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  • February 2026 Reads

    I read 3 books in February. Here is a blurb of each of the books I read in February.

    Win Some, Lose Some: The Trials and Tribulations in the Career of a Trial Lawyer – a memoir” was written by Mark N. Stageberg, who is a Minnesota attorney specializing in personal injury and wrongful death cases. He originally did defense work before transitioning to plaintiff work. Mark has spent his career as a trial lawyer, completed over 175 jury trials, and has had 7 cases with million-dollar jury awards. This book was a candid look at both victories and failures and contained interesting stories of unusual clients, unexpected courtroom twists, and behind-the-scenes legal drama. Here are some of my many takeaways:

    The vast majority of the litigation clients who walk into your office do not have cases with all 3 necessary elements for a good lawsuit: good liability, extensive damage, and enough insurance coverage. Cases with good liability and big damages can often be easily resolved with a policy-limit settlement without litigation. The limits of the defendant’s liability insurance coverage govern the outcome of many good liability and damage cases.

    What is interesting about pro bono legal work is that many of a lawyer’s promising cases can turn into unintended pro bono work. Payment for plaintiff’s personal injury work is dependent on contingent fees, and if a case isn’t won, it can be a waste of a lot of legal time and money.

    An interesting and quite lucrative area of personal injury legal work involves airplane crashes. 4 primary causes for airplane crashes:

    • some mechanical failure (in the plane itself – leading to a product liability claim)
    • some inaccurate or incomplete information from air traffic controllers
    • a maintenance or service error by a mechanic
    • pilot error

    The government, through the National Transportation Safety Board, does a thorough investigation of every accident and publishes a report from its experts identifying the probable cause of the crash. Much of the investigation is done by the government, but the case must be put together with privately retained experts.

    This book contained a couple “hot takes.” These are not my personal opinion or the opinion of my employer.

    “A common misperception among the general public is that our judges have some level of superior legal knowledge that justified their appointment as the final arbitrators of our unresolved disputes. Most judges are selected because of political connections unrelated to their experience, expertise, or intellect. The cream of every law school class garners the top law firm positions and after a few years, they’re making more money than the judges in the state or federal courts.”

    “Most of the criminal lawyers serving as county attorneys or taking public defender positions were not the top scholars in their law school classes and took those jobs because nothing better had been offered. Prosecuting attorneys have the police, or the FBI and U.S. attorneys in the federal system, to do all of the workup on the cases. The prosecuting attorney only has to present the evidence to the jury and argue that they have met the burden of proof. Similarly, the defense seldom has to prove much of anything and instead sits back and picks away at the prosecution’s witnesses, arguing strenuously that they have not met their burden to prove the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.”

    I think this statement is overly simplified. I respectfully disagree with this perspective.

    I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in learning more about the career of a civil attorney.

    The Last Lecture” was written by Randy Pausch with Jeffrey Zaslow. Randy was a professor at Carnegie Mellon and an award-winning teacher and researcher who had worked with Adobe, Google, Electronic Arts (EA), and Walt Disney Imagineering and pioneered the Alice Project. At the time of this writing, he had ten tumors on his liver and had pancreatic cancer, and he wrote this book with Jeffrey Zaslow to teach his 3 young children what he would have taught them over the next 20 years. Many college professors are asked to consider their demise and to ruminate on what matters most to them. For years, Carnegie Mellon had a “Last Lecture Series” – which was renamed to “Journeys” – reflections on personal and professional journeys. Here are some lessons:

    • When you see yourself doing something badly and nobody’s bothering to tell you anymore, that’s a bad place to be. You may not want to hear it, but your critics are often the ones telling you they still love you and care about you and want to make you better.
    • Self-esteem – there’s really only one way to teach kids how to develop it: You give them something they can’t do, they work hard until they find they can do it, and you just keep repeating the process.
    • When we send our kids to play organized sports, for most of us, it’s not because we’re desperate for them to learn the intricacies of the sport. What we really want them to learn is far more important: teamwork, perseverance, sportsmanship, the value of hard work, and an ability to deal with adversity.
    • Brick walls are there for a reason. They give us a chance to show how badly we want something.

    Look for the best in everybody. If you wait long enough, people will surprise and impress you. In the end, people will show you their good side. Just keep waiting. It will come out.

    This book isn’t quite what I expected. It was more about Randy’s life and career rather than a “Last Lecture Series.” Given that the Last Lecture Series was renamed to “Journeys” – reflections on personal and professional journeys – this book seems to fit that description. Still, this book has some great lessons.

    How to Be Enough: Self-Acceptance for Self-Critics and Perfectionists” was written by Ellen Hendriksen, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist at Boston University. The overall theme of this book is that you become “enough” not by perfecting yourself, but by letting go of harsh self‑judgment and recognizing your inherent worth as you already are. Here are some key points.

    People-pleasing aims to control other people’s reactions and emotions toward us. What they want is what we want, because we want to avoid devaluation, disapproval, disappointment, and dislike. Of all the people you work so hard to please, be sure to include yourself.

    • We don’t have to be good at something to enjoy it. What’s the value in not being great? Connection. It’s hard to relate to experts. They’re aspirational, not relatable.
    • The opposite of control is trust – trust that we can handle whatever happens, both internally and externally.
    • When self-worth depends on flawless performance, even small mistakes create a cycle of self-doubt and emotional exhaustion. Achievement doesn’t soothe self-doubt. It often raises the bar higher. Self-criticism becomes a default setting. Self-criticism makes us feel inadequate, grinds motivation to a halt, leaves us sensitive to others’ criticism, is stressful, takes the fun out of the process, and hinders connection.

    Some tools mentioned in the book:

    • Revise the rigid rules. Consider what the rule buys you and what it costs you. Consult your values and what’s meaningful and important to you. Focus on what works given the contest. Consider feasibility and workability. What would work for my goals and values, given this context?
    • Foster positive emotions towards yourself. Failure and positive self-regard are allowed to co-exist. We can’t go through life expecting to make zero mistakes, have zero lapses in judgement, or encounter zero insurmountable challenges.
    • Take stock to understand your procrastination: unrealistic standards? fear of failure? self-criticism? Break tasks down into ridiculously small steps and picture your future self.
    • Move away from all-or-nothing thinking. Try “I’m a (valued trait/quality) person who sometimes (exception).” Examples:
      • I’m a capable person who sometimes screws up.
      • I’m a disciplined person who sometimes lets myself go.
      • I’m a hard worker who procrastinates.
    • Reflect on what people-pleasing is costing you. Identify an opportunity to state an opinion, communicate a need, or set a limit that is meaningful to you. Try it out and consider the results. Rinse and repeat.

    I highly recommend this book to anyone who is a self-critic or perfectionist!

  • 5-star book: The Secret Lives of Booksellers and Librarians: True Stories of the Magic of Reading by James Patterson and Matt Eversmann

    This year, I’d like to post more detailed blogs about some of the books I have read and rated 5 out of 5 stars. Here is another one.

    Book: “The Secret Lives of Booksellers and Librarians: True Stories of the Magic of Reading” by James Patterson and Matt Eversmann

    About the author: James Patterson is the most popular storyteller of our time and has received several awards.

    About the book: This book consisted of short essays from booksellers and librarians.

    When I read this book: March 2025

    Here are some of my takeaways:

    • Only 15% of adults in America read books.
    • 33% of high school graduates never pick up another book.
    • 42% of college grads don’t either.

    I love it when a parent comes back and says, “My kid wasn’t a reader, but you guys suggested a book, and I gave it to him, and he hasn’t stopped reading. It’s like this whole new world has opened up for him.”

    When people tell me they want to open a bookstore because they like to read and love books, I always question, “Well, can you run a business?”

    “There are so many good books out there that if this one’s not working for you, if you’re not enjoying it, don’t finish it.

    “Public libraries are a public good. We try hard to stay relevant. We invest in technology. We invest in innovation. We are there to meet the needs of the community we’re in. And we’re staffed with some of the most naturally curious people out there.”

    “Any kind of books for kids have gatekeepers. Kids are the intended readers, but they’re not the ones making the purchases. It’s grandparents, teachers, librarians, parents, older siblings. So, you’ve got to be able to figure out how to make that book appealing to both the person buying it and the person who is supposed to be reading it.”

    I can’t imagine not reading for fun, but I know that many people view reading as work, which can cause them to resent it rather than enjoy it. Just reading for sheer pleasure, without expectation or judgment, is so important and rewarding. And having a place to read all the books you want – for free! – is a major part of what libraries offer.

    I highly recommend this book to get perspectives from booksellers and librarians.

  • 5-star book: A Bit Much: Poems

    This year, I’d like to post more detailed blogs about some of the books I have read and rated 5 out of 5 stars. Here is the first one.

    Book: “A Bit Much: Poems” by Lyndsay Rush

    About the author: comedy writer and the poet behind the popular Instagram account @maryoliversdrunkcousin

    When I read this book: January 2025

    Quotes that stood out to me:

    From “Make Like a Tree and Love“: “Scientists have a hunch that trees can become dear friends linking roots to swap resources, bending branches back to share sunlight, shielding each other from the wind. Most of what I know about love boils down to this simple distinction: who stays, and who leaves.”

    From “I Am Not Afraid to Be Seen Trying“: “Or changing my mind. Or getting it wrong. Or freestyling instead of learning the routine. I’m not afraid of self-promotion or making a big deal out of it . . . I’m not afraid of low like counts or pissing off the algorithm of content that flops. And I’m not afraid to be cringe, or extra, or A Bit Much. Sure, there are things I’m scared of – like sharks and blond beards and talking to strangers on the phone – but of all the monsters under my bed, the only thing I truly fear is letting fear get in between me and anything I really want.”

    From “Top Down, Cruising in My Own Lane“: “I slip the Do Not Disturb sign onto the doorknob of my life. I’ve got important work to do: minding my own business accommodating my whims. Guarding my joy: nose buried in the story only I can tell.”

    There are many other essays I really enjoyed that I did not quote here. I highly recommend this book to anyone!

    5 out of 5 stars

  • January 2026 Reads

    I read 4 books in January. Here is a blurb of each of the books I read in January.

    101 Essays that will Change the way You Think” was written by Brianna Wiest and was recommended by a friend. This book was a thought-provoking collection of reflections to inspire deeper self-awareness and intentional living. Here are some takeaways:

    • Your habits create your mood, and your mood is a filter through which you experience your life. You must learn to let your conscious decisions dictate your day, not your fears or impulses. Learning to craft routine is the equivalent of learning to let your conscious choices about what your day will be about guide you, letting all the other temporary crap fall to the wayside. Routine consistently reaffirms a decision you already made.
    • Identify what your addictions are keeping you distracted from. Understand that addiction is a disconnection from yourself, and a disconnection from yourself is born of something present that you think you can’t face.
    • Stop eating foods you don’t like, keeping plans you don’t want, staying digitally connected with people who annoy you, hoarding clothes for a “someday” that never comes, and putting your life on hold for someone who does not want to commit. The amount of life we waste gathering and holding onto the things that will never really serve us keeps us away from the things that bring us joy and purpose and meaning.

    Choose not to be harmed, and you won’t feel harmed. Don’t feel harmed, and you haven’t been.

    I highly recommend this book. I took away many lessons from this book. Two essays really stood out to me as I’ve felt self-conscious about my changing body: “101 Things That Are More Important Than What Your Body Looks Like” and “The Little Things You Don’t Realize Are Affecting How You Feel About Your Body.”

    Sticky Notes: Memorable Lessons From Ordinary Moments” was written by Matt Eicheldinger, whose stories on social media take viewers through hundreds of memories he has collected over the years. Matt wrote down 15 years of daily interactions between himself, students, and families. This book shows how small, everyday moments between teachers and students – captured through years of classroom stories – reveal the profound impact of empathy, encouragement, and human connection. Here are some lessons:

    • Heartbreak can be hard, especially when it’s new. When we witness this with friends, family, or students, we often feel a drive to fix and solve, but sometimes you don’t have to do any of those things. Sometimes you just have to be present.
    • We forget how many parents are figuring out parenting for the first time, and that can feel pretty overwhelming, especially if it’s not going well. Just because a child’s behavior isn’t changing doesn’t mean parents aren’t doing anything about it. Sometimes it just means they don’t know what to do, and that’s an opportunity to show grace and understanding and offer help where we can.
    • We often try to give people space when we think they are in a bad mood, but maybe that’s not always the right move. Maybe they just need to be given a genuine dose of kindness to bring them back.

    Measuring success is different for everyone, and you can’t be the judge of it.

    Memories are kind of like key chains, aren’t they? I wonder how many of us have forgotten to truly live the experience rather than just collecting them.

    I highly recommend this book. It’s an easy read filled with short stories and life lessons.


    The Forgotten Sense: The New Science of Smell and the Extraordinary Power of the Nose” was written by Jonas Olofsson, a professor of psychology at Stockholm University, where he directs the Sensory Cognitive Interaction Lab. Jonas has researched the sense of smell for 20 years. Here are some key facts from the book.

    The sense of smell has a back door to the brain through the throat. So, when we eat and drink, we smell both through our nose and our throat. Odors are released in the mouth when we eat, stimulating the olfactory receptors in the nasal cavity. The smells that enter the nasal cavity via the throat are important to what we call “flavors.” We tend to think they are tastes being perceived in the mouth, when in fact it is the sense of smell working in disguise.

    Some people have an extreme sensitivity to smell, while others are insensitive to the same odorant. Comparing people who appear to have a perfectly normal sense of smell, it can sometimes take up to 100,000 times more odor molecules for the most insensitive person to detect an odor that the most sensitive person can smell very easily. Something I was most surprised by is that chemically sensitive people do not have particularly sensitive noses. They have sensitive brains. Our brains create expectations that can sometimes be so vivid that they are hard to distinguish from real-life smells. The brain makes predictions and creates stress responses that become overwhelming.

    The only method recommended by the world’s leading experts to rehabilitate the sense of smell is olfactory training – smelling things like lemon, eucalyptus, rose, and clove – repeatedly – for months. Thankfully, this helped me rehabilitate my sense of smell after having long COVID-19.

    I recommend this book to anyone wanting to learn more about the sense of smell.

    Dark Wire: The Incredible True Story of the Largest Sting Operation Ever” by Joseph Cox is a gripping piece of investigative journalism from the world’s leading reporter on the Anom story. Joseph Cox has built his career exposing the inner workings of organized crime and the surveillance programs designed to track it, and this book shows exactly why he’s earned that reputation. Drawing on interviews with fugitives wanted by the FBI, members of organized criminal groups, convicted traffickers, law enforcement officials across multiple countries, and even the coders and sellers behind encrypted phone networks, the author reconstructs an operation that feels almost too bold to be real.

    • After the FBI shut down Phantom Secure, an encrypted phone network favored by criminal organizations, agents realized those same users would soon be searching for a new platform to hide their communications. Their solution was bold: create that platform themselves.
    • The result was Anom, a supposedly secure phone system promising untraceable chats, hidden communication tools, and discreet photo‑editing features. What its users didn’t know was that the entire network was an FBI‑run trap quietly logging every message and image.
    • To navigate legal and jurisdictional limits, the U.S. had Lithuania collect Anom messages and pass them along, while Australian authorities—unrestricted by U.S. privacy laws—monitored the devices for threats to life.

    Impact:

    This was a fascinating book. In addition to recounting an unprecedented sting, it raises questions about privacy and the future of digital surveillance. I recommend this book to anyone interested in true crime, cybersecurity, or the evolving tactics of global law enforcement.

  • Books I Read in 2025

    Here is a complete list of the 50 books I read in 2025, listed in the order that I read them. This was the least number of books I have read in recent years. Although I maintained a habit of reading every day, I was very busy with work, school, and other commitments in 2025 and did not post many detailed book reviews. When I created this blog, my intention was to read, learn, and share about the books I read. In 2026, I plan to get back to posting more detailed book reviews about books I rated 5 out of 5 stars.

    1. Built to Move: The 10 Essential Habits to Help You Move Freely and Live Fully by Kelly Starrett & Juliet Starrett

    2. While You Were Out: An Intimate Family Portrait of Mental Illness in an Era of Silence by Meg Kissinger

    3. Riding the Lightning: A Year in the Life of a New York City Paramedic by Anthony Almojera

    4. A Bit Much: Poems by Lyndsay Rush

    5. Rolling Warrior by Judith Heumann with Kristen Joiner

    6. What I Told My Daughter: Lessons from Leaders on Raising the Next Generation of Empowered Women edited by Nina Tassler with Cynthia Littleton

    7. Your Journey to Financial Freedom by Jamila Souffrant

    8. Keep the Memories, Lose the Stuff: Declutter, Downsize, and Move Forward with Your Life by Matt Paxton with Jordan Michael Smith

    9. We Should Get Together: The Secret to Cultivating Better Friendships by Kat Vellos

    10. The Secret Lives of Booksellers and Librarians: True Stories of the Magic of Reading by James Patterson with Matt Eversmann

    11. The Unplugged Hours: Cultivating a Life of Presence in a Digitally Connected World by Hannah Brencher

    12. What if YOU Are the Answer? And 26 Other Questions That Just Might CHANGE YOUR LIFE by Rachel Hollis

    13. Burps by Grace Hansen

    14. Funny, You Don’t Look Autistic: A Comedian’s Guide to Life on the Spectrum by Michael McCreary

    15. The Unclaimed: Abandonment and Hope in the City of Angels by Pamela Prickett & Stefan Timmermans

    16. The New Rulebook: Notes from a psychologist to help redefine the way you live by Chris Cheers

    17. Bibliotherapy: Books to Guide You Through Every Chapter of Life by Molly Masters

    18. The Fountain of Youth – Confession: The Only Key to Living Forever by David Durand

    19. Supersized Lies: How Myths About Weight Loss Are Keeping Us Fat – And the Truth About What Really Works by Robert J. Davis, PhD

    20. Selling the Dream: The Billion-Dollar Industry Bankrupting Americans by Jane Marie

    21. I Wish I Knew This Earlier: Lessons on Love by Toni Tone

    22. Love is a Choice: 28 Extraordinary Stories of the 5 Love Languages in Action by Gary Chapman

    23. Compassion in the Court: Life-Changing Stories from America’s Nicest Judge by Judge Frank Caprio

    24. Motherhood by Sheila Heti

    25. Change Your Mind and Your Life Will Follow: 12 Simple Principles by Karen Casey

    26. The Mindful Catholic: Finding God One Moment at a Time by Dr. Gregory Bottaro

    27. Sovereign: Reclaim Your Freedom, Energy, and Power in a Time of Distraction, Uncertainty, and Chaos by Emma Seppala

    28. Says Who? A Kinder, Funner Usage Guide for Everyone Who Cares About Words by Anne Curzan

    29. The Things You Can See Only When You Slow Down by Haemin Sunim

    30. I Could Live Here Forever: a novel by Hanna Halperin

    31. The Ritual Effect: Unlocking the Extraordinary Power of the Ordinary by Michael Norton

    32. Crush Your Money Goals by Bernadette Joy

    33. Open When: A Companion for Life’s Twists and Turns by Dr. Julie Smith

    34. The Cure for Burnout by Emily Ballesteros

    35. The Note by Alafair Burke

    36. Build the Life You Want by Arthur C. Brooks & Oprah Winfrey

    37. Connect: Building Exceptional Relationships with Family, Friends, and Colleagues by David Bradford & Carole Robin

    38. We’ve Decided to Go in a Different Direction: Essays by Tess Sanchez

    39. Reconnected by Carlos Whittaker

    40. The Not-Quite States of America by Doug Mack

    41. Secrets of Adulthood: Simple Truths for Our Complex Lives by Gretchen Rubin

    42. Cue the Sun!: The Invention of Reality TV by Emily Nussbaum

    43. You Gotta Eat by Margaret Eby

    44. Justice: What’s the Right Thing to Do? by Michael J. Sandel

    45. Anatomy of a Con Artist: the 14 Red Flags to Spot Scammers, Grifters, and Thieves by Johnathan Walton

    46. It’s Not Hysteria: Everything You Need to Know About Your Reproductive Health But Were Never Told by Karen Tang, MD, MPH

    47. The Visual MBA by Jason Barron

    48. Love Worth Making by Stephen Snyder, M.D.

    49. Beyond Anxiety: Curiosity, Creativity, and Finding Your Life’s Purpose by Martha Beck

    50. There is No Place for Us: Working and Homeless in America by Brian Goldstone

  • December 2025 Reads

    I read 5 books in December. Here is a blurb of each of the books I read in December.

    It’s Not Hysteria: Everything You Need to Know About Your Reproductive Health But Were Never Told” was written by Karen Tang, MD, MPH, a board-certified gynecologist and minimally invasive gynecologic surgeon who is an internationally recognized leader in reproductive health. You can find her on TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube at KarenTangMD.

    This book was a very informative overview of the symptoms, diagnosis, and treatment for many gynecologic conditions, such as fibroids, endometriosis, PCOS, ovarian cysts, pelvic floor dysfunction, pelvic organ prolapse, urinary continence, sexual dysfunction, vulvar skin conditions, infertility, and ovarian cancer. Here are some of my main takeaways:

    When people are dealing with general gynecologic problems, there aren’t any fixed treatment pathways. People with the exact same symptoms can have completely different healthcare goals and may choose very different treatment plans. You are the only one who can decide what quality of life means for you and what will best to help you achieve it.

    • Consider: goals for treatment, thoughts regarding medications, preferences in terms of surgery, thoughts regarding fertility, what would influence your decision to pursue one treatment versus another, and how you want your healthcare provider to discuss treatment options with you.

    Since gynecologic conditions such as endometriosis, pelvic floor dysfunction, and premenstrual dysphoric disorder can cause a wide range of symptoms but don’t show up on imaging studies or lab tests, patients are often told by doctor after doctor that there is nothing wrong with them and that the problem must be emotional or mental. Sadly, this is our twenty-first-century version of hysteria.

    I highly recommend this book to all women who want to learn more about gynecologic issues!

    The Visual MBA: Two Years of Business School Packed Into One Priceless Book of Pure Awesomeness” was written by Jason Barron, MBA and contained two years of business school packaged into one highly illustrated book. Jason took sketch notes during business school and captured the main points visually. Each chapter is based upon traditional business school classes. This is a great book for visual learners. Although I can’t recreate the illustrations, here are some lessons:

    • context
      • includes the reward system, goals, culture, tone, and environment that the team will be working in
    • composition
      • includes who is on the team and their skills and personalities to get the job done. This is where hiring the right people who mesh with the team is critical.
    • competencies
      • includes having the right people whose combined skill can solve the problem. It’s about setting the right goal and leveraging the team’s skill to achieve it.
    • change
      • includes the team’s ability to adapt to rapidly changing circumstances while working towards the goal.

    First rule of marketing: You don’t try to serve everybody. Marketing makes its money in segmentation. Who is your customer, and who is not? Ask your biggest fans what they like (a particular feature), why they like it (product benefit), why that matters (personal benefit), and how that connects to a high-level personal value. A good way to find out if you have a good product is to ask people if they would buy it and for how much.

    Appeal to a customer segment, find a base of segmentation, and the competition’s advertising will have no effect. Be so amazing that customers naturally prefer you.

    • Bases of differentiation: image, hunger, comfort, cleanliness, beauty, status, style, taste, safety, quality, service, accuracy, further a cause, reliability, nostalgia, belonging

    I highly recommend this book to anyone who wants to learn more about business, marketing, and entrepreneurship!

    Love Worth Making: How to Have Ridiculously Great Sex in a Long-Lasting Relationship” was written by Stephen Snyder, M.D., one of America’s most trusted authorities on sex and relationships. This book was recommended to me. This book is about sexual feelings, not the best sex techniques. Here are some takeaways that I’m comfortable posting on this blog:

    • Sex is emotion in motion. Desire, arousal, and connection are deeply tied to how we feel, not just what we do. Emotional states shape sexual experiences.
    • Great sex happens when you’re fully present, emotionally attuned, and responsive – not when you’re trying to impress or meet expectations.
    • Desire often follows connection. Desire frequently emerges after emotional closeness, shared presence, and feeling understood.

    This is not a book I would typically read, but I would recommend this book for those interested in deepening emotional connection and improving relationship quality, rather than those looking for quick tips or explicit advice.

    Beyond Anxiety: Curiosity, Creativity, and Finding Your Life’s Purpose” was written by Martha Beck, a Harvard-trained sociologist, New York Times bestselling author, world-renowned life coach, and speaker. This book covered how to handle your biological and psychological tendency to get anxious (“calming the creature”), activate the creative self, and how to “commingle with creation” (too woo-woo for me). Admittedly, this book had some helpful lessons, but parts of it were a bit too woo-woo for me in that the author frames anxiety as a spiritual misalignment and emphasizes “awakening.” The author is also very critical of religion. Here are some lessons I found helpful:

    • You can create a calming scene by selectively focusing on certain memories, perceptions, and fantasies, but that’s exactly the same thing you’re doing when you see the world as frightening and unsafe.
    • Anxiety spirals pull us away from the world. Creativity spirals pull us into it. Follow your interest curiosity. Get creative and enhance your right-hemisphere capabilities. Do Sudoku, art, projects, or anything creative. Carve out time each day to learn more about this item and think of it as the center of your day. Calm your anxiety and sort through your priorities. Calming our anxiety and focusing on creativity can help us reconnect with our whole brains and bring us enormous happiness.
    • Calm yourself. When life gets difficult, choose your favorite calming exercises and use them.
    • Wander around. Wandering leads to wondering.
    • Let your mind catch fire. Witness things that grab your curiosity intensely and pull you into deep exploration.
    • Practice deeply. To gain skills and open up access to the genius of your brain, start by finding some skill or activity that interests you so much you want to master it. Watch people who do this thing extremely well and try to replicate it.
    • Get stuck. Hitting an impasse awakens your creative genius.

    Anxiety always lies. Healthy fear is the truth: a clear impulse to act when faced with danger. Anxiety is only a thought: the fear when the threat isn’t present.

    There Is No Place For Us: Working and Homeless in America” was written by journalist Brian Goldstone and is a deeply reported, eye-opening narrative. Goldstone cites 364 sources and spent years embedded with the families whose lives shape this book. It follows the unforgettable stories of five working families in Atlanta and reveals how easily housing instability can overtake people who are employed, responsible, and trying to survive.

    • Homelessness is no longer about unemployment. Homelessness is driven more by wages that don’t match rent, insecure gig-style employment, and no margin for illness, car trouble, or childcare gaps. Evictions play a central role. One eviction triggers years of instability.
    • After an eviction, families are often locked out of traditional housing altogether. With no landlord willing to rent to them, they are pushed into weekly motels that cost two to three times market rent, while simultaneously losing savings, credit, work hours, transportation, and stability.
    • Currently 11.4 million low-income households are classified as “severely cost burdened,” spending, on average, an astounding 78% of their earnings on rent alone.
    • Atlanta – between 2010 and 2023, median rents soared by 76%, and the metro area lost a staggering 60,000 apartments renting for $1,250 or less. The problem is not so much a lack of new housing as the kind of housing that is being built. Over the past decade, 94% of the thousands of apartments added to the city’s rental market have been luxury units.

    In order to get housing aid, you have to be considered literally homeless, which means you’re in a shelter or on the street. Most family shelters don’t allow boys over the age of 13, which fractures family stability.

    I highly recommend this book to anyone seeking an honest picture of homelessness in America and an understanding of the structural forces behind it.

  • November 2025 Reads

    I read 3 books in November. Here is a blurb of each of the books I read in November.

    You Gotta Eat” was written by Margaret Eby, a deputy food editor for the Philadelphia Inquirer. This book contained ideas for living deliciously without impossible effort. Here are some of the many ideas from the book:

    • Season mac and cheese with Old Bay seasoning, taco seasoning, Cajun seasoning, or ranch seasoning. Even better: add ground hamburger and taco seasoning.
    • For theatre-style popcorn, add Flavacol.
    • Baked potato topping ideas: Cajun seasoning, curry powder, taco seasoning, or chili crisp
    • stir-fry sauce: 4 tbsp soy sauce, 1 tbsp sriracha, and 1 tbsp brown sugar
    • sauce for sheet pan vegetables: 2 tbsp tahini (or 1 tbsp peanut butter and 1 tbsp water), 2 tbsp hoisin sauce, and 2 tbsp water
    • Thai-inspired sauce: 1 tbsp brown sugar, 1 tbsp fish sauce, and 1 tbsp lime juice

    This book was an easy read and contained easy recipe ideas.

    Justice: What’s the Right Thing to Do?” was written by Michael J. Sandel, who has taught political philosophy to Harvard undergraduates for over three decades. This book was a journey in moral and political reflection and invites readers to subject their own views about justice to critical examination and to figure out what they think and why. This book relates the big questions of political philosophy to the most vexing issues of our time. Here are some of the main ideas:

    • utilitarianism = maximize utility/happiness and prevent pain or suffering. Utilitarianism fails to respect individual rights.
      • Ex: in ancient Rome, they threw Christians to the lions in the Coliseum for the amusement of the crowd.
    • libertarianism = libertarians favor unfettered markets and oppose government regulation, not in the name of economic efficiency but in the name of human freedom.
      • Libertarians oppose laws to protect people from harming themselves and believe that these laws violate the rights of the individual to decide what risks to assume.
        • Ex: seatbelt laws
      • Libertarians oppose using the coercive force of law to promote notions of virtue or to express the mora convictions of the majority.
        • Ex: prostitution laws
      • Libertarians object to Social Security, minimum wage laws, employment discrimination laws, and occupational licensing requirements. The libertarian sees a moral continuity from taxation (taking my earnings) to forced labor (taking my labor) to slavery (denying that I own myself).
    • Kant’s critical philosophy/enlightenment = the moral worth of an action consists not in the consequences that flow from it, but in the intention from which the act is done. What matters is doing the right thing because it’s right, not for some ulterior motive.
      • Universalize your maxim. Think “What if everybody did that?”
    • John Rawls – equality = the way to think about justice is to ask what principles we would choose in an original position of equality, behind a veil of ignorance.

    This book contained thought-provoking examples to critically analyze what you think and why.

    Anatomy of a Con Artist: the 14 Red Flags to Spot Scammers, Grifters, and Thieves” was written by Emmy-winning former TV reporter and current reality TV producer Johnathan Walton. He is also a host, writer, and executive producer of the hit podcast Queen of the Con and was unfortunately the victim of a con artist. This book contained 14 red flags of con artists and detailed examples of several real cases, including the con artist who scammed him. Here are some main takeaways:

    • I just want to help.” Con artists are rescue merchants. They will suddenly show up when there’s a problem or a disaster or unrest. They’ve learned that if they can offer a solution to a major problem someone’s having, the person in trouble will focus exclusively on the offered solution, and it’ll blind them to everything else – ultimately enabling the con artist to scam them.
    • Con artists don’t outsmart you. They out-feel you. One of the biggest ways con artists trick you into giving them money is by using invented drama.
    • Once you wire your money to someone, unless you catch it very quickly and alert the bank that there’s a problem, that money is gone forever. Con artists love wires because the transactions are quick and permanent. Never send wires!
    • Dale Carnegie techniques con artists use:
      • “Arise in the other person an eager want.”
      • “To be interesting, be interested.” Con artists learn as much about you as possible as fast as they can.
      • “Dramatize your ideas.”
      • “Remember that a person’s name is to that person the sweetest and most important sound in any language.” They use your name a lot in conversations.

    If you suddenly realize that you are the victim of a con artist, you need to create a timeline with details of what happened. Pitching a criminal case to the police is a lot like pitching a show to a television executive. You have to make it compelling, succinct, easy to follow, easy to understand, and impossible to ignore.

    • When and how did you meet this person? What stories did they tell you and on what dates? When did the money change hands? Why did you give them money? What was the lie or lies they told you? How and when did you figure out they were lying?
    • Gather up and print all of the texts and emails.
    • Do a criminal and civil case search on court websites, PACER, or BeenVerified.com.
    • Reach out to people who know this con artist and tell them you were scammed. Ask if they or anyone they know was scammed.
    • Write a sworn affidavit and get it notarized.
    • Rehearse your speech before going to law enforcement and come with all evidence.
    • Call the police frequently and ask for an update.

    I highly recommend this book to learn about the red flags of con artists to watch out for!

  • October 2025 Reads

    I read 6 books in October! Here is a blurb of each of the books I read in October.

    Connect: Building Exceptional Relationships with Family, Friends, and Colleagues” was written by David Bradford and Carole Robin, who have taught interpersonal skills to MBA candidates in their legendary Stanford Graduate School of Business Course, Interpersonal Dynamics, and have coached and consulted hundreds of executives for decades. This book was a transformative guide to building more fulfilling relationships and focused on cultivating authenticity vulnerability, and honesty while being willing to ask for and offer help, share a commitment to growth, and deal productively with conduct. I learned so much from this book. Here are just a few takeaways:

    Exceptional relationships involve mutual commitment, a steady and ongoing process of increasing self-disclosure, stretching beyond your comfort zone, and seeing setbacks as something to explore and learn from rather than as a reason to retreat.

    Feedback is the breakfast of champions. Feedback starts a conversation. It doesn’t end it. Building relationships where each person feels free to give and ask for feedback is key both to preventing pinches from becoming crunches and to helping each person develop in new and more effective ways.

    • Intent = needs, motives, emotions, and intentions
    • Behavior = words, tone, gestures, facial expressions
    • Impact

    Each person can initially only know 2 of the 3 realities. You have to stay on your side of the net. You may know their behavior and impact, but you don’t know their intent. Sooner or later, the other person will tell you (or continuously show you).

    This is just a glimpse of the many lessons in this book. This book caused me to reflect on some of my past friendships and what exceptional friendships should consist of. I highly recommend this book to anyone who wants to learn more about building exceptional relationships and being a better friend, coworker, and partner.

    We’ve Decided to Go in a Different Direction: Essays” was written by Tess Sanchez, who spent more than 20 years in the entertainment industry as a casting director. This book was funny, insightful, and contained amusing essays that examine the aftermath of a major life shift that took the author from fully in control and plunged her into unfamiliar chaos. This book examines how we claim our identity and how we choose to define ourselves. This was an easier read. Here are some lessons:

    • Water the flowers, not the weeds. Nurture and grow the good in your life, and dehydrate the weeds.
    • The key to success, fulfillment, and happiness is flexibility – embracing the now – however that may look.
    • Career loss isn’t the end. It’s a pivot point. It can be painful, but also freeing.
    • Identity is bigger than your job title. Rediscover who you are outside of your professional role.
    • Resilience is messy, not linear. Change comes with backslides, confusion, and emotional turbulence.

    One of my favorite lessons from this book is the concept of a “painful favor.” The author used the phrase “painful favors” to describe pivotal moments in her life that felt harsh and disruptive at the moment but ultimately led to personal growth and new opportunities. I love this concept, and there have been several “painful favors” in my life that I am grateful for.

    Reconnected” was written by Carlos Whittaker, a bestselling author and storyteller who averaged 7 hours 23 minutes a day on his phone before this experiment. Carlos went screen-free for 7 weeks to see what screen time was doing to his head, hands, and heart; he spent 2 weeks with Benedictine monks, 2 weeks with Amish in Ohio, and 3 weeks at home with family. I enjoyed reading about his experiment. Here are some of the many lessons:

    • We don’t wonder any more. How many times are you in a conversation when somebody wonders something only to stop wondering because they can look it up on their phone? We’ve lost the ability to not know, and we now feel like we must know everything. We can’t, but we feel like we need to. If we can’t admit that we don’t know something, suddenly we are creating experts who aren’t actually experts. Ex: TikTok
    • Recovering our ability to have regular solitude is so important for our mental health and overall well-being. Let your mind wander, do a digital detox, and experiment with tech-free hobbies.
    • How many times do we pull out our phones when we get uncomfortable with our present circumstances? Jesus made a habit of being fully present with people that hardly anyone wanted to be present with. Our presence has the ability to change not only our lives but the lives of others. You could change another’s life – someone that you might not even notice if you weren’t looking up.
    • The table is one of the most intimate settings we have for sharing our lives. The table is one of the best tools we have to get to know someone well and to discover the heart of somebody. Try going phone-free and allotting more time for meals.

    Not every argument is worth having and not every comment deserves a rebuttal. Choose where to invest your energy. Respond with reason, not with rage.

    One of the most interesting lessons was that the Amish allow some pieces of technology that aren’t going to grow them apart. They weigh the potential value of every piece of new technology before allowing it. Community is more important than anything else. They don’t think cars are evil, but they know that if they started using cars, their community would no longer be a community.

    This book was intriguing and filled with lessons about the impact of technology.

    The Not-Quite States of America” was written by Minnesota author Doug Mack. This book was boring at times and reads like a history textbook. This book covered some interesting tidbits about the territories of the Virgin Islands of the United States, American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, and Puerto Rico. Here are some facts:

    • Residents of the territories cannot vote for president. They can run for president.
    • The Virgin Islands of the United States (USVI) are heavily reliant on tourism and imported goods. Agriculture is only 1% of USVI’s overall budget. With the blessing of the U.S. Treasury and Congress, the islands offer a 90% reduction in U.S. corporate and personal income taxes. The appeal of the USVI for the United States was its utility as a coaling station.
    • People born in American Samoa are U.S. nationals, not U.S. citizens, making them the only group on U.S. soil without automatic citizenship. To gain citizenship rights, they must become naturalized like any immigrant. Tuna canning is the largest private-sector employer. American Samoans who oppose birthright citizenship value 3 traditions that might be deemed unconstitutional:
      • The Native Land Ordinance – only individuals with at least 50% Samoan blood may own native land
      • Matai-only Senate – traditional chiefs, not elected by popular vote
      • Sa – the roads are closed when prayer time is observed in some villages
    • Military bases occupy nearly 1/3 of Guam’s land, but much of this land is not actively used by the military; the military simply controls the land.
    • The Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI) rely heavily on tourism and foreign labor. The Northern Mariana Islands are a U.S. commonwealth, meaning the residents are U.S. citizens, but CNMI has local self-government, including its own constitution, legislature, and governor. The U.S. Congress selectively applies some federal laws.
    • Puerto Ricans are U.S. citizens but can’t vote for president. Puerto Rico has 10x more people than all the other territories combined. The Spanish and American cultures intertwine, creating a unique identity.

    Secrets of Adulthood: Simple Truths For Our Complex Lives” was written by Gretchen Rubin, who has authored many books and hosts the top-ranking, award-winning podcast Happier with Gretchen Rubin. This book was not quite what I anticipated. It contained valuable information, but it was more like a listicle or what you may find in a fortune cookie. Here are some “secrets” of adulthood:

    • If you find it hard to take good care of yourself, care for yourself like a toddler: Don’t let yourself get too hungry, too tired, too uncomfortable, too bored, too lonely, or too overwhelmed.
    • The traffic changes, the weather changes, yet the same people are always late, and the same people are always on time.
    • More trial, more error – and more accomplishment.
    • Nothing is more exhausting than the task that’s never started.
    • By giving something up, we may gain. Briefly depriving ourselves of a pleasure often has one of two good results: either it reawakens our enjoyment or reveals that we’re happier when we don’t indulge.
    • If we take the credit, we must accept the blame.
    • Don’t buy things until you need them. Store things at the store.
    • If you can’t think of a topic of conversation, ask, “What’s keeping you busy these days?”

    Cue the Sun!: The Invention of Reality TV” was written by Pulitzer prize-winning New Yorker author Emily Nussbaum. The book covered the history of reality tv, starting from its contentious roots in radio, and Emily conducted in-depth interviews with more than 300 sources to gather information for this book. Here are some key points:

    • Reality TV didn’t just appear. It evolved from radio call-ins, prank shows, and experimental documentaries.
    • Reality TV thrives on presenting “real life” while heavily manipulating footage. This results in ethical dilemmas. Producers edit raw footage to craft narratives and often distort reality. This raises questions about consent, exploitation, and how much “truth” audiences really want.
    • The launch of Survivor in 2000 marked reality TV’s explosion into mainstream dominance. It taught networks that unscripted formats could be cheap to produce yet massively profitable.
    • Reality TV influences politics and celebrity culture. As an example, Donald Trump leverages reality TV fame from The Apprentice into political power.
    • By the 1960s, Candid Camera had become a major hit on radio, but on TV, the show’s subjects weren’t anonymous anymore. Some laughed, others got angry, and many experienced a messy blend of feelings.
    • The Dating Game required no background checks. One of the show’s winners, Rodney Alcala, turned out to be a serial killer, was also a convicted sex offender, and paroled twice. At the time he filmed his segment, he was in the midst of a murder spree.
    • The People’s Court was the first television show to feature binding arbitration.
    • America’s Funniest Home Videos was unusually easy to produce since it relied on videotapes sent in by viewers and filmed on camcorders. It cost ABC almost nothing – no actors, directors, or stunt professionals. Together with America’s Funniest Home Videos, Cops jump-started the reality genre, which had been static for nearly a decade.

    Survivor was the first series to take the reality genre mainstream in the United States. It stood out because it united 3 key traditions: prank show, game show, and real-life soap opera.

    • By 2002, casting a reality show had become a science, down to the thick contracts contestants signed, granting editors total control. There was also a natural next step after the finale aired: move to Los Angeles.
    • In 2006, with the rise of The Real Housewives, cast members of reality shows began to identify as influencers, viewing themselves as performers and collaborators, brand representatives of the shows they appeared in.
  • September 2025 Reads

    Open When: A Companion for Life’s Twists and Turns” was written by Dr. Julie Smith, who has over 10 years of experience as a clinic psychologist and is one of TikTok’s top 100 creators. You can find Dr. Julie on Instagram/TikTok/Youtube at drjulie. This book covered advice for navigating anger, setting boundaries, comparison, confidence, friendships, parenting, arguing, seeking help, overwhelm, priorities, grief, apologies, and much more. Here are some of the many insights that resonated with me.

    Whether it’s the good news or the bad, if you have to keep parts of your life under wraps to fit in, that’s not a friendship that is going to nourish and bring out the best in you. Search for acceptance and belonging in the right places. Consider: Is this a place I truly want to belong? Would being recognized as part of this group be a positive in my life? How much of myself, my beliefs, or my values would I be expected to change in order to be accepted? Is that okay with me?

    Comparison can lead to constructive forward motion and be a good thing. If it leads to envy, resentment, bitterness, and a loss of self-worth, then we are getting it all wrong, and both our efforts and our attention have been misplaced. Questions to ask yourself: What do I feel envious of specifically? What specific skills do they have that I would like to have also? Would learning those skills help me with achieving my own goals? How did they get there? Can I imitate any of that process to help me get closer to my personal goals?

    Confidence is the bus that never arrives while you sit waiting. It usually makes an appearance after you have decided to walk and you’re almost at your destination. So get to work on making some progress, and the bus will likely arrive once you’re a little way down the road.

    I highly recommend this book!

    The Cure for Burnout” was written by Emily Ballesteros, who has a burnout management coaching business. This book outlines five areas in which you can build healthy habits to combat burnout: mindset, personal care, time management, boundaries, and stress management. I learned so much from this book. Here is just a snippet.

    • Burnout is a state of exhaustion, stress, or misalignment with the direction your life is heading in for an extended period of time. Tangibly, burnout will consume your calendar, sabotage your relationships, and harm your physical health. Intangibly, it will steal the best years of your life while you have your head down in survival mode. It will destroy your mental health and cause exhaustion and possibly depression.
    • There are three kinds of burnout, and people can suffer from more than one type:
      • burnout by volume – burnout as a result of a high volume of responsibilities, a compact schedule, and very little downtime
      • social burnout – burnout as a result of interpersonal demands that exceed your available social resources – these people become the person everyone confides in, vents to, or asks for favors because they are pleasant and reliable
      • burnout by boredom – burnout as a result of chronic disengagement and disinterest in the items in your life

    Think of personal care as the equivalent of getting gas on a road trip: there is never a convenient time to stop. The personal care pillar mandates that we go out of our way, stop to refuel, and sacrifice the time we could spend “productively” on something else.

    • Think of your minimum non-negotiables – getting a minimum amount of sleep, eating food at certain intervals, getting movement, having alone time, etc.
    • To manage stress, pause/postpone projects that you’ve loved but are currently bringing more stress than joy, simplify projects, delegate/outsource tasks, and quit doing unnecessary tasks.
    • Set boundaries. What boundaries might help reinforce the changes you want to make?

    This book was packed with information, and I highly recommend it!

    The Note” was written by Alafair Burke, an Edgar-nominated New York Times bestselling author of fifteen novels of suspense and professor of Criminal Law. The main storyline of this book is that a vacation in the Hamptons went terribly wrong for three friends with a complicated history. A prank involving a mysterious note led to a missing tourist and a police investigation, unraveling layers of secrets and betrayals. I don’t typically read fiction books, and I won’t spoil this one. Overall, it was an interesting changeup from the books I typically read. This book kept me interested, but it contained overloaded themes of cancel culture, racism, anti-Asian hate, true crime obsession, and more. It seemed that the author wanted to mention many different issues in the book.

    Build the Life You Want” was written by Arthur C. Brooks and Oprah Winfrey. Arthur C. Brooks is a professor at Harvard Business School and teaches courses on happiness and is also an acclaimed author and speaker. Oprah Winfrey is a global media leader and public figure. This book covered the four big happiness pillars: family, friendships, work, and faith. Here are some of my many takeaways:

    • Ask yourself the good questions: What does living well mean – for me, not according to someone else’s model – and how do I do it? What is genuinely worth striving for? What can I offer, and how can I serve? What lessons can I glean from my experiences, especially the toughest ones? How do I make the best use of my limited time on this earth?
    • Stop caring what others think. “We all love ourselves more than other people, but care more about their opinions than our own.” “Care about people’s approval and you will be their prisoner.”
    • The key to finding meaningful work is to feel a sense of accomplishment and to believe that your job is making the world a better place. Look for a fundamental match between an employer’s values and your own. At the same time, put some space between your job and your life, and make friends and spend time with people who have no connection to your work.

    Our impulses, amplified by the consumer economy, entertainment, and social media push us to spend our time idolizing money, power, pleasure, and prestige. These idols all stand in the way of enjoyment, satisfaction, and purpose. They substitute pleasure for enjoyment, make satisfaction harder to attain and keep, and focus us on things that are trivial and not meaningful. The four idols are distractions to numb us to emotional circumstances we dislike and feel we can’t control.

    I highly recommend this book for those interested in learning more about finding happiness in family, friendships, work, and faith.

  • August 2025 Reads

    It’s been a while since I’ve posted on this blog since I have had other priorities. I read 2 books in August and gave myself permission to quit 2 other books – a true act of self-care. Previously, I didn’t allow myself to not finish books. Here is a blurb of each of the books I read in August.

    The Ritual Effect: Unlocking the Extraordinary Power of the Ordinary” was written by Michael Norton, professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School. Here are some main takeaways:

    The essence of habit is the what – something we do – brush our teeth, go to the gym, pay bills, etc. The essence of ritual is the how. It matters to us not simply that we complete the action but the specific way that we complete it. When rituals are disrupted, people report feeling “off” all day.

    Some rituals become so intricate that the ritual interferes instead of prepares. Ex: performance rituals – baseball players engage in an average of 83 movements when batting.

    Rituals and repetition can be powerful tools for honing our self-control, but ritualistic behavior can, over time, start to control us instead. Among the most common treatments for compulsive behaviors is “habit reversal” training – identifying the root behavior that’s causing problems and replacing it with something else.

    • Rituals wake up our experience of commitment – doing things together.
    • Relationship rituals are exclusive.
    • Rituals – not routines – bring the magic.
    • Consensus is a critical factor. Do you and your partner agree that it’s a ritual and not just a routine?
    • Food and drink are often central to rituals, but how we share them is what shapes family identity.
    • Rituals can be the practices that call us home and bring family together.
    • Family rituals immerse us in the moment, strengthen identity, and create lasting meaning.

    Rituals give us a sense of ownership, an affirmation of identity or belonging, or an increased feeling of meaning.

    • Personal rituals are more adaptable and meaningful than inherited rituals since we can shape them to fit our values and goals.
    • Rituals strengthen social bonds through shared meals, celebrations, or communal ceremonies.
    • Rituals don’t have to be complex. Simple, intentional actions can transform daily life.

    Crush Your Money Goals” was written by Bernadette Joy, an expert money coach and founder of CRUSH Your Money Goals. Here are some main points.

    • Curate your accounts. Coordinate accounts and track spending.
    • Reverse into independence. Set clear financial independence goals. Use the $1 rule to question non-essential purchases.
    • Understand your net worth and track it.
    • Spend intentionally. Align spending with values.
    • Heal your money wounds. Address emotional triggers that lead to overspending.

    Net worth trackers organize your accounts into cash & cash equivalents, investments, property, credit cards, and loans. Trackers mentioned in this book include Empower (free) and Monarch Money (paid subscription).

    • Survivebasic necessities, including housing, utilities, food, transportation, and health
    • Revive current expenses that aren’t necessary but make life worth living for you, such as vacations, clothing, entertainment, and hobbies
    • Strive – anything that helps you grow your net worth

    The CRUSH method consists of 50% strive, 25% survive, and 25% strive. In other words, saving/investing half of your income – which does not seem attainable for most people, especially people who don’t earn six figures. The author mentioned that if this is not attainable, people should work to increase their income.

    • Remember that the interest you pay on any debt is making someone else rich by being their passive income stream. Ex: your mortgage, auto loans, and credit cards.
    • Unsubscribe from email marketing and digitally detox from constant comparisons. Reduce impulse spending.
    • Implement a $1 cost per use rule – technology, furniture, clothing, accessories, home goods.
    • Invest in a Roth IRA, where you won’t pay taxes on growth. All income earned is tax-free.
    • Compare insurance plan rates each year. Ask for discounts from service providers.
  • July 2025 Reads

    It’s been a while since I’ve posted on this blog since I have had other priorities. I read 4 books in July. Here is a blurb of each of the books I read in July.

    Sovereign: Reclaim Your Freedom, Energy, and Power in a Time of Distraction, Uncertainty, and Chaos” was written by Emma Seppala, a Yale lecturer and international keynote speaker. This book was insightful! It was packed with tips to recharge your life and change the way you think and act – from your emotions, mind, relationships, intuition and body. Here are some of my many takeaways:

    • Sovereignty is reclaiming your right to exist as you. It involves courage, awareness, and self-honoring. Consider what would happen if you loved and cared for yourself as much as you do for others.

    Some of the many tips covered:

    • Sovereign self
      • Listen to the state of your mind and body. Ask yourself what you need.
      • Prioritize what fills your cup – what brings you rest, rejuvenation, energy, vitality, upliftment, inspiration, and joy.
    • Sovereign emotions
      • Remember: when you run from your feelings, you run from your healing. Feel instead of suppressing.
      • Remember that emotions are energy in motion. Take care of your basic needs: sleep, diet, exercise, and yourself.
    • Sovereign mind
      • Create boundaries around your media. Don’t go on social media to look at what other people are doing or selling.
      • Observe and discern: What are the intentions of the messaging. Is it giving you freedom or binding you in fear? Do you wish to engage with it?
    • Sovereign relationships
      • 6 keys of positive relational energy
        • caring for, being interested in, and seeing the best in others
        • providing support for one another, including offering kindness and compassion
        • avoiding blame and forgiving mistakes
        • inspiring one another and focusing on what’s going right
        • emphasizing meaningfulness
        • treating others with basic human values like respect, gratitude, trust, honesty, humility, kindness, an integrity
    • Sovereign intuition
      • Consult your gut feelings.
      • Unplug from technology. Create opportunities for contemplation. Schedule idle time.
    • Sovereign body
      • Relate to your body as your best friend because that’s what it is. Learn to love it, care for it, listen to it, and live in harmony with its needs.
      • Reflect on these questions: Do you honor and care for your body the way you would a child? If not, what would it look like if you did?

    This is one of the best books I have read this year, and I highly recommend it to everyone!

    Says Who? A Kinder, Funner Usage Guide for Everyone Who Cares About Words” was written by Anne Curzan, professor of English Language and Literature, Linguistics, and Education at the University of Michigan. This book was intriguing, although some readers may find it overwhelming or too academic. Here are some things that resonated with me:

    One key point for everyone who uses dictionaries is that dictionary editors are trying to walk a fine line between capturing words as they are used and providing guidance about the contexts in which some words are generally accepted or not accepted. While the editors of today’s dictionaries are usually trying to describe actual usage, we as dictionary users often erroneously assume that they are prescribing correct usage. Attitudes at the language change over time!

    • English has lots of synonyms in many areas of the lexicon, and they demonstrate the remarkable creativity we as humans bring to language, the many languages that have contributed to the English lexicon, the diversity of our linguistic identities, and the nuanced choices we get to make as speakers and writers.
    • Dictionary editors determine which pronunciations get recorded as standard and which get labeled as nonstandard – and which don’t get included at all.
    • What’s correct depends on where, when, and to whom you’re speaking. Formal writing has different expectations than casual conversation.
    • Many grammar rules are based on tradition, not logic. Usage evolves, and what was once “wrong” can become accepted over time. Examples:
      • Peruse” has long meant “to read thoroughly” – but now people use it to mean “to glance over, skim” – which is becoming more acceptable.
      • Literally” is used to mean “in the literal sense” AND “figuratively.”

    The Things You Can Only See When You Slow Down” was written by Haemin Sunim and contained so many life lessons and a guide to mindfulness. I got a lot out of this book. Here are some takeaways:

    • According to some psychologists, happiness can be assessed with two simple questions: First, do you find meaning in your work? Second, do you have good relationships with those around you?
    • We like to get involved in other people’s business, thinking we are doing so for them. We offer unsolicited help and interfere with their lives. We take away their power and make them feel incapable. This stems from our desire for control and recognition. It has little to do with love.
    • A bad driver brakes often. A bad conversationalist also brakes often – interrupting the flow with his own stories.
    • Being a good boss requires much more than just having a lot of technical knowledge. It is important to have integrity and a positive relationship with the staff, to give timely feedback and professional mentoring, and to advocate for what the team needs.

    I really enjoyed the lessons from this book and highly recommend it.

    I Could Live Here Forever: a novel” was written by Hanna Halperin. This is a fiction book and is not what I typically read. This book was described as “a gripping portrait of a tumultuous, consuming relationship between a young woman and a recovering addict.” I agree with that description. Since this was a fiction book, I didn’t take many notes, but these quotes resonated with me:

    “The nice thing about writing was it took pain and warped it into something useful. I could shape it into a beginning and a middle and an end. It was manageable that way . . . by the time I was done with it, it was just a story.”

    Overall, I wanted more character development.

  • June 2025 Reads

    It’s been a while since I’ve posted on this blog since I have had other priorities. I read 3 books in June. Here is a blurb of each of the books I read in June.

    The novel “Motherhood” by Sheila Heti follows a woman in her late 30s as she grapples with whether or not to have children. This book was not plot-driven; it was more like a long internal monologue in which the woman constantly questions what it means to be a mother and whether motherhood would enhance or diminish her life. I didn’t like the writing style, but it was thought-provoking at times. Here are some key lessons from this book:

    • the pressure of societal expectations for women to have children
    • motherhood as a choice, not an obligation
    • motherhood is often tied to a woman’s identity
    • the cost of motherhood – sacrifice of time, freedom, and sometimes the dreams or ambitions women may have for themselves
    • Women are often expected to become mothers, while men are not held to the same societal standards.

    Do I want children because I want to be admired as the admirable sort of woman who has children? Because I want to be seen as a normal sort of woman, or because I want to be the best kind of woman, a woman with not only work, but the desire and ability to nurture, a body that can make babies, and someone who another person wants to make babies with?

    We are miserly with ourselves when it comes to space and time. But doesn’t having children lead to the most miserly allotment of space and time? Having a child solves the impulse to give oneself nothing. It makes that impulse into a virtue.

    Whether I want kids is a secret I keep from myself. On the one hand, the joy of children. On the other hand, the misery of them. On the one hand, the freedom of not having children. On the other hand, the loss of never having had them.”

    Change Your Mind and Your Life Will Follow: 12 Simple Principles” was written by Karen Casey, a speaker and author of 16 books. Here are some lessons that resonated with me:

    • Tend your own garden. Focusing outside ourselves and attempting to control other people is a clever avoidance technique that helps us escape having to look at our own sometimes troubling behavior.
    • We are not in charge of others! Not their behavior, their thoughts, their dreams, their problems, their successes, or their failures.
    • Let go of outcomes. No matter what we do or how perfect our input, we are never in control of the outcome of any situation. You are responsible for making the effort – nothing more.
    • Don’t let the mood swings of others determine how you feel.

    Any thought can be released. We are fully responsible for our thoughts and can take charge of them whenever we need or want to. No one can take charge of your thoughts, and thus your life, without your compliance.

    Be vigilant about your choices. If what you are seeking is peace, you must be vigilant about the choices you make. The ego will often beckon you to choose gossip, criticism, comparisons, judgements, jealousy, fear, and anger – none of these choices will lead you to peace.

    The Mindful Catholic” is based on an eight-week program called Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction and was written by Gregory Bottaro, the director of the Catholic Psych Institute and the developer of the Catholic Mindfulness Online Course. Here are some takeaways:

    Mindfulness = paying attention to the present moment without judgment or criticism. Curiosity is the disposition of mind that we are seeking to cultivate when we practice mindfulness. Mindfulness does not mean turning off the thoughts in your mind but using them as a door to greater awareness of yourself.

    Tendencies vs. Mindfulness:

    This book also covered mindfulness exercises. As someone who isn’t experienced with mindfulness, here is my favorite:

    • Sacramental pause – Start with prayer (“Ever-present God, here with me now, help me to be here with you“). Open your awareness to any thoughts, emotions, or physical sensations, then narrow your focus to the physical sensation of your breath alone, and finally expand the focus to the physical sensations of your whole body.
  • May 2025 Reads

    It’s been a while since I’ve posted on this blog since I have had other priorities. I read 5 books in May. Here is a blurb of each of the books I read in May.

    Supersized Lies: How Myths About Weight Loss Are Keeping Us Fat – And the Truth About What Really Works” was written by Robert J. Davis, PhD, host of the Healthy Skeptic video series and an award-winning health journalist whose work has appeared on CNN, PBS, WebMD, and the Wall Street Journal. Here are some main points:

    Instead of focusing on individual villains, we need to pay attention to the general quality of our diets – emphasizing whole foods and minimizing highly processed foods – vegetables, fruits, beans, nuts, seeds, seafood, lean poultry, and whole grains, such as oats and rice. Whole foods tend to have fewer calories per ounce, more fiber, and be more filling, and we often eat them more slowly, giving our brains time to get the message that we’ve had enough.

    • When calories are cut or increased by a specific amount, the change in weight will vary from person to person, and these differences are due at least in part to genetics.
    • Calories shouldn’t be the only consideration. That can detract from the pleasure of eating, contribute to an unhealthy relationship with food, and result in too little of the things your body needs. Instead, when choosing what to eat, also pay attention to the sugar, fiber, and protein, and consider how healthful and filling the foods are and how you feel after you eat them.

    If dietary supplements had to meet the same standards of proof for safety and effectiveness as medications, few, if any, would be allowed on the market. Supplement makers aren’t required to test for safety. The law assumes that supplements are innocent until proven guilty – just the opposite of how medications are regulated.

    Selling the Dream: The Billion-Dollar Industry Bankrupting Americans” was written by Jane Marie, a Peabody and Emmy Award-winning journalist. In this book, Jane expands on her popular podcast The Dream to expose the source of multilevel marketing schemes. Although I have never been involved in multilevel marketing (thankfully), I got a lot out of this book! Here are some main takeaways:

    • 99% of those who join MLMs make no $ or even lose $. Women make up 74% of the MLM workforce.
    • In an MLM, the product being sold doesn’t matter since most of the $ is being made via recruitment fees and distributors stocking their own shelves with inventory.
    • Despite what those in MLMs may believe, they are not business owners. They don’t control anything except their own sales efforts. They don’t own the product they’re selling or any IP, they don’t set their own prices or salaries, and they are often bound by strict rules in how they can market and sell the products. They also lack a guaranteed salary, benefits, and workers’ rights.

    The MLM world is a bizarre land where incentives can range from the opportunity to buy your own ticket to a conference to earning a new rank solely based on products you’ve purchased that now sit in your garage. The disincentives are just as plain: once you’ve roped in your friends and family, quitting seems off the table and an admission that you sold them a bill of goods.

    “Nutrition” clubs are seemingly popping up everywhere. One of the most fascinating things I read in this book is that Herbalife nutrition clubs prohibit signs that state or suggest that Herbalife products are available for retail purchase on the premises. Club owners are not permitted to post signs indicating whether the club is open or closed, and the interior of the club must not be visible to persons outside.

    I recommend reading this book if you want to learn more about the MLM industry.

    I Wish I Knew This Earlier: Lessons on Love” is an essay-type book divided into themes and written by Toni Tone, an award-winning speaker, writer, and social content creator. Here are some points that resonated with me:

    • Intimacy tells you more about a relationship than intensity. Can you be vulnerable? Do you feel safe? Is there trust? Do you have similar interests? Can you easily hold a conversation with them? Do you have similar values?
    • Have a life outside of your love life is essential. A healthy relationship should complement your life, not become it. A partner who is good for you wants you to flourish and wants you to be the best version of yourself. The best version of yourself is well-rounded, has friendships outside of your romantic relationship, hobbies, and aspirations outside of your romantic relationship.

    We should choose to love people for who they really are because the painful truth is that potential doesn’t always manifest. You may think a person is capable of moving mountains for you, but should these mountains never be moved, how will you feel? Falling for potential is not just a disservice to you but it’s also a disservice to the person you are choosing to love. We don’t possess the power to change people. People change because they want to.

    I highly recommend this book to anyone!

    Love is a Choice: 28 Extraordinary Stories of the 5 Love Languages in Action” was written by Gary Chapman, author, speaker, and counselor and #1 bestselling author of The 5 Love Languages series. Here are some great points:

    • Perhaps one of the keys to finding an enduring affection is to be willing to accept the interruptions and intrusions.
    • How do you measure love? Each of us speaks a different love language. How can we learn someone’s love language? By asking them what makes them feel really loved or by watching how the person expresses love to others.
    • Love doesn’t require that we always have all the answers. Instead, many times love just asks that we listen to the problem, that we try to understand, and that we express our condolences, sympathy, or love. Sometimes love means just being there for the person we care about.

    Love requires effort and action. Love is not passive. It requires constant effort, communication, and care. Actions like making time for each other, showing affection, or helping with everyday tasks can strengthen a relationship in profound ways.

    Open, honest, and empathetic communication is necessary to foster understanding and connection. Instead of assuming your partner knows what you need, communicate your feelings, desires, and needs clearly. Practice active listening and empathy.

    Compassion in the Court: Life-Changing Stories From America’s Nicest Judge” was written by Judge Frank Caprio, who became an unexpected television and internet superstar while in his eighties. Judge Caprio’s three-time Emmy-nominated television show, Caught in Providence, has amassed over 20 million followers across social media and his videos have accrued billions of views. Here are some key lessons:

    • True justice should be tempered with compassion. Treat people as human beings, not just as cases or statistics.
    • Compassionate decisions build trust in the judicial system. When people feel that they are treated fairly and with understanding, they are more likely to follow the rules and make positive changes.
    • What may seem unimportant to you could be incredibly important and life-changing to the person before you. One small act of kindness, one act of being thoughtful, can really change the course of a person’s life.
    • Put yourself in the shoes of the person you are facing and then ask yourself: What would help? How would you behave if it were your parents, grandparents, brother, sister, or relative in that situation? How would you want them treated?

    My courtroom was a microcosm of the city of Providence, a progressive city that’s been welcoming immigrants for hundreds of years. Many of the defendants who have appeared before me may not have felt life had treated them fairly, but it was my sincere hope that in my courtroom they felt that they had the opportunity to speak, to be heard, and to be treated fairly in the way our system of justice demands.

  • April 2025 Reads

    It’s been a while since I’ve posted on this blog since I have had other priorities. I read 5 books in April. Here is a blurb of each of the books I read in April.

    Funny, You Don’t Look Autistic: A Comedian’s Guide to Life on the Spectrum” was written by Michael McCreary, who does stand-up comedy about being on the autism spectrum and uses comedy to help demystify autism and break down stereotypes. He has performed across North America and lives in Toronto, Canada. Although this is not a comprehensive educational book, I learned more about autism. Here are some takeaways.

    Everyone with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is different. People with ASD have many of the same thoughts and feelings as anyone else. The difference is in the intensity of those feelings and the degree to which they affect functioning.

    The DSM-5 defines autism as a “triad of impairments” that presents challenges in these areas:

    1. social interaction
    2. communication
    3. repetitive behaviors

    Some people have heightened senses and can’t handle sudden bursts or noise or tags on clothes, while others are under-sensitive to sensory information and need to seek out stimulation. This is known as “stimming” and can include rocking, staring at lights, repetitive blinking, tapping, making sounds, spinning objects, rubbing your skin, clapping, or leg-shaking.

    The author took improv classes. Improv requires you to listen to people, respond to them, and go with the flow: “Improv taught me more about social skills than any learning strategies ever could.”

    When I’d seen comics lean on a mic stand, I always thought it was a power move. I soon realized that it was meant to make your shaking less obvious.

    In media, the characters often seem like a checklist of symptoms rather than real people, a collection of quirks that have been mistaken for a personality. The problem with presenting autism on-screen is that it becomes the crux of the character. Having autism is a characteristic, not a character.

    Although this book provided some useful information, it left more to be desired.

    The Unclaimed: Abandonment and Hope in the City of Angels” by Pamela Prickett and Stefan Timmermans is a powerful work of narrative nonfiction that explores what happens when people die with no one to claim them. Prickett, a sociology professor and former broadcaster, and Timmermans, a UCLA sociologist known for his work on death investigations, follow the lives of four individuals in Los Angeles who died between 2012 and 2019—some with family and means, others without—revealing how easily people can become invisible. Alongside their stories, the authors introduce us to the scene investigators, notification officers, and crematorium workers who step in when no one else will. I found the book deeply moving and full of surprising insights. Here are just a few that stayed with me.

    • Today, more and more relatives are abandoning their dead, leaving it to local governments to dispose of the bodies. Up to 150,000 Americans now go unclaimed each year.
    • The term of choice for those sent to the potter’s field is no longer indigent but unclaimed reflective of relatives’ inability or unwillingness to take care of their dead.
    • There is no federal agency to track or oversee the unclaimed – just a patchwork of ad hoc local practices.
    • Los Angeles – “Over five hours, the men poured 1,461 boxes and envelopes into the grave – a year’s worth of ashes.”

    Just because a family might be indigent does not mean a decedent is. To access a decedent’s $, the family needs a death certificate. The medical examiner’s office would not release the death certificate until the family hired a private funeral home to transfer the body from the crowded crypt. Quick access to the death certificate was one of the few carrots the office had to entice hesitant families to claim.

    Patterns that increase likelihood of being unclaimed: social isolation caused by eroding family ties, never getting married, estrangement

    I highly recommend this fascinating book! I learned so much about the unclaimed.

    The New Rulebook: Notes from a psychologist to help redefine the way you live” was written by Dr. Chris Cheers, an Australian psychologist and educator with a focus on elevating mental health in the arts and LGBTQIA+ communities. In this book, Dr. Cheers compassionately asks readers to examine 5 key areas of their lives: self-care, emotions, work, love, and body, and offers evidence-based solutions to redefine their lives not based on expectations of how they should live but led by what they need. Here are some reflections.

    If you only focus on self, you start to view self-care as something that is a solo effort – something you buy for yourself, do alone, etc. Many of the worthwhile actions of self-care are carried out in relation to other people, such as communicating boundaries, saying no, or standing up for yourself.

    We often recognize that we’re unhappy in our relationships, at work, or in daily life, but we rarely see major change as a real option. Instead, we try to feel better about the lives we already have and convince ourselves that change is too hard or simply not possible. In that process, self-care can become a soothing distraction rather than a solution. If your version of self-care is helping you cope with something that truly needs to change, it may not be care at all. It may be a quiet form of self-neglect.

    1. How can I care for myself today?
    2. What are the barriers to making that happen? Can they be challenged?
    3. What can I do to help make that care happen?
    4. What positive impact will this care have not only for me, but for my community and the people in my life?

    Values – How do you want people to describe you? What words do you want them to use to describe what you have held as most meaningful and important in your life? These are your values.

    • Values are useless if they just remain an ideal. Our daily actions become our life and identity. Consider how your actions have aligned with your values over the last six months and consider which behavior you could limit to make space for more meaningful actions.

    We promote belonging in our relationships through intentional gathering. Safety comes from clear communication and trust. Trust is earned through actions that show accountability, integrity, and reliability. We can also promote a sense of safety in our relationships through learning how to have a difficult conversation, apologize, and come together after conflict.

    I recommend this book to anyone who wants to examine the 5 key areas of their lives: self-care, emotions, work, love, and body.

    Bibliotherapy: Books to Guide You Through Every Chapter of Life” was written by Molly Masters, a writer, podcaster, director and CEO of Aphra, and CEO of Bookshop Limited. Bibliotherapy is the application of literature towards a therapeutic goal. This book was a bibliotherapy concierge for confidence and courage, adulting, empowerment, first loves and great loves, heartbreak, self-love and self-discovery, LGBTQIA+ identity, new beginnings, new parents, creativity and inspiration, escapism, your mind, grief and loss, and feeling directionless.

    This book was split into sections and provided one-sentence blurbs about most books recommended. I wrote several titles down to research more or read, and I highly recommend this book if you want book recommendations for the categories listed above! I will not be sharing titles recommended at this time because I don’t want to endorse books I have not read yet.

    .

    The Fountain of Youth – Confession: The Only Key to Living Forever” was written by Dave Durand. This book was handed out by my Catholic church and explores a topic that many Catholics (and Christians in general) struggle with: the Sacrament of Confession. Dave Durand takes a direct approach, addressing common excuses people make for avoiding confession, and offering responses rooted in Scripture and Church teaching. Here’s a brief look at a few of those points:

    1. “It is not necessary to go to a priest. I can just tell my sins to God directly.”
      Durand reminds us that Jesus gave His apostles the authority to forgive sins—a gift passed down through the Church.
    2. “At least I’m not as bad as others.”
      The book challenges the idea that God “grades on a curve” and instead invites us to humbly acknowledge our need for grace, just as many saints once did.
    3. Self-Justification
      Rather than justifying our actions, confession helps us confront our faults honestly before God, which can lead to deeper transformation in all areas of life.
    4. “Who is the Church to say what’s a sin?”
      Durand addresses this with a reminder that moral truth doesn’t change based on opinion and that Jesus established the Church for guidance and accountability.
    5. “I keep committing the same sin—what’s the point?”
      He encourages persistence in confession, noting that repeated sin doesn’t mean failure if we sincerely strive to grow in virtue with God’s help.
    6. Emotional Blocks
      Past negative experiences can make confession difficult, but Durand gently urges readers not to let one painful moment keep them from God’s healing grace.

    Overall, The Fountain of Youth offers a clear and convicting view of confession within the Catholic faith grounded in both Scripture and the Catechism. Whether you’re a lifelong Catholic or simply curious about the sacrament, it presents a perspective worth reflecting on.

  • March 2025 Reads

    It’s been a while since I’ve posted on this blog since I had other priorities in March. I read 5 books in March. Here is a blurb of each of the books I read in March.

    We Should Get Together: The Secret to Cultivating Better Friendships” was written by Kat Vellos. Kat’s writing is read in over 100 countries and she has been featured in several news outlets. Find out more at katvellos.com. This book helps adults create fulfilling friendships that last a lifetime and tackles challenges of adult friendships and how to make and maintain friendships through more meaningful conversations, identifying quality connections, and prioritizing them. Since starting school, many of my friendships have changed. I got a lot out of this book, but here is just a handful of tips:

    • Friendship factors: compatibility, proximity, frequency, and commitment. We show our commitment through 5 core behaviors: openness, caring, trust, dedication, and reciprocity.
    • One of the biggest complaints that comes up when people talk about friendship during adulthood is that everyone’s so busy all the time – work, school, kids, marriage, etc. Maybe the reason we’re “so busy” is because we’re binging shows and endlessly scrolling through social media. Take control of your time. Do you lack the time or the dedication?
    • Ask open-ended questions and follow-up questions to pull you deeper into conversation. Some fun ideas:
      • What’s the weirdest job you’ve ever had?
      • What’s a book that you think everyone should read?
      • If you had to spend one hour a day studying a topic or practicing a skill, what would you pick up and why?
      • If you had to be a teacher for the rest of your life, what would you teach?
      • What were three songs that you loved as a teenager?
      • What was a low point during this year for you? How did you handle it?
      • What excites you?

    I highly recommend this book and will post more about it in a future blog.

    The Secret Lives of Booksellers and Libraries: True Stories of the Magic of Reading” was arranged by James Patterson and Matt Eversmann. James is the most popular storyteller of our time and has received several awards. This book consisted of short essays from booksellers and librarians. Here are some of my many takeaways:

    Having a good library is not political. A good library will have books on vegetarianism and hunting. A good library will have books on every religion. A good library will have books about all eras of history, from ancient Rome to the Civil War to the Holocaust. A good library will have books about different countries, different cultures, and different life experiences.

    “I don’t see the library going away at all. We’ll just have to keep up with whatever comes next and evolve with what the citizens want. We hope they continue to want what we provide: lifelong learning and joy.”

    Public libraries are open to everyone. And free. There aren’t that many public spaces left where you can go without the expectation of spending money.

    I highly recommend this book to get perspectives from booksellers and librarians.

    The Unplugged Hours: Cultivating a Life of Presence in a Digitally Connected World” was written by Hannah Brencher, a writer, TED speaker, and entrepreneur. Hannah challenged herself to 1,000 unplugged hours in one year – taking back a life that had slowly become less present, less awake, and less vibrant over time. This book was a weaving of a memoir, cultural commentary, and spiritual insights. Here are some takeaways:

    • What would happen if we checked into the lives we’re building as much as we checked into other people’s lives online?
    • Think about something you’ve been wanting to do for a long time – something you keep pushing off because of e-mail, mindless scrolling, or yet another binge-worthy show. Whatever it is, power down your phone and do that thing you’ve been wanting to do. After one hour, turn your phone back on. You’ll have missed out on nothing, but gained something back instead: a piece of your time, a tiny sliver of your life.
    • Before taking the challenge, define what “unplugged” means to you. For the author, it means not using your phone, internet, social media, tv, or consuming any form of digital media. Build your boundaries intentionally.
    • Don’t believe the lie that you don’t have enough time. Instead, acknowledge that exercising, reading, etc. just isn’t a priority for you right now. Scrolling on your phone takes up a lot of time. The time is there; it’s just waiting to be reclaimed.

    The double-edged truth about the devices we hold is that there will always be something to check. Something to read. Some way to improve. Something to watch. Another thing to reply to. Something to share. Another comment to make.

    Scrolling in bed in morning: “I was allowing other people’s fingerprints – their agendas, opinions, praise, and problems – to get all over my day before my feet even touched the ground.”

    There’s often a disconnect between the life people are living and the life they’re curating for others to see. In the unplugged hours, ask yourself: Does this moment still matter to you if no one else knows you went, saw, lived, ate, loved, fought, and tried? Does this moment still matter to you if you never pull out your phone to tell people that it happened?

    I highly recommend this book for anyone feeling like they are on their phones too much and that they don’t have time to do things they’ve been putting off, including maintaining friendships.

    What If YOU Are the Answer? And 26 Other Questions That Just Might CHANGE YOUR LIFE” was written by Rachel Hollis, a speaker, podcast host, entrepreneur, and #1 New York Times bestselling author whose work has impacted millions of readers worldwide. This book was thought-provoking. Here are some things that resonated with me.

    • What Who are you waiting for? Live your life. Try new stuff and see if you like it. Learn to look at other humans as individual plays in their own stories without feeling the need to write yours the same way. Listen to your heart, your gut, and your inner knowing. Give yourself permission to change lanes, directions, occupations, beliefs, and other things you need to on the journey of trying your best to do your best.
      • Realize that no one else can solve our problems, heal our wounds, or make the most of the opportunity we’ve been given. You are the hero you’ve been waiting for.
    • What must you let go of to be the person you want to be?
    • What’s bigger, your dreams or your excuses?
    • Knowing what you know today, would you sign up for this again? Job, friends, relationships, projects, etc. If not, what are you going to do about it?
    • Who would you be without your fear?
      • There are two kinds of fear: 1) clear and present danger of a very real threat 2) imaginary fear we create by dreaming up what might happen – anything you’ve never done, places you’ve never gone, conversations you’ve never had, and people you don’t know
      • Anything you’re curious about or interested in but don’t pursue because of what might happen is you allowing your fear to control you.

    I highly recommend this book for anyone wanting to reflect on their lives and personal growth and make changes.

    Burps” is a children’s book written by Grace Hansen. I wanted to learn more about burping since this is new to me. Here are some tidbits:

    • When we eat and drink, we swallow food and water, but we also swallow air. Air contains gases like nitrogen and oxygen.
    • Too much gas in the esophagus and stomach can be uncomfortable. Burping releases this excess gas.
    • Carbonated drinks contain carbon dioxide and can cause us to burp.
    • Bacteria in our digestive tract helps break down food. Hydrogen peroxide can be made int he process. This gas smells like rotten eggs.
    • Burping is our body’s way of releasing excess gas.

    Although this book said that everyone burps, that is not true! Some people have a condition called RCPD (inability to burp).

  • February 2025 Reads

    I read four books in February. Here is a blurb of each of the books I read in February.

    Rolling Warrior” was written by Judith Heumann with Kristen Joiner. Judith is an internationally recognized leader in the disability rights movement. She has advocated for disability rights at home and abroad, serving in the Clinton and Obama administrations and as the World Bank’s first advisor on disability and development. Kristen is a writer and activist who tries to tell stories that change how people see the world. This book was the young reader’s edition of Judith’s acclaimed memoir “Being Heumann.”

    Judith became sick with polio when she was 18 months old. Most people who get it are fine after a week or two, but some end up paralyzed and not able to move. Judith was paralyzed and can move her arms and hands, but can’t walk, dress herself, or go to the bathroom by herself. Judith detailed the challenges of living with polio:

    • Having a manual wheelchair when streets had curbs with no ramps
    • not going to a typical school until she was 14 years old – 1 1/2 hours away because her neighborhood school wasn’t accessible
    • having to ask other students for assistance when needing to go to the bathroom
    • having to ask other students for assistance to get into her dorm, which had a step
    • engaging in a sit-in protest with 150 disabled people to prompt the signing of Section 504.

    Section 504 of Title V of the 1973 Rehabilitation Act prohibits discrimination against people with disabilities in institutions and programs receiving federal funding. Judith’s lifelong work also contributed to the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).

    My story is similar to so many other people’s – those with and without disabilities. Telling our stories helps strengthen our ability to continue to fight against injustice. Sharing the stories about how we want our world to be – and then turning these dreams and visions into reality – is what we must all commit to doing.

    What I Told My Daughter: Lessons from Leaders on Raising the Next Generation of Empowered Women” was edited by Nina Tassler with Cynthia Littleton. Nina Tassler spent more than a decade as head of entertainment programming for CBS. This book consisted of short essays. Here are some of the many quotes from the essays that stood out to me.

    We tell our girls that they can do anything, be anything, that the world is theirs for the taking. We encourage them – expect them – to be ultra-high achievers with lofty goals for college and beyond. I fear we may sometimes put too much pressure on our girls, imbue them with impossible standards. I worry that our dreams for them may sometimes, unintentionally, lead them to believe they can never make mistakes, and that perfection is more important than resilience. I want her to know that not only can she success, but that she can fail without being a failure, be hurt without being diminished, and be embarrassed without being ashamed.

    • “They always have the right to change their minds, especially when it comes to their personal happiness, whether it involves friendships, potential partners, and even career choices.”
    • “There are so many lessons we teach our daughters every single day – by what we say and do and how we treat others and how we let them treat us. We lead by example.”
    • “Choose friends who care about your feelings. Choosing the right people in whom to entrust our emotions and vulnerabilities may be the hardest but most important skill we learn in life.”

    Your Journey to Financial Freedom” was written by Jamila Souffrant, founder of Journey to Launch and the host of the podcast of the same name. She has been featured by several news outlets and is a certified financial education instructor. This book covered financial independence, creating your enjoyable financial independence plan, executing it, increasing income, paying down liabilities/debt, increasing assets, and staying the course and enjoying the journey. I got a lot out of this book. Here are some key points:

    • This book covered 5 journeyer stages, each of which has different financial priorities. This book also covered 5 different guacamole levels, which correspond with different lifestyle levels.
    • There are 6 components you’ll need to work on to help you reach financial independence: income, expenses, liabilities, assets, mindset, and habits.
    • This book encourages readers to evaluate their expenses based on their journeyer stage and guac level. Consider whether you are comfortable with sacrificing everyday indulgences now to achieve a bigger guac level later, whether you plan to maintain the same level in the future when you reach financial independence, and what guac level you can realistically live at now while working toward financial independence and the guac level you want to maintain once you reach it. Many people assume they need the same income in retirement but have goals of traveling more and living a more luxurious life. Evaluate your lifestyle and expenses now compared to your desired lifestyle and expenses later.
    • This book covered ways to increase income, set savings goals, optimize expenses, create a debt payoff plan, and increase assets.

    It isn’t all about the future and living your best life in retirement. What are the things that you want and wish to do when you reach financial independence and how can you start doing them now? ex: hobbies and vacations

    Don’t put your joy and freedom on layaway. The thing about living too much in the future or waiting for the next is that by the time you accomplish or have those things, your life has passed you by. Figuring out how to enjoy the now no matter where you are is critical to a peaceful and sustainable journey. Find joy right where you are.

    This book was very comprehensive and educational, and I highly recommend it!

    Keep the Memories, Lose the Stuff: Declutter, Downsize, and Move Forward with Your Life” was written by Matt Paxton with Jordan Michael Smith. Matt is one of America’s top downsizing and hoarding experts, has been the featured cleaner on Hoarders, is the host of Legacy List with Matt Paxton, has been featured in several news outlets, and has helped thousands of people from all walks of life leave behind belongings that no longer serve them so that they can finally take the next step. Jordan Michael Smith is an award-winning journalist, author, ghostwriter, and speechwriter. This book is also in collaboration with AARP, the nation’s largest nonprofit, nonpartisan organization dedicated to empowering people aged 50+ to choose how they live as they age. Here are some of many tips that resonated with me:

    • Clean or declutter for 10 minutes every night 5x/week. Stick to it.
    • Set a deadline to keep yourself accountable and force you to do the hard work even when you don’t feel like it.
    • Understand your why. What are your reasons for decluttering? Less stress? More space for stuff? Moving?
    • The best predictor of whether you’ll need an item is whether you are currently using it or have recently used it, not whether you think that, one day, somehow, somewhere, you’ll use it. In all likelihood, that day will never come. Love who you actually are and force yourself to say goodbye to your “fantasy self” items, the stuff you think you’ll use when you’re a different version of yourself. Ex: exercise equipment, clothes that are way too small
    • Give yourself permission to give. Don’t confuse the emotional worth with the economic worth. Something is only worth financially what an independent third party will give you.

    Free yourself from guilt. We think we’re expected to carry on not just traditions passed down to us, but actual belongings. The reality is that you aren’t obligated to any thing or lifestyle other than the one you want. Let go of expectations about your obligations to inanimate objects.

    Ask yourself, “What are the items that will help me live happily and keep my story living on forever?” Discover your legacy and feel free to keep 5-6 items that are intensely personal, both to the giver and the receiver.

    We confuse the sentimental value of our objects with the financial value they’ll have to others. It’s only human to believe our stuff is worth more than it actually is because we attach emotions and memories to those items. Selling our belongings means separating the powerful emotional value from the brutal financial reality of what those possessions are worth in the marketplace.

    I highly recommend this comprehensive book! It contains tips for decluttering, moving, creating a Legacy List of items, giving items away, selling items, and contains many resources.

  • 101 Things I Learned in Culinary School

    “101 Things I Learned in Culinary School” was written by Louis Eguaras with Matthew Frederick. Louis is a department chair at the Culinary Arts Institute at Los Angeles Mission College, Chef Instructor at the Institute of Culinary Education, and a former White House Chef. I read this book back in 2023. This book is not a recipe book! Instead, it contains practical how-tos and interesting facts. Here are some of the many facts that stood out to me.

    Guests seek more from a dining experience than to satisfy their appetites: comfort, prestige, value, relaxation, artistry, social fun, or perhaps just a good place to watch the game. Be clear why customers choose your restaurant. Prioritize what they most need.

    • Keep guests informed. Be open about errors and oversights – understaffed, dish running late, etc. Acknowledge mistakes!
    • Repurpose rather than reuse. Have multiple uses for every food item. Repurpose preparation scraps and use in stocks, soups, purees, etc.
    • Liabilities for restaurants: food-related illnesses, chemical hazards, physical hazards, property hazards, drinking hazards/serving too many drinks

    School teaches you how to cook. Experience teaches you how to be a chef. A cook follows a recipe; a chef can intuitively modify a recipe. A cook knows how; a chef knows why.

    Kitchen lingo:

    • all day” = the total # of items to be prepared. Ex: 2 burgers rare + 1 burger medium = “3 burgers all day
    • dragging” = not ready with the rest of the order. Ex: “The fries are dragging.”
    • drop” = Start cooking. Ex: “Drop the fries.
    • fire” = Start cooking, but with more urgency. Ex: “Fire the burgers.
    • on the fly” = with extreme urgency. Ex: “Get me two soups on the fly.

    Mise in place is a practice and a philosophy. Determine everything you need before starting a dish or shift – recipes, ingredients, utensils, pots, pans, stocks, sauces, oils, dishware, and anything else. This permits the most efficient use of a cook’s space and time and informs the disposition and posture of a chef.

    Shake hands with a knife. To hold a chef’s knife properly, rest your thumb on one side at the juncture of the blade and handle, and let your middle, ring, and pinkie fingers grip the handle naturally on the other side. The index finger rests on the side of the blade, near the handle.

    4 ways to tenderize:

    • mechanical (pound with a mallet before cooking)
    • marinade in an acidic bath for 30 minutes to 2 hours
    • salting/brining – coat with coarse salt and refrigerate for 1-4 hours, then rinse off and pat dry before cooking
    • slow cooking in liquid in a slow cooker

    Food keeps cooking after you stop cooking. Allow for carryover cooking in meats by removing them from the heat source when the internal temperature is about 5 degrees Fahrenheit below the safe-to-eat temp. Let sit for 5-10 minutes and monitor the temperature.

    Ways to thicken a stock, soup, or sauce:

    • reduction (remove the pan lid and simmer until desired thickness is achieved)
    • roux (heat butter in a saucepan, and slowly add an equal amount of flour, stirring constantly to produce a paste)
    • slurry (cornstarch for dairy-based, arrowroot powder for acidic sauces)
    • gelatin

    A pepper’s name often changes when dried.

    • Fresh pimiento ➡️paprika
    • poblano ➡️ mulato (not ripened) or ancho (ripened first)
    • jalapeno ➡️chipotle (smoked)

    Menu types:

    • static (common chain/fast-food restaurants)
    • cycle (changes daily/repeats weekly)
    • market (based on what is available for purchase by the restaurant daily)
    • farm to table, a la carte, prix fixe, etc.

    Serve a just-enough portion. The protein should be about the size of the palm of your hand, and the vegetables should span about 2 or 3 fingers. A just-enough portion conveys that care and quality were elevated over quantity and that guests should eat more slowly to savor and enjoy. It also leaves room for appetizers and desserts.

    Ways to make a plate look better:

    • vary plate shapes
    • use complementary colors
    • paint the sauce
    • design the negatie space
    • bed it – put it on a bed of lettuce, rice, etc.
  • Thoughtful Thursday – February 6, 2025

    As I discern the frequency of Thoughtful Thursday posts going forward, I wanted to share some of the insights I have learned in the past week. Here are some of the things I’ve learned this week:

    Life Kit – The science behind the FDA ban on food dye Red No. 3

    • Desserts, candy, and medications that are bright cherry red often contain synthetic Red dye No. 3. It has been known to cause cancer in rats.
    • The FDA is now banning it in food and ingested drugs (revoking authorization)
    • Red dye No. 3 is a petroleum-based dye that gives products a bright cherry red color.
    • 2002 – petition was filed with the FDA to ban the dye, and the FDA has been reviewing the petition and research ever since.
      • Red dye No. 3 in high doses causes cancer in rats. The FDA previously concluded it was safe for humans in the amounts used in food and said that Americans aren’t going to eat Red dye No. 3 in amounts large enough to cause cancer
    • 2023 – California became the first U.S. state to ban Red dye No. 3, although the ban doesn’t take effect until 2027.

    The Environment Working Group has compiled a list of over 3,000 packaged foods and drinks that contain Red dye No. 3!

    • There are also concerns about other synthetic food dyes linked to behavioral issues  and ADHD-like symptoms in children.
    • These dyes are more common in cheaper, ultra-processed foods.
    • Food manufacturers have until January 2027 to remove red dye no. 3 from their products.
      • Replacing with Red 40 (also linked to behavioral issues in kids) or natural food compounds found from fruits and vegetables (ex: beets)
    • Check food labels and try to avoid food dyes.

    Chasing Life – Want a Healthier Mocktail? Here’s How

    Disclaimer: My body doesn’t tolerate carbonation, alcohol, or mocktails, so I haven’t tried these recommendations!

    • Add water to get the volume right. Ex: instead of 2 oz of gin, add 2 oz of water.
    • Mocktails, like cocktails, are actually meant to be small and savory. You don’t need to use a lot of added sugar or syrups. Not meant to be a 12 oz beverage
    • If limiting alcohol instead of going alcohol-free, use sherry or fortified wines. These provide more of a flavor profile than NA drinks.
    • When you go alcohol-free, there is a chance you won’t miss it!
    • Many zero-proof options rely heavily on sodas, fruit juices, and syrups to try to compensate for the lack of alcohol. You can add water to tone down the sweetness.
    • 1 month without alcohol will improve your sleep, boost your energy, and lower your blood pressure. That’s pretty good incentive.

    Self Improvement Daily – Plant Yourself In Fertile Soil

    One of the most important impacts of your life and your success is your environment. Your environment is always pushing you to take make certain choices and take certain actions. 

    It’s the difference between hanging around friends who always want to meet up for drinks instead of hanging out while hiking, working out, or socializing without alcohol. It’s the difference between having access to healthy food in your pantry rather than always grabbing and stocking up on junk food. It’s the difference between having a good book by your bed versus only having your phone within arm’s reach.

    Environment influences what happens without our awareness. The majority of the time, we’re acting unconsciously and automatically.

    “Here’s a metaphor I like to use that demonstrates the power of environment. Think of the potential of a seed.

    A seed has everything it needs to grow into a tall mighty tree. A seed is fully capable, yet most of the time, it doesn’t even sprout. Why? Because it’s dependent on the soil. The seed requires a certain environment to thrive.

    The same seed planted in two different places can lead to two very different outcomes. When it’s in fertile soil, it grows tall and strong. When it’s planted in sand, it doesn’t even have a chance. And that’s not because there’s anything wrong with the seed. It’s just in the wrong environment.

    As humans, we experience the same thing. There are environmental conditions that bring out our best. The right people, opportunities, circumstances, and spaces set us up for success. But there are also environments that bring out our ‘not so best’, causing us to make choices that don’t serve us and limit our potential.

    Unlike a seed, however, we can control our environment. We can choose our surroundings and therefore, shape the influence it has on us. We can plant ourselves in fertile soil and when we do, that’s when we are maximizing our growth and potential! 

    If you’re falling short of the level of consistency, productivity, good health habits, and impact that you know you’re capable of, it’s probably because you’re in the wrong soil. Choose to put yourself in a place where you can thrive and watch the results pour in!”

    TED Talks Daily – The secret to telling a great story – in less than 60 seconds

    • Many great stories start with a question because it will make people stick until the end to find out the answer.
    • You want to get your audience’s attention immediately, so you want to start by asking something shocking.
    • After you’ve hooked your audience, you want to take them on a journey building up to your answer where you want them to feel constant progression so that as we’re moving closer and closer to our answer, they feel like they can’t stop listening.
    • If everything is smooth sailing, nobody cares. We want to add conflict before getting to our answer. Without conflict, the audience isn’t as invested.
    • After enough buildup, we finally need our answers. Build tension by making the answer feel uncertain to make a satisfying ending.
    • If it takes longer to tell your story than it does to make a fast food burger, you’re probably overcooking both.

    I’ve noticed this trend often on TikTok. People tell short stories with conflict to capture interest and build up progression before detailing the end of the story.

    Mary’s Cup of Tea – How to Make Adult Friendships Easier with Kat Vellos

    • Connecting with existing friends more easily: If you are a busy or forgetful person, set reminders in your phone to follow up with the person. Don’t leave your hangout without setting your next hangout (just like a salon appointment). Connect your friends to each other to share time together.
    • Making more friends nearby: Be aware of your limits and take it step by step. Start by making acquaintances with the people who already live near you and are easier to fit into the life you’re living – people on your block, people in your apartment building, people in your town. Become a regular at a third place – neither home nor work – somewhere you go to for enjoyment – gym, coffee shop, brewery, bar, etc. Host friends with frequency – ex: Sunday dinners at home.
    • When we say that friendship is hard, we often say it’s hard because we’re afraid to introduce ourselves to new people, scheduling is hard, we’re too busy, we aren’t getting close fast enough to people, friends don’t give as much as they take, etc. When we say friendship is hard, we might mean that having courage is hard, having confidence is hard, prioritization and persistence is hard, having patience is hard, or taking risks and dealing with disappointments and rejection is hard. These things are part of life, not just friendships!
    • If someone says you should get together and you reach out and they don’t schedule something, follow up suggesting something you think they would say yes to!
    • On average, adults lose 1-2 friends per year because they fall out of touch and things fade away. Like plants, you need to water and nourish your friendships.

    Book: “We Should Get Together” – I look forward to reading this!

  • January 2025 Reads

    I read four books in January. Here is a blurb of each of the books I read in January.

    Built to Move: The 10 Essential Habits to Help You Move Freely and Live Fully” was written by Kelly Starrett and Juliet Starrett, the cofounders of San Francisco CrossFit and coauthors of the Wall Street Journal Bestseller Deskbound. Kelly is also the cofounder of The Ready State. This book included different movements and tips to incorporate them into daily life. Here are some takeaways:

    • The range of motion and body positioning relates to health, ease of movement, and the presence and absence of pain.
    • This book included measurable and repeatable diagnostics that will help you assess your current condition, where you need to go, and how you’re going to get there. This book also included mobilization techniques for reducing stiffness and resolving pain.
    • Think about how you want to live your life, take into consideration that the body naturally gets stiffer and weaker with age, and undertake strategies to counter those potential erosions before they set in. To be able to keep moving when you’re older, you need to get or keep moving now.
    • Sit-and-rise test – getting up and down off the floor without using your hands, knees, or losing balance – determines when you have good range of motion in your hips and gauges leg and core strength and balance and coordination
    • Incorporate various ground-sitting positions into your day: cross-legged sitting, sitting with your legs out in front of you, one-leg-up sitting, etc.
    • Find your balance. Do the one-leg stand test with your eyes closed for twenty seconds. How steady you are on your feet depend on your feet, your inner ear, sensory receptors in the muscles, tendons, fascia, joints, and eyesight.
    • Aim to limit sitting to six hours per day. Set up a standing workstation and move around every thirty minutes.

    While You Were Out: An Intimate Family Portrait of Mental Illness in an Era of Silence” was written by Meg Kissinger, who teaches investigative reporting at Columbia Journalism School. Meg spent more than two decades traveling across the country to report on America’s mental health system for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and has won dozens of accolades. This book was frank and revelatory and was a personal and painful narrative. I highly recommend this book! Here are some of the many things that resonated with me:

    • Meg details the family dynamics of alcoholism, mental illnesses, and two of her siblings committing suicide and how the shame and practice of “not talking about it” impacted her and her family.
    • 5.6% of adults suffer from serious and persistent mental illness, and more than 1/3 of them don’t get treatment. A person with serious mental illness is 10x more likely to be incarcerated than hospitalized.
    • Jails and prisons have become the nation’s de facto mental health hospital system. By 2010, almost 90% of the hospital beds across the country that were once available for the sickest psychiatric patients had been eliminated.

    “Suicide prevention experts I’d interviewed over the years told me repeatedly that we can do a lot more to stop people from killing themselves. Knowing the warning signs for suicide and how to talk to those who are considering it will save lives. So why weren’t we able to stop our siblings? Because we had been discouraged from talking about it. I could not help but wonder what life would have been like if we had grown up in a more transparent era.”

    Riding the Lightning: A Year in the Life of a New York City Paramedic” was written by Anthony Almojera, an EMS lieutenant with the Fire Department of New York City who has also been featured in various media outlets. This book was devastating, candid, and vital, and guides readers, one month at a time, through the first year of COVID-19 from the perspective of a paramedic in New York City. I recommend this book to readers who want a glimpse of how COVID-19 changed EMS each month in 2020. Here are some takeaways:

    • In the beginning of COVID-19, every EMT and paramedic who transported a patient with suspected coronavirus was instructed to wear gloves, a gown, goggles or a face shield, and an individually fitted N95 mask, then throw everything away after each patient contact. Originally, the health department recommended that ambulances be aired out for two hours after every fever/cough call. (!)
    • Protocols were shifting constantly – what protective equipment to wear, how to deal with a cardiac arrest, whether to consult telemetry about where to take a patient, whether to notify the hospital that you were transporting a suspected case of COVID, how often to change your N95 mask, etc.

    Surgical masks are made of polypropylene, a nonwoven paper substance that allows air to pass through it but not droplets of moisture. They don’t stop airborne particles from passing into your nose and mouth. For that, you need an N95.

    • In March 2020, the New York City COVID-19 deaths averaged over 400 per day. On March 30, 2020, New York City EMS received 7,253 calls – one call every 12 seconds!
    • The telemetry office couldn’t keep up. There was 1 physician fielding all questions from EMS crews in a city of over 8 million people!
    • Hospitals didn’t have enough ventilators or CPAP machines. For all the people who were dying in the hospital, many more were dying before they even got there – at home, in ambulances, or in lines to the emergency departments.
    • At one point, the author had 14 calls in 16 hours, and every patient died!

    Patients’ families want to believe that something can be done, that the outcome will change if the patient goes to the hospital. But the medical system was so swamped during the pandemic that our protocols had changed. As of March 31, 2020, we were transporting patients only if we got a pulse back at the scene. Hospitals didn’t have the resources to try to resuscitate them, and we didn’t have the resources to transport them, so we had to pronounce these patients dead then and there.” By April 2020, if there was no pulse or electrical activity in the heart after 20 minutes, paramedics/EMS were instructed to stop CPR and pronounce the patient dead.

    A Bit Much: Poems” was written by Lyndsay Rush, a comedy writer and the poet behind the popular Instagram account @maryoliversdrunkcousin. This book was great, and I highly recommend it!

    When your surroundings begin to feel cold and uninhabitable and your environment no longer offers the support or sustenance you need, I hope you migrate. I hope, as you make your way down south, that you find another silly goose to fly with, too – in such a tight-knit formation that Wikipedia would refer to your crew as plump. And I hope that no matter how long the journey takes you, the wind is always at your back; nudging you closer to home.

    Starting something new is like a one-man show for a one-man audience; the only applause worth seeking is your own. Don’t rob yourself of that while you wait for approval from somewhere else. Sometimes winning yourself over is the greatest show on earth.

    A great philosopher once said I saw the sign and it opened up my eyes (I saw the sign). But when you see the world through rose-colored glasses, it can be hard to recognize a red flag. So what I have learned is this: If they’re mean to the waiter, they’ll be mean to you. If they never follow through, they will never show up. If it hurts your stomach, it will hurt your heart. You can’t temper a storm, but you can sure as hell evacuate the beach.

    If cauliflower can be pasta, you can be whatever you want.

  • Thoughtful Thursday – January 30, 2025

    It’s been over a month since I’ve posted a Thoughtful Thursday post. I am discerning whether to continue with weekly Thoughtful Thursday posts or whether to post those less often so that I can post more book posts. With that said, here are some of the most interesting things I’ve learned this month!

    The Mel Robbins Podcast – The Top Expert Advice of the Year

    • People will consistently give you what you allow them to give you. You are in control of two things in this world: what you give and what you accept. 
    • Boundaries are not walls to keep things out. Boundaries are bridges to let the right things in. 
    • Boundaries are meant to protect your peace and your energy. When you’re setting boundaries, ask yourself what you need in your life right now, what boundary you need to set that will lead you to what you need, and why you must stick to the boundary. What is it costing you not to stick to this boundary? Your future? Your peace? You tell people how to treat you by what you continuously accept. 
    • You spend more time trying to protect the battery on your smartphone than you do protecting your own or recharging your own battery. 
    • LET THEM is a boundary. 

    https://www.gabethebassplayer.com/blog/how-can-i-read-your-mind-better

    How Can I Read Your Mind Better?

    January 8, 2025

    i.e. What are your unspoken expectations?

    This is at the heart of so much heartbreak and frustration in this business.

    Our personal expectations are ‘just the way it is’…and it’s easy to think they’re shared by others…or at least they should have read my mind by now.

    It’s worth asking the people around you what they’re really hoping for. You’re sure to learn something new. Something they’ve been thinking all along but secretly expecting you to just read their mind.

    You’re good but you’re not that good. You’re going to have to ask.

    I am enrolled in UCC Contracts/Business Law and Probate Law this semester for my paralegal certificate program. I am not an attorney, and this is not legal advice. These are some fascinating facts I have learned so far.

    For most contracts, the general rule is that while it’s not illegal to enter into a contract with a minor, the contract is voidable at the discretion of the minor. Once reaching the age of majority, they can also disaffirm contracts. The cases I read that stood out to me involved minors voiding arbitration clauses in contracts and voiding waivers of liability by voiding contracts. I believe this can be a risk of liability for employers who hire minors. For example:

    Pak Foods Houston, LLC v. Garcia, 433 S.W.3d 171 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2014) involved a personal injury claim. A minor filed a personal injury claim against a fast-food restaurant. The restaurant filed a motion to compel arbitration based on an arbitration agreement that the minor signed as part of an employment agreement. The court found that the contract was voidable, and the minor disaffirmed the agreement by terminating her employment and filing suit.

    I’ve been intrigued by the many rules of Probate Law this semester and how different state statutes vary. For those with wills, a spouse cannot be disinherited in the will, but disinheriting children is allowed. Each state has a plan for the assets of those who die without wills. As an example, for those who die without wills in Minnesota:

    524.2-102 SHARE OF THE SPOUSE.

    The intestate share of a decedent’s surviving spouse is:

    (1) the entire intestate estate if:

    (i) no descendant of the decedent survives the decedent; or

    (ii) all of the decedent’s surviving descendants are also descendants of the surviving spouse and there is no other descendant of the surviving spouse who survives the decedent;

    (2) the first $225,000, plus one-half of any balance of the intestate estate, if all of the decedent’s surviving descendants are also descendants of the surviving spouse and the surviving spouse has one or more surviving descendants who are not descendants of the decedent, or if one or more of the decedent’s surviving descendants are not descendants of the surviving spouse.

    In other words, if you are married without kids and die without a will, your surviving spouse gets 100% of your assets. If you are married with kids and neither you nor your spouse have kids with other people, your surviving spouse gets 100% of your assets. Yet, if you are married with kids and you or your spouse have living kids that are not biologically shared, your living spouse gets the first $225,000 plus 1/2 of any balance of the estate, and the rest gets split up between all of the kids (descendants).

    My husband and I are doing the Bible in a Year series with Fr. Mike Schmitz, which has been so informative and interesting so far. One thing that has resonated with me so far is that many of us are pharaohs to ourselves. We make ourselves so busy that we don’t have time to think about God. We make ourselves so busy that we have made ourselves into slaves by saying “I have to do this, I have to do that” and all of the other things that we’ve set up. We’ve set up a pace of life for ourselves that is unmanageable, and we don’t have time for worship. God’s people were never meant to be slaves – not a slave to Pharaoh and not a slave to the pharaoh that lives inside of us. We are meant to be free so that we can truly belong to Him.

    And if you aren’t religious, this can still also apply to several other areas of your life. What are the things that you are making yourself a slave to? Are you spending too much time working, scrolling on your phone, etc.? What are the things you say you don’t have time for? What are you doing with your time instead? Are you making time for the things you say matter the most to you?

    What are the symptoms of R-CPD?

    Additional symptoms, outside of the lifelong inability to burp or belch, can include:

    • Abdominal and/or chest bloating and pain
    • Excessive flatulence
    • Nausea
    • Gurgling noises from the neck and chest
    • Difficulty vomiting or fear of vomiting (emetophobia)

    As shown, the chief complaints are GI-related. Yet, GI doctors (and many other doctors) are not aware of this condition, leading many to run numerous tests instead of asking the right questions. In an ideal world, when patients complain of bloating, gas, nausea, and gurgling, GI providers and other providers would ask “Can you burp?” If not, they should be treated for R-CPD. There are not many providers who are aware of and treat this syndrome.

    Here is more information about it, such as the symptoms, treatment, etc. There is even a Reddit community for this condition: https://www.reddit.com/r/noburp

  • Read This Before Our Next Meeting

  • Real Self-Care

  • Books I Read in 2024

    Here is a complete list of the books I read in 2024, listed in the order that I read them. I was very busy with work, school, and other commitments in 2024 and did not post many detailed book reviews. When I created this blog, my intention was to read, learn, and share about the books I read, so I hope to post more book reviews in 2025.

    1. 101 Things I Learned in Advertising School by Tracy Arrington with Matthew Frederick

    2. The Book You Want Everyone You Love* To Read by Philippa Perry

    3. Internal Medicine: A Doctor’s Stories by Terry Holt

    4. Killers of the Flower Moon by David Grann

    5. Good Talk by Mira Jacobs

    You can read mini book burbs about books 1-5 here: https://wordpress.com/post/readlearnshare.blog/4548

    6. Her Honor: My Life on the Bench . . . What Works, What’s Broken, and How to Change It by LaDoris H. Cordell

    7. Flawless: Lessons in Looks and Culture from the K-Beauty Capital by Elise Hu

    8. I’ll Fly Away by Rudy Francisco

    9. How to Break Up With Your Phone by Catherine Price

    You can read mini book blurbs about books 6-9 here: https://wordpress.com/post/readlearnshare.blog/4766

    10. How to Talk to Anyone: 92 Little Tricks for Big Success in Relationships by Leil Lowndes

    11. Like, Literally, Dude: Arguing for the Good in Bad English by Valerie Fridland

    12. 100 Ways to Change Your Life by Liz Moody

    13. Excuse Me As I Kiss the Sky by Rudy Francisco

    You can read mini book blurbs about books 10-13 here: https://wordpress.com/post/readlearnshare.blog/5064

    14. The Sun Does Shine by Anthony Ray Hinton

    15. Warren Buffett Invests Like A Girl And Why You Should, Too by LouAnn Lofton

    16. Unreasonable Hospitality: the Remarkable Power of Giving People More Than They Expect by Will Guidara

    17. The Book of (More) Delights by Ross Gay

    You can read mini book blurbs about books 14-17 here: https://wordpress.com/post/readlearnshare.blog/5220

    18. Becoming A Crime Scene Investigator by Jacqueline Detwiler-George

    19. Know Your Endo by Jessica Murnane

    20. The Body Keeps The Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma by Bessel van Der Kolk, M.D.

    21. Extreme Measures: Finding a Better Path to the End of Life by Jessica Nutik Zitter, MD

    You can read mini book blurbs about books 18-21 here: https://wordpress.com/post/readlearnshare.blog/5376

    22. Vagina Problems: Endometriosis, Painful Sex, and Other Taboo Topics by Lara Parker

    23. Stop Overthinking by Nick Trenton

    24. Excellent Advice for Living: Wisdom I Wish I’d Known Earlier by Kevin Kelly

    25. One Decision Away: Key Principles to Create What You Want in Life and Work by Paula Melo Doroff

    26. In the Form of A Question: The Joys and Rewards of a Curious Life by Amy Schneider

    You can read mini book blurbs about books 22-26 here: https://wordpress.com/post/readlearnshare.blog/5584

    27. A Thousand Naked Strangers by Kevin Hazzard

    28. What’s Eating Us: Women, Food, and the Epidemic of Body Anxiety by Cole Kazdin

    29. The Courage of Compassion: A Journey From Judgment to Connection by Robin Steinberg

    You can read mini book blurbs about books 27-29 here: https://wordpress.com/post/readlearnshare.blog/5734

    30. The Perfectionist’s Guide to Losing Control by Katherine Schafler

    31. If My Body Could Speak: Poems by Blythe Baird

    32. Lessons Learned and Cherished: The Teacher Who Changed My Life by Deborah Roberts

    33. Picturing Joy: Stories of Connection by George Lange (Photographer)

    34. To Hell With the Hustle by Jefferson Bethke

    35. The Good Life: Lessons from the World’s Longest Scientific Study on Happiness by Robert Waldinger, MD

    36. Calling A Wolf A Wolf: Poems by Kaveh Akbar

    You can read mini book blurbs about books 30-36 here: https://wordpress.com/post/readlearnshare.blog/5858

    37. Crossing Fifty-One: Not Quite A Memoir by Debbie Russell

    38. We Came, We Saw, We Left: A Family Gap Year by Charles Wheelan

    39. Ultra-Processed People: The Science Behind Food that Isn’t Food by Chris van Tulleken

    You can read mini book blurbs about books 37-39 here: https://wordpress.com/post/readlearnshare.blog/5985

    40. Find Your People: Building Deep Community in a Lonely World by Jonnie Allen

    41. A Good Time for the Truth: Race in Minnesota edited by Sun Yung Shin

    42. If My Flowers Bloom: Poems by Deshara Suggs-Joe

    43. Ex traction: Poems by Lara Coley

    44. Never Not Working: Why the Always-On Culture is Bad for Business – and How to Fix It by Malissa Clark

    45. All the Gold Stars: Reimagining Ambition and the Ways We Strive by Rainesford Stauffer

    You can read mini book blurbs about books 40-45 here: https://wordpress.com/post/readlearnshare.blog/6097

    46. Where I Dry The Flowers: Poems by Ollie Schminkey

    47. Self-Care Activities for Women by Cicely Horsham Brathwaite, PhD

    48. How to Be Perfect: An Illustrated Guide Words by Ron Padgett Pictures by Jason Novak

    49. Growing Up in Public: Coming of Age in a Digital World by Devorah Heitner

    50. Exactly What to Say: The Magic Words for Influence and Impact by Phil M. Jones

    51. The Complications: On Going Insane in America by Emmett Rensin

    You can read mini book blurbs about books 46-51 here: https://wordpress.com/post/readlearnshare.blog/6226

    52. The Fire This Time: A New Generation Speaks About Race edited by Jesmyn Ward

    53. Employment Law: A Very Short Introduction by David Cabrelli

    54. Learning to Disagree: The Surprising Path to Navigating Differences with Empathy and Respect by John D. Inazu

    55. About Time: Poems by Neil Hilborn

    56. The Little Book of Sleep: The Art of Natural Sleep by Nerina Ramiakhan

    57. The One Minute Manager by Ken Blanchard and Spencer Johnson

    You can read mini book blurbs about books 52-57 here: https://wordpress.com/post/readlearnshare.blog/6308

  • December 2024 Reads

    I read six books in December, some of which were short and easy reads. Here is a blurb of each of the books I read in December.

    The Fire This Time: A New Generation Speaks About Race” was edited by Jasmyn Ward, an author and associate professor of Creative Writing at Tulane University who has won several writing awards. This book demonstrated the power in words – the power in asserting our existence, experience, and lives through words. This book was selected as a book club read for my employer. Here are some quotes that stood out to me:

    • [During an internship at a magazine that was more than 150 years old] “Sometime during the end of my first week, a chatty senior editor approached me in the corridor. During the course of our conversation, I was informed that I was almost certainly the first black person to ever intern at the magazine and there had never been any black editors. On good days, being the first black intern meant having my work done quickly and sounding extra witty around the water cooler; it meant I was chipping away at the glass ceiling that seemed to top most of the literary world. But on bad days I gagged on my resentment and furiously wondered why I was selected. I became paranoid that I was merely a product of affirmative action, even though I knew I wasn’t.”
    • I accepted the reality that the historic colonial houses – now the business residences of attorneys, hairstylists, insurance agents, and doctors – were considered by more people to be more valuable than the bodies below them.”
    • Empathy requires us to dig way down into the murk, deeper than our own feelings go, to a place where the boundaries between our experience and everyone else’s no longer exist.
    • Rules of walking – “no running, especially at night; no sudden movements; no hoodies; no objects – especially shiny ones – in hand; no waiting for friends on street corners or standing near a corner on the cellphone lest I be mistaken for a drug dealer

    Employment Law: A Very Short Introduction” was written by David Cabrelli, the professor of Labour Law at the University of Edinburgh and the author of 5 books. This book contained a decent overview of employment law, and I learned about other countries; however, I learned much more in my Employment Law class this semester. Here are some main points:

    • Employment contract = employment relationship and rights. No employment contract = no employment relationship and rights. The various roles governing the constitution, classification, variation, contact, performance, suspension, and termination of the employment relationship are all derived from contract law.
    • There is a rise of atypical workers in the labor markets of advanced Western economies, such as the U.S. These independent contractors work very flexibly and as and when they want and often suffer from low pay, little or no job protection or security of earnings, and are subject to the control of those hiring their labor.
    • British legislation enacted in 1971 protects employees from unfair dismissals. The USA remains an exception to most countries. The USA has an employment-at-will doctrine, which safeguards the liberty of the employee to resign and find another job without liability and allows the employer to discharge the employee without sanction.
    • One thing that stood out to me, that I hadn’t considered previously, is the quote that “Employers operating at below a living wage are free riding on the back of the public purse.”

    Learning to Disagree: The Surprising Path to Navigating Differences with Empathy and Respect” was an insightful book written by John D. Inazu, a Distinguished Professor of Law and Religion at Washington University in St. Louis. Multiple studies have shown that Americans have a growing disdain for those who differ from them politically and ideologically. We deride our political, religious, and ideological opponents as dangerous or evil and retreat to digital foxholes. This book is a necessary read for many people and a reminder to treat people as humans. Here are some main takeaways:

    • Good lawyering requires empathy for adversaries. You don’t have to like the other side, but you do have to understand them. How are you going to persuade a judge that you have the better story? The better you understand the other side of an argument, the better you can critique it and the more strongly you can defend your own position.
    • Assume the best of someone to open the door to deeper understanding and an opportunity to learn from those who see the world differently. Distinguish people from the ideas they hold. Other people are humans with whom you share many things in common. That doesn’t mean you will always share – or even respect – their ideas.
    • Recognize the limits to your knowledge and understanding. Embrace the likelihood that you won’t be able to convince everyone who thinks differently that you are right and they are wrong.
    • Well-intentioned people can have differing beliefs without being evil. In a country as large and diverse as the United States, every one of us holds beliefs and opinions that other people think are beyond the pale.
    • Practice repentance, grace, and forgiveness.

    About Time” is a book of poems by Neil Hilborn, a best-selling author and the most-watched poet ever (with over 150 million views). Neil has performed in 41 states and 8 countries. Neil is one of my favorite poets and is incredibly talented; with that said, I did not enjoy this book as much as his prior books. Here are some quotes that stood out to me:

    • Ask the thoughts what they want: Why am I going to kill myself and if I do, go all the way to the logical end: Who will it hurt, what gets left behind, what good remains undone; dissect the bells, separate the ringing into a flat expanse and not the towering blaze telling you it is . . .
    • “The Prozac makes me less tired but I’m still pretty tired but maybe that’s cause depression makes you tired.”
    • I know why, but why is it that the pills will keep me alive but they give me enough to kill myself?

    To quote my favorite TV personality slash parasocial therapist slash mommy? Doctor Robin Zasio of Hoarders fame: You’ve got to feel it to heal it. As it relates to hoarding, I think she means that if you never throw out things you accumulate then you don’t have to deal with the emotional context around those things.

    The Little Book of Sleep: The Art of Natural Sleep” was written by Nerina Ramlakhan, a professional physiologist and sleep therapist for 25 years who runs sleep and wellness programs at Nightingale Hospital in London. This book was a quick, easy read. One description reads: “Drawing on Western science and Eastern practices, this beautifully illustrated guide to sleep teaches that, by making better choices in our waking hours, we can positively influence our sleep.” Here are some tips from the book.

    • Sattvic describes the type of sleep we should be getting – pure, deep, natural, and healing. This is the kind of sleep where you wake up feeling refreshed, filled with vitality, and looking forward to the day ahead.
    • The journey back to deep sleep is about working on yourself to create an inner core of safety and making lifestyle choices that will help your nervous system to recalibrate and shift back into safety mode if you’ve been running on survival mode.
    • Tips:
      • Eat within 30 minutes of waking.
      • Reduce your caffeine intake to less than 300 mg per day. The half-life of caffeine is 5 hours. Avoid any caffeine until you’ve eaten.
      • Drink plenty of water.
      • Take breaks from technology. Withdraw from technology an hour before you get into bed. Don’t keep your phone in your bedroom or watch TV in bed.
      • Create a sanctuary in your bedroom. Think soft, relaxing colors, essential oils, and cool and well-ventilated.
      • Try breath awareness exercises.
      • Increase your oxytocin levels by expressing your feelings, getting a massage, hugging someone, stroking your pet, and engaging in activities that make you feel at your best, happy, and carefree.

    The One Minute Manager” was cowritten by Ken Blanchard and Spencer Johnson. Ken Blanchard is a prominent, gregarious, sought-after author, speaker, and business consultant. Spencer Johnson, M.D. is the author or coauthor of numerous New York Times bestselling books. This book was an insightful and easy read, although it could have been more concise. Here are the main habits of a one minute manager:

    • One Minute Goal Setting – set goals with their people to make sure they know what they are being held accountable for and what good performance looks like
    • One Minute Praising – try to catch their people doing something right so that they can give them a One Minute Praising
    • One Minute Reprimand – reprimand people immediately and tell people specifically what they did wrong then remind them how much you value them and reaffirm that that you think well of them but not of their performance in this situation.
  • Thoughtful Thursday – December 12, 2024

    My intention is to post a Thoughtful Thursday column each week and share some of the insights I have learned in the past week. Here are some of the things I’ve learned this week:

    Mental Performance Daily – Culture Killers

    TED Talks Daily – Why you think you look bad in photos

    • We’ve decided certain angles are better than others.
      • Accomplishments, achievements, love, passion, creativity, and brilliance don’t change between photos. Your children, pets, and grandchildren see you at your worst angles and don’t love you any less or care about you any less. You are worthy of being photographed.
      • We put pressure on how we are going to show up in photographs, and this pressure prevents a lot of us from showing up in photographs with and for the people we love the most.

    Hidden Brain – The Secret to Gift Giving

    • Obligations are probably the single biggest reason that gifts are given in the first place, whether it’s for Christmas, a birthday, an anniversary, or a graduation. When you get a gift, it feels like you have to return that gesture at an appropriate moment – whether it’s at that moment, the next birthday, etc.
    • Recipients are often focused on the experience of the gift over the ownership of the gift. When you receive something, in the moment it might make you happy, but does it actually provide you value and utility and joy for the duration of owning whatever it is that you’ve received? Sometimes the things that bring you happiness in the moment are not the things that bring you happiness in the long-term.
    • The surprise is something that gift givers think is critical to a recipient. When I give you a gift, I have this belief that you will only value that gift if you don’t expect receiving it. That is simply not true.
    • A lot of people imagine that the reason gifts are exchanged is because we’re trying to make other people happy. But there are also selfish reasons for giving a gift, such as signaling who you are as a person and as a gift giver and signaling that you’re a creative gift giver. Sometimes people who think they’re creative make sure that the choices of gifts are creative even at the expense of the recipient. Ex: not giving the same gift to the same person another year and not giving the same gift to someone else
    • The cost of a gift is not nearly as predictive in terms of happiness of the recipient as people tend to think.
    • The research is pretty clear that recipients do not value socially conscious gifts as much as givers hope they would. Ex: charity donation, planting a tree, etc.
    • Idea: family spreadsheet – “Whenever one of us has a desire for an item of some sort that exceeds some minimum expense, we put it on there as a potential gift that we would love to receive at some point. And what’s nice about that is when it’s time to fulfill my obligation, I’m not racking my brain trying to figure out what would make her happy. It still maintains an element of surprise in the form of the timing of the object itself. She might know that she wants item X, but she’s not going to know that I’m going to give it to her at a specific time.”
    • Receiver is overjoyed when they get exactly what they want
    • Experiential gifts – less of a wow factor upon opening, but providing a very valuable experience down the road
    • Recommendation: if you’re going to give a gift, do it on a random day. The value that people get when they receive gifts on non-occasions is so much higher because they have no expectations.

    https://www.gabethebassplayer.com/blog/the-next-episode

    The Next Episode

    December 6, 2024

    We don’t have it. That’s what makes our lives different from the all the things we stream.

    In streamer land we can always find out what’s next, we know the episode schedule, we have behind the scenes, we can binge it in two days and find out the end, or we can look up the end right now.

    That’s why we’re drawn to movies and tv and podcasts and stories…because we long for a complete story where it all makes sense and the loose ends are perfectly tied.

    But in real life we don’t have the next episode and we certainly don’t know the season finale. We’re living it.

    What if they’re right?

    We spend a lot of time in our own heads, certain that our path and our method make sense. We often become more certain in the face of criticism or even suggestions.

    This confidence is essential, as it allows us to lean into our project.

    Once in a while, though, it might help to model the alternative. What if they’re right? How would that play out? If they’re right, what could I do with that insight?

    If it’s helpful, run with it.

    We can always go back to being right tomorrow.

  • November 2024 Reads

    Mental self-care: When you find yourself engaging in distracting behavior, reflect. What do I need right now? Is this giving me what I need, or do I need something else? Ex: may need a shower, hydration, exercise, rest, a hug, a good cry, journal reflection, or a talk with a friend.

    Social self-care: Schedule activities with people you’d like to get together with on a regular basis. Rotate hosting.

    Professional self-care: Establish a morning routine to set the tone for the rest of the day.

  • Thoughtful Thursday – November 21, 2024

    My intention is to post a Thoughtful Thursday column each week and share some of the insights I have learned in the past week. Here are some of the things I’ve learned this week:

    Mary’s Cup of Tea – 5 Mantras to Get You Through Tough Times

    Life Kit – How to slow down when you eat

    • Signs you are eating too fast: hiccups, heartburn, feeling hungry right after eating
    • Mindful eating asks us to slow down and notice our food.
    • Most nutritionists urge us to take 20 minutes to eat a meal. It takes that long for your body to get the signal to the brain that you are full. If you eat fast, your brain is not getting that signal that you are full, causing you to eat too much.

    Before Breakfast – Make space for friendship

    Law School Toolbox Podcast – Quick Tips – LinkedIn Best Practices for Law Students

    https://www.gabethebassplayer.com/blog/what-time-do-you-open

    What Time Do You Open?

    November 14, 2024

  • Thoughtful Thursday – November 14, 2024

    Self-Growth Nerds – 5 Most Powerful Questions to Ask Yourself

    TED Health – A Healthier You: A 5-step guide to better doctor visits

    NerdWallet’s Smart Money Podcast – Are You Spending Like Your Generational Peers?

    Fit, Healthy, & Happy Podcast – Fitness & Health Habits to Break

    The problem with the movie version

    There are lights, camera and action, but mostly there’s the unreality of making it fit.

    Happily ever after, a climax at just the right moment, perfect heroes, tension, resolution and a swelling soundtrack. Every element is amplified and things happen right on schedule.

    Consume enough media and we may come to believe that our life is carefully scripted, and that we’re stars of a movie someone else is directing.

    This distracts us from the truth that real life is more muddled and less scripted. There is no soundtrack. We’re actually signed up for a journey and a slog. Nothing happens ever after. It’ll change, often in a way we don’t expect.

    We have no choice but to condense a story when we want to film it. Our real story, on the other hand, cannot be condensed, it can only be lived. Day by day.”

  • October 2024 Reads

  • Thoughtful Thursday – October 24, 2024

    Stuff You Should Know – The Story of Spirit Halloween

    • There are more than 1,400 stores in the U.S. between August and November. Some are within miles of one another.
    • Spirit Halloween hires 25,000 temporary employees August-November. Stores close on November 2. Spirit Halloween’s online store is open year-round. 
    • 30-40% of stock carries over from year to year 

    Life Kit: Health – How to cut ultra-processed foods from your diet 

    Before Breakfast – Make it worth the commute 

    The Big Flop – The Truth About D.A.R.E. 

    Confused about good

    How often do we assume that popular things are good, and that good things become popular?

    If your work doesn’t catch on, does that mean it wasn’t good?

    In almost every field, people with insight, taste and experience admire and emulate good things that aren’t popular, and are surprised by popular things that aren’t good.

    Perhaps we need to broaden our definition (or narrow it) so we can be clear about what we mean.”

  • Thoughtful Thursday – October 10, 2024

    My intention is to post a Thoughtful Thursday column each week and share some of the insights I have learned in the past week. Here are some of the things I’ve learned this week:

    Self-Growth Nerds – The Power of Consistency: 5 Mindset Shifts for Achieving Your Dreams

    Mentally Stronger with Therapist Amy Morin – 10 Things Being a Therapist Taught Me About the Human Experience

    Real Simple Tips – 6 Tips for Keeping Lips Moisturized

    Life Kit – How to talk to your loved ones about misinformation

  • September 2024 Reads

  • Thoughtful Thursday – September 19, 2024

    Optimal Living Daily – If You’re Feeling Stuck, Look Inward by Emily Rose Barr

    https://www.gabethebassplayer.com/blog/thoughts-and-actions

    Thoughts And Actions

    September 16, 2024

    Life Kit – Boost your mood in 15 minutes

    The Liz Moody Podcast – 5 Things I Did to Fix My Phone Addiction

    https://apps.apple.com/us/app/brick-ditch-distractions/id6448794069

  • Thoughtful Thursday – September 12, 2024

  • August 2024 Reads

  • Thoughtful Thursday – August 29, 2024

  • July 2024 Reads

  • Thoughtful Thursday – August 8, 2024 – Olympics fun facts

    But Why: A Podcast for Curious Kids – What’s it like to compete in the Olympics?
    Finding Mastery – Second Place Heartache: Katie Hoff’s 16-Year Journey to Recover from the Games

    https://psycnet.apa.org/doiLanding?doi=10.1037%2F0022-3514.69.4.603

    A young girl, smiling while wearing a skateboard helmet adorned with stickers, holds a small Chinese flag. She is dressed in a white athletic top
    Self Improvement Daily – Golden Examples of Resilience
  • Thoughtful Thursday – August 1, 2024

    Optimal Living Daily – How to Find Meaning in Life: 7 Steps to a More Fulfilling Existence
    The Jordan Harbinger Show – Sovereign Citizens – Skeptical Sunday
    The Personal Finance Podcast – How Much Should You Spend on a Family Vacation?

    https://www.gabethebassplayer.com/blog/chances-to-connect


    Chances To Connect

    July 31, 2024

    If you are looking for chances to connect you will find them all over the place.

    You’ll probably have to go first. It might be a little weird. It will be scary. You might not get the response you’re hoping for. You might over share. You might ask the wrong question. Your effort might not get reciprocated.

    But it beats the alternative…

    If you’re not looking for chances to connect, the depth of your relationships and your relational maturity are at the mercy of others’ initiative…and your indifference.

    “It seems…”

    “What a simple verb. A five-letter modifier that opens the door to discussion.

    If we state something as a fact, we’re asking for an argument.

    But seems opens the door to learning and discussion.

    What are you seeing that I’m not seeing?”

  • Thoughtful Thursday – July 25, 2024

    Mentally Stronger with Therapist Amy Morin – 10 Mental Health Improvement Strategies Therapists Prescribe Their Patients
    • Get physical activity. Exercise reduces stress and anxiety and improves self-esteem. Find an activity that you enjoy so that you can stick to it.
    • Find a way to relax. Watching tv and scrolling on your phone stimulates your brain, so aim for ways to relax your brain. If you invest time into caring for your mental health now, you will feel better and perform better later.
    • Work on something that you’ve been putting off. The more you put something off, the more you dread doing it and the worse you feel.
    • Take care of your body. Eat a healthy diet and get adequate sleep.
    • Get social support. The people you spend time with might be the biggest factor that determines how mentally healthy you are. Having positive people in your life reduces the symptoms of mental illness. Remove yourself from toxic relationships.
    Sad to Savage – Little Things to Help You Get Out Of A Rut
    • Pay attention to the people you have in your life, the environments you have, the music you listen to, the content you consume, the people you follow … all of those things can contribute to you feeling like you are in a rut.
    • Make a list of things that make you feel happy that you can turn to when you’re feeling down. Ex: family time, running, going outside, reading, etc.
    Chasing Life – Does Money Buy Happiness?
    Self Improvement Daily – “You can have it your way.”

    Burger King’s motto “Have it your way” is a welcome reminder that each one of us matters and deserves to be cared for. We don’t need to settle for how things are; we can create a new reality for ourselves.

    We can pursue our ambitions with pride. We can change our future if we have the courage to do so. Being selfish in investing in yourself can be one of the most selfless things you can do because it can great the greatest impact on others.

    If you’re overstretched at work and compromising your own health, that’s not having it your way. When we enforce better boundaries about our work hours, we can have more time to fulfill ourselves in other ways.

    If you don’t have as much time for the things and people you love, or the energy to do anything at the end of a long day, that’s not having it your way. When we say no to others, we say yes to ourselves.

    Reordering priorities and making a commitment will start to shape your life your way. Balance your personal life, care, and passions in a way that you feel good about by figuring out how it all fits together.

    The two bicycle errors

    “Momentum activities like public speaking, board sports and leadership all share an attribute with riding a bicycle: It gets easier when you get good at it.

    The first error we often make is believing that someone (even us) will never be good at riding a bike, because riding a bike is so difficult. When we’re not good at it, it’s obvious to everyone.

    The second error is coming to the conclusion that people who are good at it are talented, born with the ability to do it. They’re not, they have simply earned a skill that translates into momentum.

    There’s a difference between, “This person is a terrible public speaker,” and “this person will never be good at public speaking.”

    And there’s a difference between, “They are a great leader,” and “they were born to lead.”

    The thing about momentum activities is that we notice them only twice: when people are terrible at them, and when they’re good at it. That includes the person you see in the mirror.”

  • Thoughtful Thursday – July 11, 2024

    Real Simple Tips – Here are 6 Home Upgrades That Are a Waster of Money
    Life Kit – Staying safe in extreme heat
    The Mel Robbins Podcast – 13 Things I Wish I Knew in My 20s

    https://www.gabethebassplayer.com/blog/charging-for-the-chapel

    Charging For The Chapel

    July 9, 2024

    Would Michelangelo have painted the Sistine Chapel if he hadn’t been commissioned by the church, being paid along the way?

    Probably not.

    It’s ok for you to charge (lots of) money for the thing you’re good at too.

    The paradox of lessons

    The people most likely to sign up for coaching or additional learning are the folks who are already good at their craft.

    “I’m terrible at this,” can lead to, “and I don’t want to be reminded of it.” Or perhaps, “I don’t want to waste their time,” or, “I’m never going to get better.”

    When it’s possible to get better, embracing mediocrity isn’t a useful strategy.

    I’d rather have a surgeon who regularly attends trainings, wouldn’t you?

    Read a book, find a coach, organize a group. If you’re serious about getting better, you’ll improve.

    Learning creates more competence but first, it amplifies our feelings of incompetence.”

  • June 2024 Reads

  • Thoughtful Thursday – June 27, 2024

    Optimal Relationships Daily – When Your Expectations of Others is Making You Frustrated
    “Let Them” by Cassie Phillips
    On Purpose with Jay Shetty – If You’ve Been Feeling Drained…Listen To This

    https://www.gabethebassplayer.com/blog/running-its-course

    Running Its Course

    June 25, 2024

  • Thoughtful Thursday – June 20, 2024

    Life Kit – Why we become bored with our lives (and how to find joy again)
    All the Hacks with Chris Hutchins – Travel Wisdom from the World’s Most Traveled Man (Harry Mitsidis)
    TED Talks Daily – A second chance for fathers to connect with their kids
    What is a breadcrumb example graphic

    Breadcrumbs leave a visual trail of which pages a user has visited. Image source ProfileTree.com

  • Thoughtful Thursday – June 13, 2024

    Mary’s Cup of Tea – Feeling Behind in Life? Listen to this
    Optimal Health Daily – The Five F’s That Keep You Stuck in Chronic Pain
    Life Kit – Fiber has tons of benefits. Here’s how to eat more of it
    Stuff You Should Know – Short Stuff: Amber Alerts

    https://www.gabethebassplayer.com/blog/good-enough-to-try-things

    Good Enough To Try Things

    June 7, 2024

  • Thoughtful Thursday – June 6, 2024

    Sad to Savage – How to Create Habits and A Routine With An Inconsistent Schedule
    Inside Out Money – Progress over Perfection
    On Purpose with Jay Shetty – 7 Habits to Be Present
    Life Kit – Summer fun on a budget
  • Thoughtful Thursday – June 15, 2023

    My intention is to post a Thoughtful Thursday column each week and share some of the insights I have learned in the past week. Here are some of the things I’ve learned this week:

    Self Improvement Daily- Breaking Down Productivity

    The word productivity is a combination of two words: productive activity. It’s to be active in productive ways. ‘Productive’ is simply having the high ability to produce. To produce what? Society and culture have taught us that we must always be thinking about producing results, revenue, and efficiencies. Can’t we also choose to produce joy, presence, mindfulness, and connection?

    You get to decide for yourself what you want to produce. It’s your life, your time, and your attention. Productivity is actually just “doing the things you want to be doing.”

    Productivity = Productive activity = Doing things that produce the results you want = Doing the things you want to be doing.

    The next time you feel down on yourself for not checking things off of your never-ending to-do list over the weekend, reframe your mind and consider that productivity is doing the things you want to be doing. Resting and hanging out with friends could still be productive; you are taking care of yourself and growing strong relationships with people you care about. If that is what you want to be doing, you were productive!

    Small Change – 10 Signs You Might Be Financially Immature
    1. You act aggressively when someone asks you about your money.
    2. You are dismissive of others’ success.
    3. You spend when you are depressed.
    4. You tend to look at the individual spending of your partner rather than simply being concerned with how much is being spent. If the “what” is more important than the amount, you may be financially immature.
    5. You are unable to get excited by saving for a big goal. “We can’t do that. That’s crazy.”
    6. You have avoided looking at a bank statement for months.
    7. You fear tax time.
    8. You gloat at parties about your investments that you haven’t actually made or lie about the investments you have.
    9. You are too conscious about the brands you are wearing.
    10. You use spending as a cure for boredom.
    Savvy Psychologist- 6 skills of mindfulness you may be missing
    • Observe. Pay attention to your environment and your internal experiences without judgment. This entails wordless watching and being fully present in the moment, observing your thoughts and feelings as they come and go, and noticing the world around you without trying to change it. Use your five senses.
    • Describe. Put your observations into words. Describe your experiences objectively without adding your own interpretations or judgments. Describe your observations from your five senses.
    • Participate. Be fully present and engaged in the present moment. Let go of distractions and focus on the task at hand, whether that be work, hobbies, or relationships.
    • Non-judgmental stance. Accept yourself and others without judgment. Let go of the inner monologue and distorted interpretations. Instead, practice self-compassion and understanding. Cultivate an attitude of acceptance and openness. Let go of the evaluative judgments we often make.
    • One-mindfully. Focus on one moment, task, or thought at a time. Let go of distractions and multi-tasking and focus your attention on the present moment.
    • Effectiveness. Focus on what works in a given situation rather than what is “right or wrong.” Let go of rigid thinking and embrace a more flexible and adaptive mindset. Focus on the outcomes you want to achieve and explore different ways of achieving them. Do what works, not necessarily what you prefer.
    FIRE the Family Podcast – 22 Actionable Ways to Invest in Yourself
    1. Go to college. Don’t go into extreme debt to go to college. Be wise and research what your expected income will be before taking out several loans.
    2. Join the military.
    3. Go to a trade school.
    4. Get a job. There’s no better way than to find out what you like and don’t like doing.
    5. Learn how to cook. It increases your independence and reduces your expenses of eating out.
    6. Learn how to exercise properly. You will feel better about yourself and your health, live longer, and improve your mental health.
    7. Open a brokerage account. VTSAX is a great investment.
    8. Join a local young-professional networking group.
    9. Implement an every-dollar budget.
    10. Ask your parents and grandparents for advice. Pick their brains and learn everything you can.
    11. Find the person you want to spend your life with.
    12. Get out there and fail. You learn from failing.
    13. Run a half marathon. It requires a lot of discipline, preparation, and time.
    14. Identify your mentors.
    15. Develop an inner circle.
    16. Cut out negativity. Set proper boundaries for yourself and your family.
    17. Develop SMART goals (specific, measurable, attainable, relevant, time-bound).
    18. Explore materialism and minimalism.
    19. Continue to find ways to compete.
    20. Practice not judging others. Then you will learn to stop judging yourself.
    21. Start reading. Reading teaches your brain to exercise.
    22. Start an online business.
    Life Kit- Planning a trip? Here’s how to pack like a pro
    • You never need as much stuff as you think. Eliminate extra baggage before you leave.
    • Pack and then remove 1/3 of the things you pack.
    • Reduce the weight with lightweight versions of what you need and with items that serve multiple purposes.
    • Use packing cubes (lightweight, expandable, zip-up pouches that save space).
    • Lighten your load of liquid toiletries. There are solid versions of items that don’t weigh as much. Use powders, not pastes. Use dry shampoo instead of the real stuff. Leave liquids at home if you can. Most of the time, you can pick up the things you need while on the road, except the things you can’t find everywhere: sunscreen, bug spray, bug bite relief, hair conditioner, and tampons.
    • Do a simple scope out of your destination with reliable sources, not sponsored content.
    • Match your activity plans to the weather forecast. Check a destination’s average monthly weather patterns in advance.
    • Always have a rain jacket, umbrella, or something to cover your backpack.
    • When traveling for leisure, one main event each day is enough. Don’t overbook activities. Build complementary activities around it or leave room for discovery and the unexpected.
    Self Care IRL- Listen to this if you are an overthinker
    • Recognize when you are actually overthinking. Identify the thoughts or situations that are triggering it. Shift your mind back to the present.
    • Journal. Writing down things can help you identify patterns in your thinking. Sometimes you can look back and see that you were overly concerned about something that didn’t end up mattering or turning out the way you worried it would.
    • Give yourself time to calm down and relax before addressing any situation. Try to immediately do things that help you to relax or bring you joy.
    • Talk to someone about the situation. Getting another perspective can help you see things more clearly. Talking about your overthinking can help reduce its frequency and intensity.
    • Learn to focus on the present moment instead of dwelling on the past or the future. This can help you be more aware of your thoughts and feelings.
    • Practice forgiveness for your past self. When we find ourselves trapped in a cycle of overthinking the past, we are stuck there and that prevents us from moving forward in a healthy way. Remember that you are a human first and you will make mistakes. Perfection does not exist. You deserve forgiveness.
    • Think positively for your future self. Think about all of the ways that things could go right. Expand on the beautiful possibilities and let those things lift you up. Reframe your mind when you are worried about what could go wrong, and think about what could go right.
    • Remember that overthinking has never helped us. It hasn’t been serving us the way we think it has.

    I am currently reading “Keep Sharp” by Sanjay Gupta, a book about the brain and slowing cognitive decline. Here are some tidbits I have learned so far:

    You probably know the five senses: sight (ophthalmoception), smell (olfacoception), taste (gustaoception), touch (tactioception), and hearing (audioception). There are six other senses processed in the brain that give us more data about the outside world:

    • proprioception: a sense of where your body parts are and what they’re doing
    • equilibrioception: a sense of balance/your internal GPS. This tells you if you’re sitting, standing, or lying down. It’s located in the inner ear.
    • nociception: a sense of pain.
    • themo(re)ception: a sense of temperature
    • chronoception: a sense of the passage of time
    • interoception: a sense of your internal needs, like hunger, thirst, and needing to use the bathroom

    The 5 pillars of brain health:

    • Move – exercise; aerobic and nonaerobic
    • Discover – pick up a new hobby, do something new, or learn something new
    • Relax – unwind, engage in stress-reducing activities
    • Nourish – consuming certain foods like cold-water fish, whole grains, extra virgin olive oil, nuts and seeds, fibrous whole fruits and vegetables, while limiting foods high in sugar, saturated fat, and trans-fatty acids can help avoid memory and brain decline, protect the brain against disease, and maximize its performance
    • Connect – having a diverse social network can improve our brain’s plasticity and help preserve our cognitive abilities

    I look forward to reading, learning, and sharing more with you soon!

  • The Upstarts (Airbnb & Uber)

    “The Upstarts” written by Brad Stone is a fascinating book about the history of Airbnb and Uber and the challenges the companies faced along the way. This was selected as a Best Book of the Year by the Washington Post, Forbes, the New Republic, The Economist, Bloomberg, and Gizmodo.

    Airbnb can be considered the biggest hotel company on the planet, yet it possesses no actual hotel rooms. For most of its first year, Airbnb was a side project that many dismissed as wildly outlandish. After 8 years, investors valued the company at $30 billion, more than any hotel chain in the world! It is now valued at $73 billion.

    Uber is among the world’s largest car services, yet it doesn’t employ any professional drivers. Uber’s potential was underestimated and thought to be just for San Francisco, but the valuation is now $77 billion, more than any other privately held startup company in the world! Uber brings new transportation options to low-income neighborhoods that aren’t served well by yellow taxis. It creates flexible jobs for the unemployed, immigrants, and students looking to finance their education.

    History:

    Airbnb’s first rental was on October 16, 2007 during the World Design Conference in San Francisco, in which an airbed was rented for $80/night. This was when the website was a Free WordPress site: airbedandbreakfast.com. On New Year’s Eve in 2015, Airbnb booked 550,000 guests. On New Year’s Eve in 2016, Airbnb booked a whopping 1 million guests!

    Uber is the partial result of research completed by Tim Ferriss. Tim researched comparable services, market, logistics, feasibility, and cab-industry dynamics and reported to Garrett Camp.

    Some investors:

    Some Airbnb investors include Jeff Bezos and Ashton Kutcher.

    Some Uber investors include Chris Sacca, Ashton Kutcher, Jay Z, and Britney Spears. Chris Sacca was the earliest angel backer and invested $300k

    Challenges:

    Uber sidestepped laws requiring professional drivers to undergo rigorous training/fingerprint-based background checks and expensive government-issued chauffeur licenses. It faced resistance from taxi companies.

    Airbnb is criticized for worsening the housing shortage, driving up housing costs, skirting hotel taxes, and violating short-term rental laws in some cities.

    Concerns:

    Airbnb concerns include safety, international competition, regulation, and executive recruitment.

    Uber concerns include surge pricing to increase the number of rides and UberX to help Uber drivers finance the least of a new vehicle.

    The cover of this book featured a wave. I love this quote explaining the cover:

    “If you want to build a truly great company, you have got to ride a really big wave. And you’ve got to be able to look at market waves and technology waves in a different way than other folks and see it happening sooner, know how to position yourself out there, prepare yourself, pick the right surfboard – in other words, bring the right management team in, built the right platform underneath you. Only then can you ride a truly great wave. At the end of the day, without that great wave, even if you are a great entrepreneur, you are not going to build a really great business.”

    This book was a fascinating read!

    I look forward to reading, learning, and sharing more with you soon!

  • Thoughtful Thursday – June 8, 2023

    My intention is to post a Thoughtful Thursday column each week and share some of the insights I have learned in the past week. Here are some of the things I’ve learned this week:

    Sad to Savage- Habits I Do On Vacation & Reflecting on Turning 26

    In this episode, Shelby was reflecting on turning 26 and asked herself these reflection questions. I think these are great for anytime, especially for a personal growth mindset!

    Ask yourself:

    • Who is she?
    • What does she say to herself?
    • How does she describe herself?
    • What does her day look like?
    • What are her daily habits?
    • Where does she live?
    • What does she do for work?
    • What does her work day look like?
    • What makes her feel good?
    • When does she work out?
    • How does she view nutrition?
    • Who does she surround herself with?
    • What are the daily choices that she makes?
    • What are the choices that she makes on the weekend?
    • What is she doing to get 1% better?
    • What is her favorite way to habit stack?
    • What is her morning routine?
    • What is her nighttime routine?
    • What is she working towards?
    • What are her top 3 goals, and what are 3 daily habits she can do to help her work towards those goals?
    • What is one area she wants to improve in?
    Mental Performance Daily- How Are You vs. What Are You?

    Instead of asking yourself how you are doing, ask what you are doing. What should I be doing right now? What is the best use of my time, energy, effort, and focus right now? How I am doing is hit or miss, up and down as part of the human condition. Asking yourself what you are doing is going to help you perform at an elite level; comparing what you are doing vs. what you should be doing.

    Optimal Living Daily- Breaking the Dependency to My Phone by Mollie of This EverGreen Home
    • Use social media less frequently. Set a daily time limit. You can use apps to limit your screen time.
    • Check e-mail at designated times.
    • Track your app usage.
    • Find a home base for your phone so it isn’t always next to you.
    • Turn off notifications.
    • Begin a new behavior. Ex: instead of browsing on your phone, read a book.
    • Turn on do not disturb.
    How to Be a Better Human- What we can learn from great salespeople (w/ Colin Coggins)

    Everyone is either selling an idea, themselves, or a product or a service.

    • The greatest sellers on the planet create agency with the person they are speaking with so that they feel like they are part of the decision-making process.
    • Acknowledge what’s happening in real life. That’s what sales is about.
    • You want people to look for the good in you and believe in you. That doesn’t happen unless you can reciprocate that.
    • Realize that who people hope you are and who people expect you are are two different things. People hope you’re like them.
    • The next time you go into a meeting, spend three minutes thinking about three things that you could love about this person.
    • What you get paid to do and what you love doing aren’t always the same thing, but a lot of times there are areas in what you get paid to do that you do love – like the stuff you would do for free. Isolate what you love. See if you can delegate or avoid the things that you don’t love.
    The Savvy Psychologist- 7 types of rest you’ve been missing

    Physical rest (passive and active)– sleeping, napping, FOLLOW A SLEEP PROTOCOL/EVENING ROUTINE, stretching, yoga, breathing exercises, progressive muscle relaxation, hot baths, massages. Watch out for signs that you need physical rest, such as lacking energy to make it through the day, feeling tired but having difficulty falling asleep, reliance on substances to give you energy, and depending on substances to give you more rest.

    Mental rest– mental fatigue can result from a variety of things, including negative self-talk, rumination, anxious what-if thinking, being stuck in the past, and judgments. Signs that you may need mental rest include irritability and decreased frustration tolerance, avoiding activities, feeling like you’re in a mental fog throughout the day, and feeling overwhelmed by daily tasks. One way to ease the mental load is through good time management skills. Take into account not only the amount of time a task takes, but the emotional load it takes as well. Another way to give yourself mental rest is through meditation.

    Emotional rest– where are you spending your emotional energy? Frustration, anxiety, inadequacy, sadness, annoyance, etc. Some signs you may be experiencing an emotional rest deficit include beating ourselves up for small mistakes, excessive worry or anxiety, feelings of self-doubt, and over apologizing. Be mindful of your environment and the things/people that drain you and restore you. Emotions are contagious. Modify your environments the best you can. Emotional awareness is key to identifying emotional drains and emotional restores. Reduce the amount of social comparisons that you do.

    Spiritual rest– organized religious practices, connecting with something greater than yourself, prayer, feeling a sense of belonging by getting involved with your community, meditation, things that bring you a sense of purpose and make you feel connected

    Social rest– A social rest deficit occurs when we fail to differentiate between relationships that restore us and relationships that drain us. It can also occur when we are engaging in too much or too little social interaction. Signs you have a social rest deficit include feeling alone, feeling detached, finding it hard to maintain close relationships, isolating from others, or finding that you are attracted to those that mistreat you. Identify your social needs. If you are introverted and have a customer-facing job, allow yourself alone time to recharge at the end of the day. Listen to your social needs and stop comparing yourself to others. Be present and show up in your social networks. This will aid in deepening relationships and feeling more connected. Find like-minded individuals who share some of your hobbies. Join a group.

    Sensory rest– giving your senses a break- overwhelming senses with constant stimuli. Spend some time away from your electronics. Read a physical book instead. Turn off the lights. Listen to your senses and give the ones that appear agitated a break.

    Creative rest– if you’ve ever felt like you’re out of good ideas, you’ve experienced being creatively drained. Creativity is about our ability to be innovative, think outside the box, or be inventive. People require creative rest when they feel stuck, uninspired, and unable to generate new ideas or solutions to problems. The key here is to remove the requirement to produce and get involved with activities that inspire you. Make time for the things you don’t normally make time for to refill your creative cup.

    How I Built This with Guy Raz- Angie’s Boomchickapop: Angie & Dan Bastian

    I was eager to learn more about Angie’s Boomchickapop, as their sweet and salty kettle corn is my favorite store-bought popcorn!! They also originated in my home state of Minnesota.

    Beginnings:

    • Neither Dan nor Angie ever had a particular love for popcorn initially. They needed a way to earn extra money to save for their kids’ college funds, and popping and selling kettle corn seemed like a reasonable way to do it. In 2001, after Dan saw an internet ad for kettle corn equipment, he convinced Angie that they should go for it. They started in their garage in Mankato, Minnesota.
    • They bought a kit using a 0% interest credit card. The kit included a tent, outdoor kettle, and table and paid $8k or $10k. Of note, the kit did not have instructions!
    • Dan was working as a teacher and Angie was working as a nurse at the time.
    • Rainbow Foods was the first place that allowed them to sell it (in front of the door outside) in November 2001. They were limited because they had to pop outdoors due to propane with the kettle. They took 1 hour to set up, bagged using twist-tie bags, and sold $300 of kettle corn.
    • Their business was originally called Kettle Corn Café.
    • Coworkers and students were surprised to see them on the weekends with their kettle corn business.

    Growth:

    • In 2002, they started to sell outside of the Minnesota Vikings training camp and gave some free popcorn to the players.
    • The players loved it, but Dan and Angie realized that they would need to pay for a sponsorship fee to be the Minnesota Vikings’ preferred popcorn! They paid an $8k sponsorship fee.
    • Dan quit his job in 2003 after 2 years in the business to focus on the popcorn business.
    • Lunds and Byerlys was interested but wanted them to get their act together for selling. They needed to find a facility, different packaging, etc.
    • They bought a small kitchen 6 months later and moved operation indoors, got the kitchen licensed, and launched 6 months later with a new brand name: Angie’s.
    • They found 2 retired teachers willing to help out and paid $8 an hour for BOTH of them.

    Challenges:

    • During their first 7 years, they were buried further and further into debt.
    • They weren’t profitable at first. They used funds to buy a trailer, a heater, and other items. Everything seemed to go back into the business.
    • In 2008, they had to get a million-dollar loan to get a bigger facility to ramp up production. They had debt and didn’t really have collateral and were turned down for a loan by many banks. They had about 20 employees at the time.
    • They eventually found a partner who gave them a line of credit using personal guarantees (home, future earnings – everything but the mini van).

    Expansion:

    • In 2008, after years of persistence, they got into Trader Joes after sending products to a contact. Trader Joes put in an order for 25 trucks ($500k worth) that would be distributed across the country to Trader Joes. Jon and Angie didn’t have enough money to buy the materials for this order, so they ordered a new credit card with a $100k line of credit and requested an immediate wire transfer!
    • Due to popularity, Trader Joes came back with another order of 25 truckloads. The business needed to scale up quickly and hire more people.
    • In 2009, revenue was $3-$4 million.
    • In 2011, outside investment firm, Sherbrooke Capital, made an offer and acquired a majority stake in Angie’s.
    • In 2011, Angie’s was in the natural and organic snack section in Costco, Target, and regional grocery chains and was doing very well. Angie’s started with kettle corn but wanted to expand through providing different flavors, messaging, and branding.
    • Dan’s cell phone was on every package because that was the business phone and he received several phone calls at all hours asking if the product is gluten-free. So they decided to get certified gluten-free.
    • Also in 2011, they went to a branding agency to come up with a new name. Boomchickapop, the new name, launched in 2012. It was the first non-GMO branded popcorn on the market. The yellow bags of sea salt popcorn were the #1 selling SKU in four months – after 9 years of business.

    $$$:

    • In 2014, TPG Growth, a private equity firm, bought out Sherbrooke. Boomchickapop equity shares became liquid to staff. They distributed millions of dollars! Between 2014 and 2017, Dan and Angie sold a big share of their ownership to TPG Growth.
    • In 2017, 16 years after the business started, ConAgra bought out Boomchickapop for $250 million! When ConAgra bought the company in 2017, they also acquired the old kettle originally bought in 2001.
    • They never imagined they would make it that far with their initial investment.

    I look forward to reading, learning, and sharing more with you soon!

  • The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People

    “The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People” is a very interesting and educational book written by Stephen R. Covey. I highly recommend this book and am certain everyone can get something out of this book.

    Habit 1: Be Proactive

    How often do you use and hear reactive phrases such as “If only,” “I can’t,” or “I have to?”

    Use your R & I! Use your resourcefulness and initiative when problems arise!

    Problems = direct control vs. indirect control vs. no control

    • Direct control problems are solved by working on our habits.
    • Indirect control problems are solved by changing our methods of influence.
    • No control problems involve taking the responsibility to change the line on the bottom of our face — to smile, to genuinely and peacefully acccept these problems and learn to live with them.

    Between stimulus and response, man has the freedom to choose.

    Viktor Frankl

    Habit 2: Begin with the end in mind.

    Picture your funeral. What would your family, friends, coworkers, and church members or community say about you? What character would you like them to have seen in you? What contributions or achievements would you want them to remember? What difference would you like to have made in their lives?

    Habit 3: Put first things first.

    The cause of almost all relationship difficulties is rooted in conflicting or ambiguous expectations around roles and goals. Many expectations are implicit. They haven’t been explicitly stated or announced. It is important to state expectations.

    Many people refuse to delegate to other people because they feel it takes too much time and effort and they could do the job better themselves. Transferring responsibility to other skilled and trained people enables you to give your energies to other high-leverage activities. Delegation means growth, both for individuals and for organizations.

    You can’t think efficiency with people. You think effectiveness with people and efficiency with things.

    Stephen R. Covey

    Habit 4: Think win-win.

    Win/win = a frame of mind and heart that constantly seeks mutual benefit in all interactions. Seek to understand, identify the key issues and concerns, determine what results would constitute a fully acceptable solution, and identify possible new options and achieve those results.

    Habit 5: Seek first to understand, then to be understood.

    Seek first to understand, then to be understood. Most people listen with the intent to reply.

    Continuous deposits are needed. 6 major deposits: understanding the individual, attending to the little things, keeping commitments, clarifying expectations, showing personal integrity, apologizing sincerely when you make a withdrawal.

    Habit 6: Synergize.

    As a principle-centered person, you try to stand apart from the emotion of the situation and from other factors that would act on you and evaluate the options. Looking at the needs that may be involved and the possible implications of various alternative decisions, you’ll try to come up with the best solution, taking all factors into consideration.

    The person who doesn’t read is no better off than the person who can’t read.

    Stephen R. Covey

    Management is doing things right. Leadership is doing the right things.

    Stephen R. Covey

    Habit 7: Sharpen the saw.

    Life life in crescendo. The most important work you will ever do is always ahead of you. Regardless of what you have or haven’t accomplished, you have important contributions to make.

    What one thing could you do that, if you did it on a regular basis, would make a tremendous positive difference in your personal life? What one thing in your business or professional life would bring similar results?

    4 dimensions of renewal

    Daily Private Victory- Spend a minimum of one hour a day in renewal of the physical, spiritual, and mental dimensions. This is the key to developing the 7 habits.

    I highly recommend this book!

    I look forward to reading, learning, and sharing more with you soon!

  • Thoughtful Thursday – June 1, 2023

    My intention is to post a Thoughtful Thursday column each week and share some of the insights I have learned in the past week. Here are some of the things I’ve learned this week:

    One of the best things I’ve heard this week is from this podcast.

    Optimal Relationships Daily- If You Want to Know if Someone is Worth Your Time, Use the Ted Lasso Rule

    If you want a quick way to determine if someone is worth your time, are they curious? Do they ask your questions? If not, are they worth even getting to know?

    Many people skip the small talk in favor of talking about themselves.  They’re the ones missing out because they’re not being curious. Curiosity has been buried by ego.

    Optimal Health Daily- Self-Care Ideas for Better Health and Nutrition by Danielle Omar
    • Thoroughly chew your food to improve digestion, engage the senses, and reduce energy intake.
    • Assess hunger and fullness to determine when it’s best for you to start and stop eating.
    • Reduce portion sizes and use smaller dishes to prevent overeating.
    • Eliminate distractions at mealtimes to better control food intake and focus on how food makes you feel.
    • Appreciate the food you’re eating without judgment and savor its appearance, smell, taste, and texture.
    • Eat foods that make you feel good.
    • Plan and prep your meals.
    • Satisfy your sweet tooth.

    I gathered some dental insights from these two podcasts:

    Science Vs – The Dentist: Toss the Floss? Flush the Brush?
    • Oral hygiene alone did not prevent cavities in studies done. Fluoride was the main component in preventing cavities.
    • Brushing with fluoridated toothpaste helps prevent cavities. Brushing might also prevent gingivitis and gum disease. Flossing may help with tooth loss as you get older. Sugar is bad for teeth. Some dentists are shysters.
    Life Kit- ‘Do I really need to floss?’ and other common questions about dental care
    • Finding a dentist is more than just picking from a list. Every procedure that a dental hygienist does is proactive in helping to prevent inflammation and reduce inflammation. A dentist is going to restore or be reactive to disease. A dental assistant assists the dentist.
    • To evaluate if a hygienist is a good fit for you, see how receptive they are to answering your questions. For example, ask about proper brushing techniques. Have the hygienists observe what you do and see what feedback you get. Overall, you want to make sure that the practice is for you, not a random cash grab.
    • Red flags- offices that do a lot of aggressive advertising, free x-rays, free exams, and free goodies to lure you in. Once you are in the chair, those dentists know you are more likely to say yes to extra procedures.
    • Get specific about your fears and then you can talk about them with your dental team. A good practitioner is going to be a great educator and help ease those fears. Is it going to hurt? Is it going to cost a lot? Is my face going to feel numb?
    • Find someone you feel comfortable with who doesn’t shame you.

    Saving money:

    • Dental schools are a great option if you are looking to save money. You get the benefit of getting many different opinions and great advice. If you have the time to do it, visits to a dental school may be less expensive, but will take more time. Appointments can take up to 4 hours instead of 1 hour due to many people checking you out and the training involved.
    • Can look for sliding scale or mobile dental clinics

    Frequency and technique:

    • Most healthy patients should come in 2x/year. Some patients may only need to come in once a year.
    • Clean teeth are all about technique.  Use a soft, high-quality toothbrush (if manual, switch out every 4-6 weeks), non-nylon floss, tongue scraper, and low abrasive toothpaste.
    • Teeth whitening- health and aesthetics are not the same thing! White teeth are a status symbol, but not necessarily a marker of health. Teeth aren’t naturally white as snow; there is a slight yellow white hue of your teeth due to dentin, an inner layer of the tooth under enamel. So if a dentist is immediately bringing up whitening procedures without any evaluation of cavities, gum disease, or other issues, be wary.
    • Charcoal and whitening toothpastes are so abrasive that they can make your teeth super sensitive and potentially wear down your teeth. They are removing stains,but are not actually changing the color of your teeth.
    Life Kit- Why the 5-minute walk break is so powerful
    • People who sit for hours on end develop chronic diseases, including diabetes, heart disease, dementia, and cancer at much higher rates than those who move throughout the day.
    • Taking a 1-2 minute walk once per hour lowers blood pressure. A 5-minute walk every half hour was able to offset a lot of the harms from sitting. Moving 5 minutes every hour resulted in the blood sugar spike after a meal being reduced by almost 60%. This may not be feasible with most office jobs, as you are losing 10 minutes of productivity each hour.
    • People are advised to get 150 minutes of moderate intensity physical activity each week (getting your heart rate up). You can break this up into 30 minutes a day 5 days a week, but small chunks of fast walking can count as well.
    • You will gain energy by moving every half hour or hour.
    • The whole point is to raise your heart rate—walking, dancing, etc.
    Self Care IRL- Habits you have that you need to break TODAY!
    • Emotional eating– eating snacks and junk when you’re happy, sad, stressed, bored, etc. Be intentional with your eating and drink more water. Sometimes you think you’re hungry but you’re just thirsty.
    • Sitting for too long at one time– try to schedule a little break at the top of each hour to get up and move, use a sit-stand desk, etc. Boosts metabolism, reduces stress, and can create a more productive day
    • Hitting the snooze on your alarm clock. Go to sleep earlier than usual if you feel you’re not getting enough sleep each night.
    • Stop spending hours on social media. Daily social media users spend, on average, 2.5 hours on social media (including TikTok). It’s not always being used to relax or escape; it’s being used to procrastinate. Many people use social media to waste time. Limit your time on social media to 1 hour/day. You can use apps to monitor your social media intake. Instead of resorting to scrolling on social media with every spare moment, try reading, learning something from a podcast, moving around, or tackling something on your to-do list.
    • Working overtime. You give up family time, me time, and sleep time, and your physical and mental health starts to decline. If you don’t NEED the money, set time boundaries with your work.
    • These habits are draining our energy and preventing us from reaching our true potential.

    I am guilty of most of these! I am focusing on being more intentional with breaking or limiting these habits this month.

    Self Improvement Daily- Mistaking Happiness for Pleasure

    We are designed to seek immediate gratification. Our unconscious pattern is to do things that make us feel good in the moment, which often conflicts with what makes us feel good later.

    Sometimes we overindulge in a meal because we enjoy the taste of delicious food, but we end up feeling sick to our stomach later. Sometimes we scroll on social media when we are bored or procrastinating, and we later regret how we used our time.

    You can feel happiness and pleasure in a moment, but pleasure is concerned with the present moment and happiness is concerned with your core values, growth, development, and well-being.

    If you can be more discerning between the two, happiness and pleasure, pursue happiness. It will lead to a much more enriching life where you feel good about who you are and how you’re filling your life with genuine joy.

    I look forward to reading, learning, and sharing more with you soon!

  • Thoughtful Thursday- May 25, 2023

    My intention is to post a Thoughtful Thursday column each week and share some of the insights I have learned in the past week. Here are some of the things I’ve learned this week:

    Self Improvement Daily- When You Are Your Own Friend

    Let’s say you had a miscommunication, let someone down, and got defensive about it, or you got into a big fight with a family member. In your own head, you may get really critical and get upset that you didn’t have more emotional control. You tell yourself you’re an awful person.

    Now look at the example from a different angle. Instead of you being the person involved in the fight that made a few mistakes, you’re a good friend of that person. After they tell you about the event and the circumstances around it, what would you say to them? You likely wouldn’t tell them how awful of a person they are. You would likely be supportive and encouraging. You’d highlight their best qualities and understand that this was an isolated incident.

    This isn’t about a lack of taking responsibility for our actions. The point is that we are so quick to find the goodness and humanity in others and the flaws within ourselvesSo the next time you catch yourself criticizing or going through self-deprecating thoughts, ask yourself this question – “What would I tell myself if I were my own friend?”

    Self Care IRL- The 8 small steps you need to start your self-improvement journey
    1. Do not change everything at once. Start with 1-3 small goals you can easily achieve. Ex: one healthy meal each day, walk 20 minutes every day, etc. You can increase and expand on your habits after a while. Progress is more important than perfection. Perfection does not exist.
    2. Make a plan of action and actually stick to it. Staying focused and motivated requires discipline. Discipline requires planning. Take action every day, even if it’s just a small step.
    3. Habit stacking. Ex: journal while drinking coffee. Listen to a podcast or watch tv while on the treadmill. Read while riding public transportation to work.
    4. Celebrate your wins—both big and small. Every step forward is success. Share your wins with friends to add accountability.
    5. Don’t be too hard on yourself. Everyone makes mistakes. You are bound to have setbacks along the way. Learn from your mistakes and keep going. Be patient with yourself. Progress takes time. Forgiving yourself is the ultimate flex in life. Practicing self-compassion is vital if you want to improve yourself.
    6. Find your support system. It is crucial if you have goals in sight. Whether you need hands-on support or emotional support, knowing that someone is there to lift you up will be incredibly helpful for encouragement and accountability. The podcast host mentioned getting together with a group of people weekly or monthly on a Wednesday to discuss “Wednesday wins”–“wins” each person has had in the past week or month. Lift each other up and encourage each other.
    7. Set goals for yourself. Document how soon you want to achieve it to determine a plan and how hard you need to work. Don’t feel overly committed to that number. Plans can change. Set weekly or monthly goals to track your progress just to see how far you have come.
    8. Be patient and keep working toward your goals, even when things get tough. You will have setbacks.
    TED Talks Daily- What makes a “good college” — and why it matters – Cecilia M. Orphan
    • We say we want colleges to be more equitable and more accessible. We tend to obsess over a tiny group of colleges most of us could never get into. It’s not because we aren’t smart enough. It’s because there isn’t enough space for all of us. They intentionally cap the number of students that they accept.
    • Instead of calling them prestigious universities, some people refer to them as “highly rejective colleges” – Harvard, Stanford, Yale, Princeton, MIT, etc. These are all major research institutions.
    • Regional public universities (RPUs) are the exact opposite of highly rejective colleges.  They pride themselves in accepting almost everyone who applies — students are more likely to be first-generation college students, students of color, low-income students, veterans, and adults balancing work and family while going to school. RPU students often don’t have the test scores required to get into a highly rejective college. It’s not that they aren’t capable; it’s because they weren’t given the same advantages as other students. RPUs change more lives than prestigious universities by allowing more students access to education.
    • People sometimes criticize RPUs and refer to them as “the 13th grade,” “not real,” or “almost anyone can get in.”
    • The colleges that already have the largest endowments tend to receive the most charitable donations. Imagine if these donations were spread across the many RPUs in the country.
    • In the U.S. and throughout the world, far more public funding goes to highly rejective colleges than to regional public universities, causing RPUs to become more expensive, which hurts low-income students and causes student loan debt to skyrocket.
    • If we really want more low-income students to go to college and equity in higher education, we need to fund regional public universities. Instead of giving to your highly rejective alma mater, consider giving to universities that really need it.
    • Last year, billionaire philanthropist Mckenzie Scott gave $1.5 billion to 73 different colleges and universities that serve low-income students and students of color.
    • There is no better way to make a difference in higher education than to give to the colleges that change the lives of their students and communities. This isn’t all about money. We all have the power to change the way we think about and talk about regional public universities or stop people when they frame them in negative ways.
    Life Kit- Making friends anywhere you move
    • Be active and intentional about making connections. Alert your network. Post on your socials and ask for introductions. Tell your coworkers, especially if you have a remote job. Communicate what kind of connection you’re looking for – someone to show you around, another couple with school-age kids, etc. We tend to think that it’s going to be so awkward to reach out to people who we aren’t in touch with anymore. You just have to own it.
    • Reconnect with old friends. You might end up better friends with them than before. Acknowledge the gap in time and that you haven’t been the best at keeping in touch. Propose specific plans for catching up. Follow up after meeting in person.
    • Incorporate more routine into your day. Ex: coffee shops. With routine, you are seeing the same faces and it becomes less intimidating to talk to them. You can incorporate any activity, community, or place you love. No matter where you live, you can develop that sense of home. Find a place for yourself that isn’t work and isn’t home: book club, soccer club, etc.
    • Find online groups, event listings, and meetups. Now is your chance to engage in an activity you’ve been thinking about. Ex: book clubs. You don’t have to know anyone there, but you can connect with others about the same book you’ve read. You meet regularly. Commit to showing up more than once. It changes the way you engage with people who are there. Stop trying to form a relationship with the collective and focus on forming relationships with the singular. It can be less intimidating to focus on individual members first.
    • When getting to know people, focus on the connection, not the relationship. Being honest about yourself is key to adult relationships. Get comfortable with the things that make you different and the interests that you have. If you are introverted, only say “yes” to the activities that you know will bring you joy. Focus your energy on one-on-one interactions. Making new friends takes effort, especially when you barely know anyone around you.
    • Take-aways: be open and intentional about making new friends. Tell your network that you’re moving or looking to meet people. Reconnect with old friends and acknowledge the passing of time. Make clear plans to meet. Build your own routines and find places you feel at ease. Go to group gatherings. For recurring groups, commit to going at least three times. Friendships start with one-on-one relationships. Remember that all of this takes time.

    When I first moved to my city, I didn’t have any friends in the area aside from former coworkers. I am grateful to have met several girls in an online Facebook group for girls making friends. Through this group, I have joined a book club, hiking groups, and made many quality friends who share similar interests.

    Optimal Finance Daily- Understanding the Seven Habits of Wealth by Rob Berger
    1. Hard work– achieving financial security is often the result of consistent diligence.
    2. Modest living– modest living can produce great wealth on a modest income.
    3. Patience– produces thoughtful, long-term decisions that can produce wealth while minimizing risk.  Patiently waiting for the right time to buy a stock or company
    4. Perseverance– working through challenges. Perseverance keeps us focused on our goals and enables us to confront all challenges.
    5. Balance– healthy balance of stocks, bonds, or other investments
    6. Self-awareness– brings into focus the motivations behind the daily decisions we make. Allows us to understand what motivates us to spend money, what investments are best for us given our tolerance for risk, and what will produce contentment in our lives.
    7. Learning– enables us to improve our careers, investments, and spending, as well as other areas of our lives

    “What we are and what we have is a result of what we repeatedly do.” Wealth then, is not the result of an act, but the result of our habits.

    How to Be a Better Human- How to set boundaries and find peace (w/ Nedra Glover Tawwab)
    • We want kids to be assertive, but we don’t teach them how to be assertive with us.
    • Pay attention to the things you complain most about. This will tell you where you need to set boundaries.
    • Many people right now are having boundary issues around being overwhelmed and overcommitting themselves. You can say no to things! People found pleasure during the pandemic by not having to attend social obligations. You don’t need to do those things if you don’t want to.  Place value on the relationships that are important.
    • Trying to do everything on your own/not asking for help- there are times when we don’t have the skillset, time, or mental capacity to do it all. We need to seek help. It can be hard to be vulnerable and ask for help.
    • Codependency- thinking “if I did this, this person would suffer this consequence because of my lack of support for their issue.” Stop thinking like this!
    • Set boundaries, find peace!

    I posted an extensive blog post about this book recently. Check it out here:

    Main Accounts: The Story of MySpace- Welcome to MySpace

    Popularity:

    • MySpace used to be the most popular website in America. It launched in August 2003. The creators, Tom Anderson and Chris Dewolfe, took inspiration from sites like Friendster and Asian Avenue. There were only 100,000 users in October 2003, but, the following year, after picking up dissatisfied Friendster users, the site exploded to 5 million users! MySpace peaked in 2008 with over 100 million users. At the height of its popularity, 250,000 people were signing up for new accounts every day. Most of the users were young – in their teens and twenties. It was at the center of their social lives.
    • In 2005, MySpace was seeing 16 million visitors per month and was the biggest social network in the world. It was sold to News Corporation, and Intermix negotiated the deal. This was done without the knowledge of the founders of MySpace. Chris and Tom were each paid $30 million. They left the company in 2009, and News Corporation brought in a new CEO and its own people.
    • When MySpace launched, social media was an unknown quantity. People had no idea how to make money off of social networks or even if they could make money off of it. The consequences of social media had yet to be seen.

    Origins:

    • Tom Anderson had founded the company with Chris Dewolfe. Before MySpace, Tom had worked for Chris as a copywriter and product tester at another startup. Tom was a musician, went to film school, and dabbled in the hacker community as a teenager. MySpace does not have the typical Silicon Valley origin story.
    •  While at Euniverse, Tom and Chris had at their disposal the company’s database of over 30 million e-mail addresses. The e-mails of everyone who signed up with a new MySpace account could be added to the database. MySpace was a subsidiary of its parent company, Intermix.

    What set MySpace apart:

    • MySpace offered opportunities for people to express their creativity and meet people in ways that felt thrilling and scary at the time. People used MySpace in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina to keep in touch with friends and family after they evacuated Louisiana. Soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan used it to connect with people back home. It was a place where millions of people could connect to one another. MySpace was one of many projects at the company EUniverse (an early ecommerce company). EUniverse was one of the few survivors of the dot com crash. EUniverse was later renamed Intermix.
    • On Friendster, users related to each other as a chain of connections. On MySpace, it didn’t really matter if your friends were strangers or actually friends. You added who you wanted and showed users who mattered to you by selecting users for your Top 8.
    • Top 8 created competition and encouraged users to curate their friends and spotlight people or bands that reflected on their personalities and personal tastes. From the glittery, sleezy design to the carefree way people communicated on it, MySpace felt like a party on the internet. People talked more casually on MySpace.
    • MySpace allowed you to tweak the HTML on your profile page so that you could change the color of the background, have a song playing while people looked at your page, etc. People put a lot of thought into it. Customizable pages (scrolling text, text that would blink, colorful texts, embedded music) allowed for self-expression.
    • MySpace was giving users free software. Previously, if you wanted to set up a website for yourself, you’d have to buy software. The way users were paying MySpace was with all of their data and information. The legacy of MySpace is the pioneering of this business model – of monetizing user data.
    • Another unique feature is that creator Tom Anderson was automatically everyone’s friend.

    Why MySpace did not last:

    • MySpace was sold as “the perfect media company that generates free content through its users. It generates free traffic by its users inviting their friends, and all you have to do is sell the ads.”
    • MySpace was on track to be the biggest mass platform for advertising in the world. Facebook is the biggest single mass platform for advertising in the world. The lack of engineering expertise and talent and the lack of focus on abilities to outcompete on the actual quality of the product is what doomed MySpace to fail against Facebook. You have to have great engineering and great talent, and that is what made Facebook win. MySpace lost relevance because it couldn’t scale up to be mainstream like Facebook.
    • The social network felt chaotic and open in a free-for-all sense much like the city where it was created: Los Angeles. It sometimes felt like a cool nightclub. However massive it was, it was still youth-oriented. With various scenes and clicks, it felt very niche. MySpace was notable and big, but it wasn’t TikTok size.
    • People who were big on the platform could not scale out and achieve mass fame. The internet culture was not mass culture in the 2000s. They were sort of niche. All of this was happening before there was viral content and before algorithms filtered what users would see. There wasn’t a “for you” page. You had to find it yourself.

    https://www.gabethebassplayer.com/blog/festival-walking

    I loved Gabe The Bass Player’s post on May 16 (all credit to Gabe the Bass Player):

    Festival Walking

    May 16, 2023

    “Summer. The height of the music festival season. The height of…

    “Is this band any good? I’m going to decide right now as I walk past the stage for thirty seconds…”

    It doesn’t matter if you’re a well established act or a new act. No one gets a pass. You get the time it takes for someone walking past the stage to be compelling enough for them to stay. You gotta be good.

    The truth is…you’ve probably got thirty seconds but their question is answered within five. And that interaction is what they’ll carry with them forever and tell their friends about when your name comes up.”

    I look forward to reading, learning, and sharing more with you soon!

  • Killing Sacred Cows: Overcoming Financial Myths

    “Killing Sacred Cows: Overcoming the Financial Myths That Are Destroying Your Prosperity” was written by Garrett B. Gunderson and was both educational and interesting. In the financial world, sacred cows are the myths and traditions that distort our thinking about money, wealth, success, and prosperity. I don’t agree with all of the information provided, but this book left me pondering and learning about new perspectives.

    This book emphasized finding your soul purpose and maximizing your human life value. In a nutshell, your soul purpose is utilizing your talents, abilities, and passions productively and effectively to make an impact on the world and bring joy to you and others. Human life value is your combination of knowledge, skills, and abilities you can use to increase your income.

    The first step to increasing our human life value is education. Then, we must take action on what we have learned and dedicate ourselves to finding and living our soul purpose. The ultimate end of every one of our decisions should be to get us closer to finding and living our soul purpose. What strengths, abilities, skills, or advantages do you feel could be utilized to create maximum value in the marketplace?

    Learn to prioritize value and utility over price. Would you buy it if it weren’t on sale? Consider opportunity costs. Most financial advice focuses on cutting costs and saving. This book takes a different approach. Instead of “I can’t afford this” ➠ “How can I create more value in the world so that I can afford this?”

    Banks make $ without big risks. They check your credit, secure their investments with collateral, require a down payment, determine interest rate/payment/period, sometimes impose prepayment penalties, cover their investments with insurance, and transfer their risks to the borrower in any way possible. We as investors/gamblers don’t have any of these risk management tools.

    Three quotes about retirement resonated with me:

    “Our goal should never be to become millionaires; our goals should be based on what will bring us our ideal quality of life and the highest level of happiness.”

    “The ultimate end of every one of our decisions should be to get us closer to finding and living our soul purpose. If you found your soul purpose, would you ever want to retire?”

    “What are you waiting for? Why not live like you really want to today instead of buying into the financial myths that tell you that your dreams are only possible in retirement?”

    This author really emphasized that 401(k)s are a “scam” due to limited opportunity for cash flow, lack of liquidity, market dependency, lack of knowledge, administrative fees, underutilization because of tax deferral, higher tax brackets upon withdrawal, estate taxes, no exit strategy, no guarantees, no control of performance, and a penalty for withdrawing early. While I understand his points, I’m unsure of alternatives, as the author didn’t delve into them. It is important to be aware of fees, investment options, and vesting schedules when contributing to a 401(k).

    This book presented some new information and perspectives, but was not comprehensive. It can be part of your financial education, but there are better financial books out there that are more educational.

    I love forward to reading, learning, and sharing more with you soon!

  • Thoughtful Thursday- May 18, 2023

    My intention is to post a Thoughtful Thursday column each week and share some of the insights I have learned in the past week. Here are some of the things I’ve learned this week:

    Optimal Health Daily- 5 Small Habits For Big Changes in Fat Loss by Lea Genders

    Prioritize protein/veggies at each meal. Protein helps you maintain muscle and protein and fiber from veggies help you feel full. Focus on what you can add to your meals to make them healthier rather than what you have to take away.

    Eat slow and mindfully. When you gobble down your food quickly, you don’t give your stomach enough time to send the signal to your brain that it’s full. Pay attention to fullness signals and stop eating when you’re full.

    Walk fast. Walk with purpose, bring a dog, or start a power walking routine.

    Prioritize sleep. Create a sleep routine and aim for 7-8 hours of sleep each night.

    Replace all drinks with water. If you replace all soda, juice, energy drinks, and sugar-filled drinks with water, you’ll cut hundreds of empty calories each day. You can use some sugar-free flavoring packets to encourage you to drink more water. I love True Lemon packets, available in a variety of flavors at 0-10 calories each and 0-1 gram of sugar each. This might seem like a lot, but it’s a much better alternative to sugar-laden drinks.

    Self Improvement Daily- HALT Before You Communicate

    Often times we say things we don’t mean, that we’ll later regret, and wonder why we even said them in the first place. We wonder what caused us to not have the self-control needed in those situations. It’s usually a matter of feeling emotional. Our emotions often take precedence over logical reasoning.

    Before you communicate, especially when you’re feeling impulsive, HALT. Pause. Take a moment to think about how you’re feeling. In particular, reflect on these four things:

    • Hungry?
    • Angry?
    • Lonely?
    • Tired?

    When you’re feeling any of these things, you’re more likely to say things you don’t mean because your mind is fixated on these specific needs. By calling out these emotions, you give your logical mind the information it needs to make the right decision.

    TED Talks Daily- TikTok’s CEO on its future — and what makes its algorithm different – Shou Chew
    • I discovered TikTok in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic, and I have learned many things and spent countless hours on the app. One unique thing I realized right away about TikTok is that it gives people a platform to reach a larger audience than other social media apps.
    • The mission of TikTok is to inspire creativity and bring joy. The vision is to provide a window to discover, give them a canvas to create, and provide bridges for people to connect.
    • Per Shou Chew, the CEO: “What makes TikTok unique is the whole discovery engine behind it. We are showing people what they like. We have given the everyday person a platform to be discovered.”
    • The biggest creator, Khaby Lame, in TikTok didn’t even speak in any of his videos in the beginning. Lame is famous for his comic expressions and deadpan reactions to overstylized TikToks. Today he has 158 million followers on the platform. As long as you have talent, you have the chance to succeed.
    • TikTok has given many people a voice that they would otherwise not have. Other platforms basically made the chances of getting discovered very low. You almost had to be famous to get followers.
    • With TikTok, if you post something that’s not interesting to a lot of people, you aren’t going to get the virality you want. You need to have a message that resonates with people, and you will generate virality.
    • Recommendation algorithm- shows you what others are interested in who liked the same videos as you. Vision= window to discover. People find communities because of the content that they are posting.
    • Other apps are built for a different original purpose.
    • In order to fulfill its mission of discovery, showing users a diversity of content is essential.
    • TikTok has created a platform for people who never thought they would be a content creator. Has given them an audience. STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Math) content has over 160 billion views.
    • User guidelines: no pornography, child sexual abuse material, no violence. Users under 18 years old experience a more restricted app and can’t use the livestream experience. Users under 16 can’t instant message or go viral. A big part of the age guideline is based on the age the user reports when signing up.
    • TikTok’s goal is NOT to optimize and maximize time spent on the platform. Minors= 60 minute recommendation. TikTok has given parents tools to limit childrens’ time spent on TikTok.
    • Over 10,000 employees are currently looking at content moderation, and this group is based in Ireland. Most of the moderation has to be done by machines, but they aren’t always on point, so they complement with actual people.
    • Guideline categories: mature, not suitable for teenagers. If content contains these guidelines, TikTok proactively removes it from users’ TikTok experience. If you search certain terms, you are redirected to a resource safety page.
    • Data access by employees is not the same as data access by the government. TikTok has implementing storing localized American data on American soil by an American company overseen by American personnel. This is beyond what any company in this industry has ever done- localizing in a way no company has ever done. All new U.S. Data is already stored in the Oracle cloud infrastructure.
    • TikTok’s desire is to keep Tiktok a place of freedom and expression (you can search for anything you want subject to community guidelines).
    • TikTok has popularized a variety of content: dancing, singing, science content, booktok, learning how to cook, sports, encouraging people to read. Booktok has 120 billion views globally.   
    • TikTok is connecting people and communities together. 5 million businesses in the U.S. benefit from TikTok today.
    Life Kit-A better way to talk to your doctor
    • Find someone who you can built a partnership with, someone who listens, and someone who will take your symptoms seriously and foster that bond. Your health is your most important asset. You need to find someone who will be on your team and be a good partner.
    • Prepare as if you’re going to your accountant and getting ready for taxes. Write down what has been happening/symptoms and your family history, and answer when your symptoms started, what you were doing when symptoms started, what makes symptoms worse, how long symptoms have persisted, whether symptoms ever get better, and your previous history.
    • Anything you can describe (duration, time it started, details) can lead to higher chances of coming up with a diagnosis. Sometimes your doctor may not ever have a clear answer for you.
    • Your doctor might not know what’s going on right away. Instead, you may receive a differential diagnosis, or a list of possibilities. Schedule follow-ups.
    • Fill out docs on the patient portal before you get there to help maximize the time together.
    • When you get a diagnosis, ask for more information. What do we know? What do I have to do? What is the treatment plan?
    • If you feel dismissed, this is a sign this isn’t the doctor for you. It needs to be a partnership. You don’t need to stick with the doctor for the rest of your life if you aren’t comfortable.
    • Advocate for yourself. When you get a diagnosis, ask: What’s actually happening in my body right now? What’s the treatment? How does the treatment work? How often will I take that medication? Will this condition ever go away? How will this condition affect my life? When should we follow up?
    • Think of your relationship with your medical provider as a partnership. You should be working together to come up with a diagnosis or a plan. Keep a medical logbook with important details. When you get a diagnosis, consider a second opinion. It’s okay to change medical providers and it might be a good idea if they’re not listening to you, they confuse you, or if you don’t feel like you can talk to them.
    NerdWallet’s Smart Money Podcast- Top Consumer Complaints and Car Shopping in 2023
    • The top consumer complaints of 2022 include negative information on credit reports that was not accurate, accounts that didn’t belong to consumers but were still on the report, credit inquiries that people didn’t recognize, and being pursued for a debt that the person didn’t owe.
    • Average price for a used car is still around $26k!!
    • Supplies still unable to meet demand- prices remain high
    • Tips: allow yourself time to shop around for both the car and the car loan. Get several auto loan offers before going to the auto dealer. Don’t tell the dealer upfront that you intend to pay cash. They may try to make up for lost revenue in the price of the car.
    • Auto rates are the highest they’ve been since 2009. Average used car loan is 11.03% interest. Some people can get 5% interest.
    • Tips: Shop around. Know your financing options. Think about the trade-offs. Buying a car with cash can keep you out of debt, but you might be able to get a better return on that investment.

    One book I’ve read this past week is “How to Live on 24 Hours a Day” written by Arnold Bennett and originally published in 1908. These points stood out to me:

    We never shall have any more time. We have, and we have always had, all the time there is.

    Arnold Bennett

    Everyone receives the same 24 hours in a day. Many view their hours at work as a day and the rest as a margin. You say your day is already full to overflowing, yet you spend 8+ hours working and 7-8 hours sleeping. What are you doing during the other 8 hours?!

    Arrange a day within a day. Think of your day outside of work as another day within your day. Have a reflective mood. Devote time each day to reading, learning, or bettering yourself. I have been committed to doing this as part of my daily habits.

    You have to live on this twenty-four hours of daily time. Out of it, you have to spin health, pleasure, money, content, respect, and the evolution of your immortal soul. Which of us lives on twenty-four hours a day? And when I say “lives,” I do not mean “exists” or “muddles through.”

    Arnold Bennett

    I look forward to reading, learning, and sharing more with you soon!

  • “Getting Away” Without Getting Away

    “Getting Away- 75 Everyday Practices for Finding Balance in Our Always-On World” was published in 2020 and written by Jon Staff, a founder of Getaway. This was one of the most fascinating, insightful books I read in 2022 and it was packed with resources from hiking, phone apps, volunteering, flowers, etc.!

    Read more about Getaway here: https://getaway.house/about/

    Photo credit: Getaway.house

    This book presented 75 ideas for finding balance in our daily lives. How we spend our days, is, of course, how we spend our lives.

    Among my favorite suggestions: keep a gratitude journal, turn off push notifications and audit your phone usage, practice deep listening by not tending to your phone when having in-person conversations, wake up with a physical alarm clock, focus on one task at a time, observe a digital sabbath, listen to an album from start to finish, go on hikes, and add downtime to your calendar.

    “Allowing an app to send you notifications is like allowing someone to insert a commercial into your life anytime they want.”

    Jon Staff

    Disable push notifications. Audit your phone usage by going to Settings (ScreenTime for iOS, Digital Wellbeing for Android). After reading this, I have regularly turned off most push notifications (Facebook, Messenger, Outlook, etc.) and it has been so freeing! I feel less stressed without these interruptions throughout the day and am more productive!

    The average American spends 20 hours/week watching TV! This is the equivalent of a part-time job! Make a list of activities to do in your new free time instead.

    Wake up to the radio as an alarm. Humans are conditioned to hear voices, not beeps. Also, listen to an AM/FM radio or an entire album sometimes. This creates an added level of discovery. You can’t control what plays and you are likely to hear something new. I know I’m guilty of switching songs every time I stream and don’t feel like listening to a song at a particular time and I think I will try this!

    Several resources were also provided in this book:

    Phone apps to control app usage: RescueTime, Self Control

    Volunteer opportunities: Volunteer Match, Idealist

    Hiking: All Trails, Hiking Project, Outdoor Project, Trail Link

    Getaway outposts are located throughout the United States. Find out more here: https://getaway.house/our-outposts. I have stayed at a tiny Getaway cabin a couple times, and I highly recommend it. I have loved the convenience of nature and several hiking trails and state parks somewhat nearby. Hiking is one of my favorite activities to “get away.” Last year, we stayed at Getaway for my birthday and hiked at four state parks in four days!

    Some of my favorite personal photos from my Getaway trips:

    I look forward to reading, learning, and sharing more with you soon!

  • Thoughtful Thursday- May 11, 2023

    My intention is to post a Thoughtful Thursday column each week and share some of the insights I have learned in the past week. Here are some of the things I’ve learned this week:

    https://ed.ted.com/lessons/debunking-the-myths-of-ocd-natascha-m-santos

    There’s a common misconception that if you like to meticulously organize your things, keep your hands clean, or plan out your weekend to the last detail, you might be OCD. Many people use OCD as a joke and naively claim that they or others must have OCD.

    • Myth 1: Repetitive or ritualistic behaviors are synonymous with OCD.
      • OCD has 2 aspects: intrusive thoughts, images, and/or impulses AND the behavioral compulsions people engage in to relieve the anxiety the obsessions cause.
      • People affected have little or no control over their obsessive thoughts or behaviors and these thoughts or behaviors interfere with work, school, and a social life and cause significant distress.
    • Myth 2: The main symptom is obsessive handwashing.
      • This is not always true. OCD can vary from fears of contamination and illness, preoccupation with numbers or patterns, excessive cleaning or double checking, and walking in predetermined patterns.

    OCD sufferers report feeling crazy for their irrational thoughts, yet find it difficult to control their actions.

    OCD is a neurobiological disorder in which brains of those impacted are hardwired to behave in a certain fashion.

    Treatments include medications that increase serotonin in the brain, behavioral therapy that gradually desensitizes patients to their anxieties, and, as a last resort, electro compulsive therapy when OCD does not respond to other forms of treatment.


    This is a compelling poem that covers the realities of having OCD. I’m a big fan of Neil Hilborn.
    Self Care IRL- Ten polite ways to say no to someone

    We are afraid of hurting feelings when we say no. Many people are chronic people-pleasers. Yet, saying no is an essential part of your self-care and emotional well-being.

    1. Just be honest, but remember to be gentle. “Thank you so much for inviting me, but I have other commitments. I really appreciate the invitation.”
    2. Try offering an alternative you’re comfortable with.
    3. Use statements that begin with I. “I really appreciate the invitation, but I have some other commitments.” Don’t blame the other person for not considering your schedule.
    4. Get in the habit of saying thank you. Make sure to express your appreciation sincerely.
    5. Use humor to lighten the mood.
    6. Be firm, but kind. Be direct, yet understanding.
    7. Offer brief explanations if you want to.
    8. Say no without apologizing! You don’t need to feel guilty for setting any boundaries. Be confident and assertive, yet respectful and kind.
    9. Use the sandwich approach. Sandwich your refusal/no between two positive statements. Show you still value and appreciate them.
    10. Practice saying no. Set boundaries and stick to them. Prioritize your needs.
    Radio Headspace- The Ingredients of Our Lives
    • When we cook, we don’t try to change ingredients – we simply use what we have been given.
    • The flavors of our lives are unique and certain ingredients are needed at certain times. The more you fixate on things you don’t have, the more upset you get.
    • Look at what you have to work with and try to make the most of it. Be at peace with what’s going on. Life ebbs and flows. Sometimes our ingredients are bountiful and sometimes the pantry is pretty bare.
    • Too much of anything can be detrimental. Sometimes your mind can make it seem like you don’t have enough of the right ingredients. You might be caught up in the trap of wanting more friends, more money, more recognition. Have you ever accidentally added too much salt to a dish? You can’t salvage it. The invitation here is to trust what you’ve been given and find contentment with what you have.
    • We can literally clean our homes and our kitchen. Sometimes having a decluttered space can help declutter our minds. When our home is clean, we feel clear, connected, and at ease.
    Optimal Living Daily- 10 Unconventional Habits to Live Distraction-Less by Joshua Becker

    Our world has become a constant feed of breaking news, information, and entertainment. Breaking news breaks into our day at breakneck speed, and we are fed messages relentlessly from advertisements on nearly every flat surface.

    1. Turn off smart phone notifications. Our smart phones are one of the greatest sources of distraction in our lives. The average person touches his or her phone 2,617 times every day! 😲 To limit the distracted nature of your smartphone, turn off all non-essential notifications: social media, e-mails, gaming, etc.
    2. Read and answer e-mail only twice each day. Schedule your e-mail processing to limit incoming distraction.
    3. Complete 1-2 minute projects immediately to live with less distraction.
    4. Remove physical clutter. Clutter is a significant form of visual distraction. Everything in our eyesight pulls at our attention and the more we remove, the less visual stress and distraction we experience. Clear your desk, walls, counters, and home of unneeded distractions.
    5. Clear visible, distracting digital clutter.
    6. Accept and accentuate your personal rhythms. Figure out what works best for you. More mentally challenging tasks-morning. Easier tasks- evening.
    7. Establish a healthy morning routine. The first hour is the rudder of the day. Begin your days on your terms apart from distraction. Develop a distraction-free morning routine.
    8. Cancel cable or unplug the television. The average American watches 37-40 hours of television each week!
    9. Keep a to-do list. No matter how hard you try to manage yourself, new responsibilities and opportunities will surface in your mind from internal and external sources. The opportunity to quickly write down the task allows it to be quickly discarded from your mind.
    10. Care less about what other people think. There is no value in wasting mental energy over the negative criticism of those who only value their own self-interests. Stop living distracted over the opinion of people who don’t matter.
    HBR IdeaCast- The Ins and Outs of the Influencer Industry

    Influencers drive consumer trends.

    • The influencer industry dates back to the first decade of the 21st century. When the recession happened, so many people turned to these new platforms that seemed promising to invent a new way of working. The early influencers usually worked in fashion and beauty and shared their ideas about a range of topics related to commercial industries like fashion and beauty.
    • In the beginning, it was mostly bloggers and Youtubers talking about topics that are near and dear to them in some way and creating content centered on their niche or professional expertise. They fell backwards into this work because it didn’t exist at the time. There was more truth to the narrative “we’re doing what we love/creating content of what we love.”
    • Once those early bloggers and influencers started to gain traction, advertisers recognized these early influencers as potential persuaders and offered branding details. After that initial wave, there was a crushing wave of people flocking to social media who also wanted to be an influencer.
    • Once the field became so saturated, it became about cultivating a sense of authenticity and presenting themselves in predictable ways to their audience members. It is getting harder to break through.
    • Influencers often identify themselves as entrepreneurs. They need to find a balance between authenticity, credibility, and drawing in endorsements to succeed. This balance is hard to attain and there are few and far between. Many influencers have chosen to leave all together or move into marketing because they don’t want to reveal many details of their personal lives.
    • There is a largely unseen sector of the influencer industry that are marketing middleman type firms that help brands connect to the right influencers for them. Brands can get access to databases and search key words/stats/content specialties and engage with them in a transactional way. Brands can also post a campaign looking for influencers.
    • A big criticism of the influencer industry is that those who rise to a high level of prominence are predominantly fairly wealthy white young women.
    • Despite the popular narrative of the influencer industry as being all about doing what you love, following your passion, democratizing culture…it is not free of these biases and problems that plague society. While there has been more awareness of this in recent years, there is still so much work to be done.
    • One of the prevailing problems is that there is little to no transparency in how these deals are being made, what the pay is, what type of content is worth how much, etc. There is even a large variance among different influencers for the same deals.
    • Most companies that engage in influencer marketing rely on the advice of marketing agencies they use to ensure they are getting their money’s worth.
    • Using an authentic niche influencer is generally better than paying a high-level celebrity for an endorsement.
    • The Walmart spotlight program is the largest and highest profile program. It essentially incentivizes Walmart employees to post about their time working at Walmart, share online a day in the life of working at Walmart, new products, etc. They reward employees who do it really well with cash bonuses or a free product. Consider rewarding employees with influencer skills.
    • Some companies cultivate their regular customers as influencers by encouraging them to post about try-ons in dressing rooms, such as Banana Republic and Loft. There are ramifications, and some question why we are rewarding influencer-like behaviors and to what ends.
    • The role of broader economic precarity in this space (societal factors drive people to want to pursue this work- entrepreneur, professional autonomy), lasting impact on technological evolution of social media (we’ve come to expect commercialism in our feeds), and extreme adaptability (driven influencers who want to adapt to changing times and technologies can keep growing) signal that influencing will continue to exist and is here to stay.
    • Benefits opportunities for entrepreneurialism, effective ways of getting media messages out there, networking, community
    • Drawbacks- rapid spread of misinformation, mental health toll
    • Advice for aspiring influencers: go into it with eyes wide open. Know that this is a line of work that is incredibly difficult. Although people can find great satisfaction and a solid income, it is not as common as popular narratives would lead you to believe. Go into it with the knowledge that, while you will be entrepreneurial, you are still beholden to other stakeholders and other people who have a vested interest in the work that you are doing.
    • Advice for those working for companies who want to tap into this industry: value influencers as professional colleagues instead of one-off engagement/transactional. Companies will find more value and satisfaction in a long-term relationship. Treat them as valued collaborators whom you pay fairly and work closely with.
    • Advice for consumers who are being bombarded by influencers: try to engage with a little bit of distance. Know that there is a range of pressures that influencers are navigating behind the scenes that shape the content that we see.
    • New book: The Influencer Industry: The Quest for Authenticity on Social Media by Emily Hund

    One book I read this past week is “A Descending Spiral: Exposing the Dealth Penalty in 12 Essays” written by Marc Bookman. This was published by New Press, a nonprofit, public interest publisher. Marc Bookman is the executive director of the Atlantic Center for Capital Representation, a nonprofit that provides services for those facing possible execution.

    Honestly, this book was eye-opening about the cruelty and injustice of the death penalty. The essays detailed problems with ineffective counsel, racist jurors and judges, anti-Semitism, prosecutorial misconduct, withholding exculpatory evidence about alternate suspects, ethical violations, false confessions, and mental illness. One case involved Andre Lee Thomas, who is currently on death row for stabbing his estranged wife and kids. Andre suffers from mental illness to the point where he removed both of his eyeballs in separate incidents and ingested one of them. 😲 Another issue with his case is that jurors who said they opposed interracial marriage were allowed to serve. Thomas is Black and his estranged wife was white. The U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal on this issue.

    Other take-aways from this book:

    Verdicts in capital cases are different than in all other cases in that the decision whether someone should live or die is a moral one, rather than factual or legal. A life-or-death sentencing decision in a capital case is the product of individual reflection. Each juror weighs the arguments for life imprisonment or execution on his or her own.

    Some states require a unanimous vote by a jury and some don’t. Some states previously allowed judges to override a jury’s decision. In some cases, juries voted for life imprisonment and judges overrode their decision and sentenced defendants to be executed.

    Serial murderers like Washington State’s Green River Killer, the Unabomber, and the Kansas BTK Killer are serving multiple life sentences after plea bargains, while those who choose to go to trial having committed far less egregious crimes often end up executed or on death row.

    11% of DNA exonerations have also involved witness identifications that later proved to be incorrect, but prosecutors and judges are far less likely to acknowledge the possible injustice of a misidentification when there is no DNA to confirm it.

    Reforms that have been suggested to reduce the risk of wrongful convictions include proceeding with investigative interrogation rather than confrontational interrogation, videotaping interrogations, and implementing special protections for juveniles and those with cognitive or psychological impairments. Many false confessions are the result of confrontational and coerced interrogations and mental illness.

    I look forward to reading, learning, and sharing more with you soon!