The Twenties

My twenties were the absolute worst.

Everything was supposed to be exciting. I was finally free from the cage. No more parents and teachers. I could take off my clothes in front of other people (with their permission). I could get a job.

I could fulfill all my dreams.

But nothing worked. Because people in their twenties generally are not good at anything.

I learned so little in college (I majored in computer programming but then had to take remedial computer programming classes when I finally got a job) that I suddenly realized how worthless the four years were. Actually they had negative worth because of the debt.

Also, in my twenties I thought I was in a rush. I had to “succeed” and “find my passion.”

In my twenties, someone told me, “time is money.” That’s why missed “opportunity” has a “cost.”

“Opportunity cost” is a phrase taught in every Economics class in college. Nobody ever uses Economics ever again after college. I minored in Economics.

Time is not money.

Money I can certainly lose, but I can also make.

I can’t make any time. There’s no time…machine (I really could not put those two words completely together) that just spits out more time if I put in a five dollar bill.

Money buys me food to put in my mouth. Time is everything else.

In my twenties I was not good at anything. But I thought I was. Because when I was in my twenties I was also stupid.

But that’s OK. In my twenties I picked a few things that I did over and over again, thinking I was good at them. Writing, computer programming, and when I had permission – taking off my clothes in front of another person.

I was good at none of these things. But I got a little better maybe at one or two because of blind repetition.

TL;DR: (too long didn’t read)

I wish I had just done this: pick three to five things and do them over and over. Only pick things you wouldn’t mind doing over and over.

Don’t push for any one outcome. Just do things over and over with no expectation.

That’s all I had to do.

***

The Thirties

The thirties really suck.

“Owning a home” is the “college” of the thirties. A 15 trillion dollar mortgage industry hypnotizes society into thinking that “owning a home is a smart investment” or you “need roots.”

Owning a home traps you in one place, causes a lot of suicides and takes all of your money.

In my thirties I was getting tired of doing things over and over again.

I felt like I had to be “done.” Or “almost there.” Or “on the right track.”

In my thirties I learned how to fail.

In my twenties I couldn’t fail. Everyone else was too “stupid.” I just had to try more and more.

But in my thirties I realized I was the common denominator of all the people I thought were stupid.

In my thirties:

I finally learned that I was only as good as the people around me. @jaltucher (Click to Tweet!)

That my value was the added up value of the people around me.

In my thirties I realized there was no such thing as one passion. That you had to pursue many things. That you had to pursue things that created happiness for other people.

TL;DR:

If you hung out with good people, and did things that created value for others, and diversified the things you did, then ONE thing will work out.

Sometimes two.

***

The Forties

Ugh. The forties suck really bad. They suck sh*t.

For one thing, you can’t eat anymore. And you can’t have any stress.

Food + Stress = Aging.

Of course you have to eat. But half of what you used to. And stress will happen. But you have to mostly ignore it or it will kill you.

You eat less by doing what you love. Then you won’t sublimate your desires by eating more.

You have less stress by owning fewer things.

In my twenties, thirties, and forties, I have been consistently stupid on relationships, parenting, communication with others, risk-taking, and most other things.

But I don’t care anymore. Awareness is better than caring.

TL;DR:

In my twenties I thought I knew what I was doing.
In my thirties I would do anything to make money.
In my forties I only do what I love doing.

You find what you love by going back to what you loved in your twenties and keeping expectations low.

***

The Fifties

A woman once brought her son to Gandhi and said, “Gandhi, can you please tell me son to stop eating sugar.”

Gandhi said, “Come back in two weeks.”

The woman took her son home, hundreds of miles away. She came back in two weeks.

Gandhi said to her son, “Don’t eat sugar.”

The woman said. “Gandhi, why did you make me go all the way home and then come back two weeks later. Why didn’t you just say that then?”

Gandhi said, “Before I could tell your son to stop eating sugar, I had to stop eating sugar.”

***

TL;DR

The fifties. Come back in two years.


James Altucher has built and sold several companies, and failed at dozens more. He’s written fourteen books, and The Rich Employee is the book to RULE THEM ALL. (Although he is also fond of The Choose Yourself Guide to WealthThe Power of No & Choose Yourself.) He’s an investor in twenty different companies. He writes every day. He doesn’t have enough friends. Still interested in knowing him? Follow him on Facebook and Twitter.