As a mother of 2 young children who decided to ditch a stable and relatively comfortable corporate career and domestic helper to wash, cook, clean and look after my own family and kids at home, I absolutely agree with Nigel that we should not leave the quality of our life in the hands of incompatible jobs, other people and the government. We should stop looking to others for answers and to look inside for the type of balanced lives we each want to lead that fulfills our spiritual, mental, financial and physical needs.
As Nigel shares, we need to take stock of how much and what we really need rather than "working long hard hours at jobs they (we) hate, to earn enough money to buy things they(we) don't need to impress people that they(we) don't like".
His concluding point that "small things matter" and "approaching balance in a balanced way" is particularly important. Seeking a balance is not about making radical and dramatic changes to our current way of life. It is about making the smallest investments in the right places to improve the quality of our life and transform society's simplistic definition of success that "the person who dies with the most money wins" to a more "balanced definition of what a life well lived looks like".
As Nigel shares, we need to take stock of how much and what we really need rather than "working long hard hours at jobs they (we) hate, to earn enough money to buy things they(we) don't need to impress people that they(we) don't like".
His concluding point that "small things matter" and "approaching balance in a balanced way" is particularly important. Seeking a balance is not about making radical and dramatic changes to our current way of life. It is about making the smallest investments in the right places to improve the quality of our life and transform society's simplistic definition of success that "the person who dies with the most money wins" to a more "balanced definition of what a life well lived looks like".
5 comments:
AWESOME!!!!!!
LIKE LIKE LIKE LIKE!!!
I cannot like this enough!!
yes isn't it a great talk?!? =)
I found it incredibly liberating to finally say, ok I opt out of this stupid rat race. So I can't splurge on that $3000 handbag, but who really needs it anyway?
Totally agree! I'm most fortunate to meet my ex-mentor who helped me escape the rat race. Since graduation, I've been self-employed, being in control of my working hours, people I work with, amount I earn and spending enough rough resting and enjoying life every year. I can never imagine being employed in an unsatisfying job. Choose your own happiness indeed. :)
thanks for this nice post 111213
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