Who Will Cry When You Die\?: Life Lessons From The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari pdfdrive com


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Who Will Cry When You Die

95.
Be an Adventurer
Teachers are climbing mountains. Entrepreneurs are flying hot-air balloons.
Grandmothers are completing marathons and homemakers are taking up karate.
The more routine our lives become, the greater our need to fill them with some
real adventures. The more obligations that beg for our attention, the more
important it becomes to shed those shackles of complacency and send our hearts
soaring through some brave new pursuit.
“Man must not allow the clock and the calendar to blind him to the fact that
each moment of his life is a miracle and a mystery,” wrote British novelist H. G.
Wells. To connect more deeply to the miracles and the mysteries of your own
life, vow to restore the spirit of adventure that you once knew as a child. Make a
list of twelve pursuits you know would bring a greater sense of passion and
energy to your normally mundane routine and tackle one of them every month
for the next year. Doing so is a highly effective way to reinvent the way you live.


96.
Decompress Before You Go Home
After a day of stress and pressure at the office, most of us arrive home cranky,
tired and dispirited. We gave the best we had to our colleagues and customers
and, sadly, we have nothing left for the people we love the most: our spouses,
children and friends. Like gladiators who have just completed the battle of their
lives, we wearily walk to our favorite easy chair and order family members to
leave us alone until we regain our composure.
Taking ten minutes to decompress before you walk through the front door
of your home will help you to avoid making this scenario a part of your daily
routine. Rather than leaving work, driving home and rushing into your house, I
recommend that you spend a few minutes sitting alone in your car while parked
in the driveway. Use this time to relax and reflect on what you would like to
accomplish during the next few hours with your family. Remind yourself how
much your partner and children need you and how many fun things you can do if
you simply put your mind to it. To further decompress, you could go for a quick
walk around the block or listen to a favorite piece of classical music before you
open the door and greet your family. Be creative about your personal
decompression time and treat it as a chance to renew and recharge so you are the
person your family wants you to be when you greet them.



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