Vita

Life

What is most important to me.

  1. Priorities
  2. General principles, and making decisions
  3. People
  4. Debates and discussing with people
  5. Knowledge
  6. Goals and obsessions
    1. Goals accomplished
    2. Goals pending
    3. Goals failed

1. Priorities

The most important thing for me should be my own health, happiness and general well-being.

[Perhaps being ā€œinterestingā€ 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:

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 ā€”Ā 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].

ā€œDecisions based on emotions arenā€™t 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, ā€œoneā€™s dreamā€ (singular), or ā€œthe dream of oneā€™s lifeā€ seems weak, and maybe even noxious. By definition, pursuing such ā€œdreamā€ 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 ā€œdreamā€ 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.

ā€œYou canā€™t go very far wrong if youā€™re motivated by love and guided by reason.ā€

ā€”Ā Sam Harris.

ā€œI just sit in my office and read all day.ā€

ā€”Ā Warren Buffett.

ā€œRelentlessly prune bullshit, donā€™t wait to do things that matter, and savor the time you have. Thatā€™s what you do when life is short.ā€

ā€”Ā Paul Graham.

ā€œDonā€™t ignore your dreams; donā€™t work too much; say what you think; cultivate friendships; be happy.ā€

ā€”Ā Paul Graham.

šŸ‘¤Ā Jordan Petersonā€™s answer to the question ā€œwhat are the most valuable things everyone should knowā€ on Quora

šŸ’”Ā Pride and šŸ’”Ā shame apply only to aspects of life over which one has considerable control.

šŸ’­Ā Example: it does not make sense to ā€œfeel proud (nor ashamed) to be an American / a woman / gay / white / tallā€¦ā€ At most, one is only partially responsible of being ā€œa Dutchā€ (citizenships can be lost and gained, to some extent, through our actions), or ā€œphysically fitā€ (you cannot control genetics, but your lifestyle influences your phenotype).

šŸ’”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.

ā€œThose who have accomplished nothing as individuals feel compelled to be proud of their race.ā€

ā€”Ā šŸ‘¤Ā Jordan Peterson

3. People

4. Debates and discussing with people

Many of my frustrations in trying to understand and debate others arise from šŸ‘‰Ā my personality type.

5. Knowledge

Learning and discovering is one of the greatest pleasures in life.

I love what šŸ‘¤Ā Steven Pinker says here about the role of universities and what an ā€œeducatedā€ person is.

6. Goals and obsessions

I believe more in šŸ’”Ā persistence and in šŸ’”Ā practice than in šŸ’”Ā talent.

A healthy dose of šŸ’”Ā obsession seems necessary to achieve great things. At least, so far I donā€™t seem to be able to accomplish almost nothing that is difficult and important (according to my own definition of ā€œimportantā€) without becoming at least a bit obsessed about it for some time.

(Some time after writing this, Iā€™m pleased to learn that šŸ‘¤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 donā€™t think that counts: I wanted it, I mostly liked it, I didnā€™t 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:

ā€œRun 10ā€“km racesā€¦ā˜‘
Get 2nd masterā€™s degree in foreign countryā€¦ā˜‘
Run Ā½ marathonsā€¦ā˜‘
Get certified in basic Japaneseā€¦ā˜‘
Run a marathonā€¦ā˜‘
Āæ?ā€

ā€”Ā Me, in Apr 2013

What I have never done, so far, is defining plans, milestones or deadlines for those goals. Perhaps thatā€™s where I should improve my methodā€¦

Now I would add, as new ā€œgoals accomplishedā€:

6.2. Goals pending

ā€¦and, as ā€œnew goalsā€, or ā€œold goals still pendingā€, things like:

6.3. Goals failed

(Hint: Iā€™m 40 at the time of updating this list.)