What It Means to Wake Up and Take Charge of Your Life
November 8th, 2006 by Matt InglotI had a very interesting conversation the other night which I’d like to share some ideas from. In a nutshell I was speaking with someone who has been making a lot of positive changes in her life lately. She was shocked at how much she had done in one year, but she also felt really behind for not having done things such as setup a savings account (even though she’s really just out of school). There was so much life “setup work” she had never done, or ever been aware of and now she feels like she’s just been jolted by all this stuff coming out of nowhere. What’s really happened is that over the past year she’s “woken” up a little bit and consequently came to realize things about life that had completely flown over her head.
I had a very similiar similiar experience several years ago which completely derailed me from my current path, which at that point was simply going in the direction life took me in. Sure I was making “choices”, such as planning on going ahead with a degree that I deep down knew wouldn’t be right for me, and planning to somehow be happy working in a cubicle the rest of my life (despite having had a chance to briefly try it and strongly hating the idea of being in front of a computer all day doing someone else’s work). After all programming was my talent, so why on earth would I want to be anything other than a programmer graduating with a computer science degree? I had goals too, or so I thought. Surely a Ferrari was a goal? I mean it wasn’t humanly affordable on the salary of a corporate computer drone, and I had no plan to attain it otherwise, but yes that was my “goal”. I completely didn’t understand that where I was letting myself drift in life had nothing to do with what I actually wanted. To make things worst this direction was highly encouraged through high grades in “smart people” courses and congratulations from others on making such a great and rewarding choice.
Luckily the entrepreneurial bone in me activated and gave me some business experience before I ever filled out the university application form that would have doomed me to writing boring code for stuffy monolithic corporations and unwittingly providing material for Office Space 2. I was exposed there to a strange freedom that was offered nowhere else. I read some extremely positive literature from people that seemed… happy. This was a world that my programming books had never exposed me to. Never before had I seriously read about ideas like goals, personal development, financial planning, and the idea that becoming truly successfully was something other than luck or born talent. It was enough to make me consciously realize what my subconscious had known all along - I wasn’t ready to spend another 4 years in school to prepare myself to be someone’s slave doing something that I already knew I would dislike. It’s not that I disliked programming - I’m having an absolute blast putting my skills to use with my website development company - it’s that I enjoyed working on projects of my own devising and not some insigificant clog in an obese software application. I took a year and a half off instead of going straight into university during which I awakened consciously further and further.
In the end I chose to enter a business program and because I had the opportunity I chose to go the double degree route and end up with a computer science one as well. My end choice in degrees is not important however, what is important is that for the first time in my life I had honestly been able to step off the beaten path, consciously examine my surroundings, figure out where I actually wanted to go, and then go in the direction that would actually take me there.
It’s possible and relatively easy to get to where you want to be in life if you stop long enough to start moving in the right direction.
I mentioned that I had simultaneously thought that I would own a Ferrari and planned to be a cubicle drone all my life writing software because I loved to write software. Clearly this was a logical flaw as I had no way of actually aquiring the funds for a Ferrari on the salary I would have been paid working for someone else. Yet having spent the last 17 years being a complete drone and not doing any true thinking for myself with regards to my own life, my brain was very happy to simply accept this gigantic fallacy. I was getting high marks and planning to enter a respectable profession, surely success would just come to me.
If this is how you plan to approach life, and most of us at least start off with this ridiculous mindset, then truthfully you will find success to indeed be hard. Feeling powerless and reliant on good fortune to succeed is highly depressing, which consequently pushes people into an even lower level of consciousness. It’s not surprising that very few people actually ever wake-up and realize it’s in their hands to mold shape their lives! If you’re waking up everyday wondering why life is so miserable and why bills suck so much then you need a really loud gong to jolt you out of it. My gong was realizing how much freedom and possibility actually existed for those were in charge of their lives, and how I was on the exact opposite track to that.
My dreams have changed somewhat from simply wanting a nice car. Truthfully they’ve become a lot more ambitious than that, but thankfully also not nearly as materially obsessed. Many of them are now real actual goals that I plan to achieve. I can place this label on them because I have taken the time to look at where they are, and then alter my course in life so at reach them. By altering course I mean that I have identified and am now systematically taking the actions that I need to acheive the goal. It’s as easy as baking a cake, but it’s far more long term. It requires staying focused on baking that cake for 5, 10, 20 years. It’s a pleasure to do now though, since I am seeing results and I am now confident that it is in fact me that controls where I go with my life. With that a lot of fear and uncertainty about my future has disappeared.
Waking up and taking charge has a lot do with building awareness of the world around you. Let’s take personal finance as an example. At this point you may already be cringing as visions of old people balancing cheque books come into your mind along with lectures about not taking on all that debt that is currently already sitting on your Visa (or another vendor of plastic 18% interest loans). It’s natural to not want to learn something when it doesn’t fall in your field of interest and when it seems like some complicated and tremendously boring thing meant to be understood by people that wear a lot of plaid.
However all that’s really at the heart of personal finance is goals and planning (again I can already see shivers as complicated financial planning forms and balanced cheque books come to mind). What people miss is that the complexity of the plan isn’t what’s important, it’s actually having a plan and following it towards some defined end goal. Believe it or not, once you supply your brain these things it’s actually very good at automatically taking care of the pesky complicated details. What if I told you that the difference between becoming a millionaire or a deadbeat with a terrible credit rating isn’t your level of income? What if the secret to achieving wealth is so dead simple that the only way you could have possibly missed it is that you’ve been asleep all your life and lazily following a crowd of equally sleeping debt-ridden lemmings? What if I simply tell you this secret and not ask for your credit card number or even your e-mail address in return? Very well.
The secret to accumulating wealth is to pay yourself first at a rate of no less than 10% of your income. With the money that you pay yourself you should invest it and aim for a return of 10% or so yearly. Immediately reinvest these returns and reinvest the returns of the returns and so on. Compound interest will do the rest for you.
This is the first and most important principle that financial planning books teach. I learned it first from The Wealthy Barber and recently again in The Richest Man in Babylon. Both of these books teach you the things you absolutely must understand about money and do so in a very easy to read way. The difference in following their advice and not following it however is profound. I wish I had woken up to these simple rules earlier and decided to start saving when I first started making money in high school. I would have had an extra $5000 or so saved up right now, and I would definitely not have noticed that 10% lower income.
So that’s how you get your finances in order, and hence start off on a path of success in that area of your life. But taking charge of your life isn’t just about learning how to manage your money. I said before it’s about becoming aware of the world around you, learning how it works, how to work within it, and what you wish to accomplish. Of utmost importance is waking up and consciously choosing to take actions towards the life that you actually want to live. To have a purpose and be actively fullfilling it. There are many areas in life to wake up to once you have done this. There’s your health to consider, your spiritual views, your social network, specific skills that you would like to aquire, and so on. It all starts to come together as you work towards understanding what you wish to achieve in life and actually going out there to achieve it.
Consciously following a path towards your goals instead of blindly drifting through life really is the secret to success, not being born into the right family or with the right genes.
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November 9th, 2006 at 12:04 pm
[…] I found an excellent article on taking charge of your life this week, by the way : ‘What It Means to Wake Up and Take Charge of Your Life’ by Matt Inglot. Really very interesting, here is a short clip : […]
November 9th, 2006 at 3:59 pm
10% interest per year.
I have always seen the return of 10% per year referred to as the “easy” way to save, invest, and become a millionaire in X years.
In reality, how easy is it to get 10% back? Obviously you can’t store it in savings or certificates of deposit. Stocks? Historically it has gone up at least 10% over its life, but how likely is it to continue? If you started to follow the advice of some people in the past few years, you would have lost some quite a bit of money, right?
Do you invest in your own business? Do you invest in your own development, believing that improving your skills will result in a better paying job? I don’t believe it is what you have in mind when you talk about saving.
Otherwise, I enjoyed the article. I am a cubicle dweller, but after months of crunch finally coming to an end, I am going to strongly pursue some passive streams of income. Independence!
November 10th, 2006 at 6:41 pm
Excellent point GB. I honestly have never seen anyone prove that 10% is achievable for everyone, but then again 10% is a white lie anyway.
If you want to be more accurate then in reality you have to make an Excel spreadsheet that calculates your expected income over time to see what kind of minimum rate of return you need to achieve a certain desired level of savings. You can then also play with the 10% savings and increase and descrease as desired and so on. But that’s exactly the kind of thing most people really don’t want to do. The 10% savings rule is common because what we really want is for people to save their money, and the more complex you make the process the less likely it is to actually happen since making those calcualtions suddenly becomes a mental barrier to saving anything.
Anyway back to rate of return and achieving it:
Unless someone can find data to somehow prove that you can definitely achieve a 10% rate of return let’s go with the following assumptions:
1) The average person can do well by AIMING to average that rate and getting close to it.
2) By building a reasonably diversified portfolio consisting of an intelligent mix and choice you can expect a reasonable return. Wealthy Barber tackles this where Richest Man in Babylon does not, and if my memory serves me correctly Chilton speaks a little of the importance of a growth oriented portfolio in the early years where you can tolerate risk and as you get older adjusting the portfolio to a more and more risk averse strategy.
To me that sounds fair, and I’m certainly content to live with that notion unless someone can prove something better.
I do fully agree that achieving that return is the trickiest part and I don’t feel qualified on advising any particular person on how they can best achieve this. However it’s worth noting the dangers of paying too much money to financial advisors, mutual fund managers, and so on. Warren Buffet explains this nicely in the 2005 Berkshire annual report: (check out http://www.berkshirehathaway.com/letters/2005ltr.pdf - page 18 ) .
Personally I believe it’s far more productive to go out there with the intention of getting the return you want rather than worrying about the consequences of not getting it (especially if you at all believe in intention manifestion as Steve often writes about).
November 12th, 2006 at 4:54 am
Fantastic article. I wish my boyfriend would read it
You think like Paul Graham and Robert Kiyosaki all at once.
November 15th, 2006 at 7:22 am
Choice. Taking the time to choose. I did the degree which i quite enjoyed and led me on to other things. Then I got the job. Which I liked, did well at but most importantly i was accepted. So I overworked - taking out an advance on my health. and then i started an mba. my body was pretty quick to shut everything down though. and i stopped and breathed.
It’s funny how quickly your life can become a rollercoaster and one you didn’t choose. If we don’t choose there are plenty of circumstances and other people who do choose for us. Not choosing is a choice. It’s more likely to suck as a choice though.
Congrats on the entrepreneurial life! I’ve just started my own thing too. It’s much better!
November 19th, 2006 at 2:11 pm
[…] Matt Inglot presents What It Means to Wake Up and Take Charge of Your Life posted at Matt Inglot. […]
November 22nd, 2006 at 10:58 am
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November 29th, 2006 at 6:21 pm
Good article.
Something for people to think about: there is always somebody at your rudder, steering your life. Is it you?
I don’t know about most other people, but I’m not particularly thrilled with the concept of someone else at the tiller, pointing me in the direction they want me to go…
December 9th, 2006 at 11:04 am
Taking Time to Choose…
This morning I’ve stumbled upon an interesting blog post by Matt Inglot: What It Means to Wake Up and Take Charge of Your Life. It is a great post but what struck me the most was the comment by……
February 18th, 2007 at 10:55 pm
Interesting and great article, although it seemed that the focus changed from taking charge of your life by focusing on your goal or target for the long term to more of a financial perspective of planning for retirement.
I recall a book I read a while back from Anthony Robbins’ Unlimited Power or practically many other self help authors where you are expected to take think to think about write out your goals and define what you wish your life to be life and how to find a path or direction to get you there. Very interesting.
August 5th, 2007 at 2:09 pm
What if you don’t know how to take charge of your life? Where do you go from there? And how do you motivate yourself. Think it’s easy to say “what it means to wake up and take charge of your life.”
August 30th, 2007 at 11:59 am
[…] “Consciously following a path towards your goals instead of blindly drifting through life really is the secret to success…” So concludes this post from Matt Inglot that explains how an entrepreneurial wake up call rescued him from a career of “writing boring code for stuffy monolithic corporations…” More of the post follows: […]
September 11th, 2007 at 11:01 am
[…] I found an excellent article on taking charge of your life this week, by the way : ‘What It Means to Wake Up and Take Charge of Your Life’ by Matt Inglot. Really very interesting, here is a short clip : […]
December 20th, 2007 at 5:21 pm
I love you