Life
What is most important to me.
- Priorities
- General principles, and making decisions
- People
- Debates and discussing with people
- Knowledge
- Goals and obsessions
- Goals accomplished
- Goals pending
- Goals failed
1. Priorities
The most important thing for me should be my own health, happiness and general well-being.
[Perhaps being āinterestingā is a better goal than being happy.]
People around me, people who are important to me, should be my second concern.
2. General principles, and making decisions
These balances are difficult in life:
- Weighing my own selfish interests against abstract moral principles.
Doing the right thing also when no-oneās looking.
Complying with rules even when the global consequences of doing otherwise are negligible or debatable.
Example: dodging taxes.
- Perhaps put in a different way: pursuing my own self-interest vs. being altruistic (ie, sacrificing things for the sake of others).
- Balancing the importance of having money vs. the importance of having time.
- Learning to what extent family is important (keeping good bonds with relatives, being involved with extended family and in-laws, working on a long-lasting
romantic partnership, having children, spending most of your time and resources on your children, etc).
- Learning the righ balance between pleasure and education or investments in the future.
- Whatās the right level of risk in life (for all kinds of decisions and changes).
- The balance between abstract intellectual principles on the one hand (what one should say and do, in theory), and social norms and pragmatism on the other.
- The balance between justly boasting about my merits and staying always humble.
- I donāt want to be vein and boring when Iām an old man.
As men age, they grow more boastful.
You can see that trait clearly in some old people; with their tendency to blow their own little trumpets at every opportunity.
I shall be vigilant and stay humble.
- Good old stoicism is an asset.
The merit of deeds should be judged considering solely the information available to that person and at the time decisions were made, or actions were takenĀ āĀ never considering their consequences, to the extent that they were impossible to predict.
Positive example: someone all of a sudden spends all their life savings on lottery tickets, and they win the biggest prize in history. Their call to spend all their money in lottery was still dumb and absolutely wrong (as it always is). Regardless of that fantastic but hugely unlikely outcome.
Negative example: [TO-DO].
āDecisions based on emotions arenāt decisions at all.ā (House of Cards, S01E12). One should not make non-trivial decisions in the heat of the moment.
The idea of having, or achieving, āoneās dreamā (singular), or āthe dream of oneās lifeā seems weak, and maybe even noxious. By definition, pursuing such ādreamā should be the ultimate goal in life, and its achievement has to bring immediate happiness at an unprecedented level. It seems imposible to know that beforehand. Also, circumstances, desires and priorities in life change wildly. But such an important, long-term ādreamā should not be subject to those petty changes. Also, by achieving that goal (if you ever do that), you automatically downgrade your life, your ambitions and expectations, ie nothing can ever be as huge, as important, or as life-changing as achieving your dream in life, right?
Always remember that you tend to idealise the past.
āYou canāt go very far wrong if youāre motivated by love and guided by reason.ā
āĀ Sam Harris.
āI just sit in my office and read all day.ā
āĀ Warren Buffett.
āRelentlessly prune bullshit, donāt wait to do things that matter, and savor the time you have. Thatās what you do when life is short.ā
āĀ Paul Graham.
āDonāt ignore your dreams; donāt work too much; say what you think; cultivate friendships; be happy.ā
āĀ Paul Graham.
š¤Ā Jordan Petersonās answer to the question āwhat are the most valuable things everyone should knowā on
Quora
š”Ā Pride and š”Ā shame apply only to aspects of life over which one has considerable control.
šĀ Example: it does not make sense to āfeel proud (nor ashamed) to be an American / a woman / gay / white / tallā¦ā
At most, one is only partially responsible of being āa Dutchā (citizenships can be lost and gained, to some extent, through our actions), or
āphysically fitā (you cannot control genetics, but your lifestyle influences your phenotype).
š”Ā Nationality, in particular, is, in the vast majority of cases, an accident, completely involuntary.
(Exceptions are those who migrate purposefully, break off with their country of origin, etc.)
Modulo those few people, no-one can truly feel proud, nor ashamed, of their nationality or their mother tongue.
āThose who have accomplished nothing as individuals feel compelled to be proud of their race.ā
āĀ š¤Ā Jordan Peterson
3. People
- Explicitly asserting š”Ā nonāromantic love (to relatives and close friends) seems to be necessary and have a huge positive impact on long-term happiness. It isnāt always natural nor easy, though.
- š”Ā Love isnāt an absolute, and it doesnāt manifest itself in a perfect form. There is no āperfect matchā, nor a āsoul mateā ultimately waiting for
you.
- In most dayātoāday situations, š”Ā lying is bad and shall be avoided.
There are a number of circumstances, though, when lying is perfectly admisibleĀ āĀ and even advisable.
Always telling the š”Ā truth is overrated.
Few valid exceptions to this rule may be lying (or simply hiding part of the truth) to: children, mentally incapable adults, terminally ill patients.
There are situations in which a lack of information is good for you.
But those are the exception.
- One shall take no š”Ā offence from sources one does not value or respect.
If someone I despise calls me a name, or tries to offend me, I can safely ignore them (as long as their public defamation or verbal violence doesnāt actually
affect my image or reputation).
:point_right:ā±Ā honour vs. dignity
- One canāt please everybody. There isnāt one way of being, behaving or talking that everybody always likes and approves. Even the most likeable, charming, thoughtful person can be annoying to some people, sometimes. Therefore, realising that somebody just doesnāt like you, for no particular reasons, might well be irrelevant newsĀ āĀ it doesnāt always need to trigger self-evaluation nor reflection, let alone guilt.
- When I see in other people habits or traits of personality that I despise, sometimes it is because deep down I know I have that very same defect.
Iāll do well if I stop and reflect honestly when I detect those unpleasant behaviours in others; when I can actually recognise myself on those
ādefectsā, it is a humbling and precious pragmatical lesson (to either be more tolerant with others and/or work on correcting that bad habit).
4. Debates and discussing with people
- All š”Ā debates should be an openāminded exchange of ideas, and a collaborative quest to put them to test in order to identify the best ones.
Thatās the goal.
Everything else is a colourful wrapping.
- Too often, the environment isnāt appropriate for a debate: loud noise, big egos, bad manners, haste and the lack of a minimum conceptual base to start with
are common.
Under such conditions, trying to debate is fruitless at best, and often frustrating.
Avoid.
- Always apply the principle of charity.
- It makes no sense to talk about the āwinnerā of a debate.
-
It is absurd when people say things like āI know what is true; and no matter what you say, I wonāt change my mind!ā or āI donāt care what
you say or what your arguments are; youāre never going to convince me!ā.
That approach to discussion alone disqualifies anyone in a rational discussion; it is much worse than using an ad hominem argument, or wielding faulty
logic.
Never say that (and never think that).
- Paul Graham: āHow to Disagreeā
- Bryan Caplan: āSilence is Stupid, Argument is Foolishā:
āremain calm, take nothing personally, use probabilities, face hypotheticals head-on, and spurn Social Desirability Bias like the plagueā.
Many of my frustrations in trying to understand and debate others arise from šĀ my personality type.
5. Knowledge
Learning and discovering is one of the greatest pleasures in life.
I love what š¤Ā Steven Pinker says here about the role of universities and what an āeducatedā person is.
6. Goals and obsessions
I believe more in š”Ā persistence and in š”Ā practice
than in š”Ā talent.
A healthy dose of š”Ā obsession seems necessary to achieve great things.
At least, so far I donāt seem to be able to accomplish almost nothing that is difficult and important (according to my own definition of āimportantā) without becoming at least a bit obsessed about it for some time.
(Some time after writing this, Iām pleased to learn that š¤Ā Paul Graham no less
seems to agree with me about the critical importance of obsession.)
An exception might be: getting my first MSc (in CS and software engineering, between the ages of 18 and 24), which was both difficult and important.
But somehow I donāt think that counts: I wanted it, I mostly liked it, I didnāt even have a plan B at the time, it was partly inertia (being curious, introverted, not too dumb), and it was mostly unexceptional in the context of my relatives and friends.
6.1. Goals accomplished
At times I have set specific goals for myself:
āRun 10ākm racesā¦ā
Get 2nd masterās degree in foreign countryā¦ā
Run Ā½ marathonsā¦ā
Get certified in basic Japaneseā¦ā
Run a marathonā¦ā
Āæ?ā
āĀ Me, in Apr 2013
What I have never done, so far, is defining plans, milestones or deadlines for those goals.
Perhaps thatās where I should improve my methodā¦
Now I would add, as new āgoals accomplishedā:
- Own and enjoy a decent motorbike (it was a Honda CBF600)ā¦Ā ā
- Own and enjoy an even better motorbike (it is a BMW F800GT)ā¦Ā ā
- Run (and finish) another marathon (abroad: NYC Marathon 2017)ā¦Ā ā
- Live and work in Japan, in Tokyo if possible (I lived in Tokyo for one year and nine months)ā¦Ā ā
- Use Duolingo every day for a long time; have a very long streak
(I used it to study tiny bits of German and Japanese for two years, uninterruptedly)
- Have a child; have children, if possible (I have one daughter)
- Take the āGiving What We Canā Pledge (ie, always donate 10% of my gross earnings)
6.2. Goals pending
ā¦and, as ānew goalsā, or āold goals still pendingā, things like:
- Live and work abroad again, this time with my family
- Travel for at least a few months around the world (not necessarily around it, but you get the idea)
- Retire āearlyā
- Own and enjoy the motorbike that I like the most, without (financial) restrictions
- Write a novel, publish it if possible (NaNoWriMo?)
- Write a non-fiction book, publish it if possible
- Publish articles or columns somewhere (digital outlet, local newspaper, etc)
- Get to speak and write German well
- Get to speak and write Japanese well
- Be stronger (significantly, both in strengh and in aspect)
- Own a house (a nice house, if possible)
- Develop (or lead) an open-source project that becomes well known or reaches great impact
- Make my living off a software product/service/company of my own
- Be ārichā
6.3. Goals failed
(Hint: Iām 40 at the time of updating this list.)
- Be a young parent (too old already)
- Have many (read: āthree or moreā) children (seems almost impossible for biological, financial and personal reasons)
- Be really fluent in a language other than Spanish (too lateā¦ unless I got to live and work in Italy or in Catalonia for the next twenty or thirty years of my life, perhaps)
- Be quite good at some sport (I donāt mean āprofessionalā, but even as an amateur itās too late)
- Be a good musician (ditto)
- Be a good illustrator, designer or painter (probably too late, although Iām not completely sure)
- Benefit from the compounding effects of early systematic investment (I bought my first bond at around 27, and my first stocks at 34)