidelines. The book indeed has clues on exactly what you have to do in order to dominate. Example: Michael Jordan having an extremely regimented life from Labor Day onward, cutting out everything except the foundational work.

Edit: I am starting my second reading and making notes as I go along. Here are the related posts. The answer to the question (vapid or valuable?) will reveal itself as I go.

Categories
Uncategorized

Action causes change

I started writing because I thought I needed to show people with silly political opinions how silly they were. Of course, I would change the course of history by showing people what is really real.

Now I’m writing to get to the bottom of me.

Action did that. Only action revealed self to self. Only action revealed the vanity and futility of the first objective. Only action showed me what I really seek.

Fortunately, what I seek is within my control.

And I realized that my daily habits included reading good stuff and writing (these few paragraphs). These two things help me remember what’s what as I go about my daily day. The remembering helps me deal with perturbations (saw that word in a book, and I love it).

Like yesterday. The rear driver’ side window in my car randomly shattered as I was driving. I didn’t go to hell. Just took care of business. I am experiencing some expense for the repair and some inconvenience from being without a car in the meantime (it takes a lot of work to thoroughly clean the shards of glass from all over the interior).

Ok, then.

Categories
Uncategorized

After 10,000 posts

. . . I will start having good ideas. But I have to get rid of the bad ones first, by posting them.

Categories
Uncategorized

The fuel

What is the fuel that drives me forward? Here is an important but incomplete clue:

Anything that creates a private challenge and tests you to control it before it controls you.

Relentless: From Good to Great to Unstoppable, by Tim Grover, p. 85.

Elsewhere in the chapter he notes that big time achievers crash across the line for their specific thing, without fear. That’s why big time achievers so often experience scandals. (And, at least outwardly, they don’t seem to care about scandals. Cf Bill Clinton.)

Not that I want scandals. I care deeply about living the good life, as better described by Marcus Aurelius and others.

But Marcus Aurelius clearly was a big time achiever. He had something driving him, with positive output and results for the man himself. Clearly one can achieve massively without scandal, for whatever definition of “achieve” you choose.

Categories
Uncategorized

Marcus Aurelius vs George Clinton

The things you think about determine the quality of your mind. Your soul takes on the color of your thoughts.

Meditations, by Marcus Aurelius. 5.16.

Good thoughts bring forth good fruit.

Bad thoughts rot your meat.

Good Thoughts, Bad Thoughts, by George Clinton, performed by Funkadelic.

I love that song. Eddie Hazel’s guitar-playing? Wow. That’s what struck me the first time I heard the song, even before George Clinton started saying his remarkably unexpected words. WHAT is THAT? From the early 1970s? Why haven’t I heard this before?

Categories
Uncategorized

Self-criticism and action

I look at what I write here and I don’t like it very much.

But I hit publish immediately.

And I like me as a result.

Categories
Uncategorized

Do things get better when you stop?

How can you tell if something is bad for you?

The easiest way is to stop doing it and see what happens. Via negativa.

One old saying I remember hearing is the definition of alcoholism:

An alcoholic is a person whose life gets better when he stops drinking.

Take away the drinking, and things improve? Diagnosis: complete.

I am having this experience with the internet generally. During the election time I became a different man, someone whose attitudes and behaviors I do not like. I was a cranky, close-minded bastard. Even if my beliefs were (and are) correct, my actions and words surely were not.

Nota bene: it is the election-year experience (especially lurking Twitter) and the questioning of my beliefs that led me to start writing here. What do I believe to be good for me, for the community? Why? The Moronathon on Twitter alarmed me and I was becoming one of them. I do not want to be one of them. One can hold a belief sincerely without being childish. It only requires some intellectual honesty, some humility, and a willingness to change if reality shows you are mistaken.

Daily, I set the Freedom.to blocking software to run from when I wake up until 1:00 a.m. it keeps me away from all tempting sites. Sometimes the blocking is a hinderance to a task I need to perform (e.g., I can’t view YouTube videos) but that is a small loss.

My mind is at peace. My principles for living are better known to me. I live a better life. I am happier.

Just like the alcoholic who has a better life when he stops drinking, I now have a better life without the worst elements of the internet. People who aren’t alcoholics can have a glass of wine. Other people can read stuff on Twitter. I have demonstrated convincingly to myself that I should choose not to be one of those people.

There is probably value to be found there, but, it appears, I have not missed much of value by abandoning Twitter, Reddit, etc.

Categories
Uncategorized

Read it again

I’m nearing the end of listening to all of the back episodes of a podcast I enjoy. As soon as I reach the most recent episode, I will start again at the beginning. This time, I will listen at my desk, with a notepad.

I’m midway through a book. Two people mentioned it within a week, so I bought it. There isn’t a lot of actionable advice (so far) but that’s not the author’s objective. In a dozen different ways (and not in a spiritual context), he’s saying the Kingdom of God is within, and find it yourself. Outsiders (like him) can encourage you, can point the way. Only you can find your Kingdom. He says as much: he doesn’t help people to access the Inner Kingdom. He insists they must do it for themselves. He is certain that the Kingdom is within all of us, not just a fortunate few. It’s a book about pro athletes, mostly. I do not like pro sports. Serves me right for having a closed mind. Look what I would have missed if I wasn’t willing.

I will read the book again as soon as I finish, and get the audio book to listen to while running. Probably I will buy the Kindle version, too. My phone is my friend now, full of important, useful, inspiring books. (I gave away my actual Kindle. Semi-useless.)

After a triple play of Taleb’s works, I put them to the side for a while. But not for long.

Read deeply. The great books are all talking about the same ancient truths, all from their own perspectives.

It’s probably not necessary to read widely, for spiritual purposes at least. Maybe for other endeavors it is. But to keep my mind clean? Half a dozen books would be enough. (I will cheat and use Taleb’s characterization of his books as a single work, the Incerto. Or just give me Skin In the Game. Otherwise, I will make the list a dozen books and be happy.)

I don’t know anyone else who reads like this.

Note. I just remembered one that I haven’t picked up in a while. If it sold 10,000 copies over the last 40 years I’d be surprised. OK maybe 20,000. I don’t know where I could find another copy. But it’s part of the foundation that made me who I am today. On the shelf, right now. It’s coming out for a refresher.

There is one little self-published book I read and re-read 30 years ago that kept me sane during a hard time. Full of horrible grammar and typos, it was. Somewhere along the way I lost the book or loaned it to someone. I don’t remember the name of the author or the title of the book. I hope whoever found it experienced the same relief, belief, and transformation that I did.

The book was about renunciation as the key to inner peace. Not renunciation of worldly goods, but renunciation of desire for things, people, approval, etc. The author was some sort of self-appointed swami who went through alcoholism, poverty, and deep unhappiness, and found this path for himself.

And that reminds me to find and reread St. John of the Cross. Dark Night of the Soul. That title tells you that St. John lived that life. Then there was the other book, apparently a true story, about the happy monk a long time ago.

Renunciation of desire sounds a lot like the Stoics from a different point of view, doesn’t it? Everything is the same, at the foundation.

Reread.

Categories
Uncategorized

The pill hierarchy

The favicon I chose is a red pill, with a hat-tip to The Matrix.

As a reminder to self, don’t get too caught up in red pill metaphor. Seek reality but don’t stop there. Keep going. I’m writing these entries to keep myself trained on target, to keep going. Merely perceiving the real and discarding fantasy is not the aim.

Again as a reminder to self, here is how I see the Pill Hierarchy, from lost to found:

  • Blue pill. Deliberately living in fantasy, afraid of reality.
  • Red pill. Choosing to see, and seeing, what is real.
  • Black pill. Doomsday thinking, giving up in the face of reality after taking the red pill.
  • White pill. Rejecting fatalism and actively and optimistically seeking answers after taking the red pill.
  • Clear pill. Accepting it all.

From blue to red is a decision. After that, it’s how you digest the consequences of that decision.

Is the experience of seeing reality going to sink you to bleak resignation and bitterness (black pill)? Or will you spring into action (white pill) and perhaps achieve some tranquility (clear pill)?

The Stoics lived the clear pill life.

For me, the biggest (and quite recent) red pill (the echo of which is still building, louder and louder in me) is that I will die, with certainty, and probably not too long from now. (Excessive use of parentheticals be damned.)

Note that this is my own pill hierarchy. I’ve seen people refer to the differently colored pills in many ways. This is my way and it works for me.