2674: Stop Doing S*** You Hate by Isaac Morehouse on Strategic Life Choices & Personal Fulfillment
Optimal Finance DailyMarch 31, 2024
2674
00:11:49

2674: Stop Doing S*** You Hate by Isaac Morehouse on Strategic Life Choices & Personal Fulfillment

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Episode 2674:

Isaac Morehouse delivers a candid reminder that pursuing what you love requires shedding what drains you. With a blend of humor and wisdom, Morehouse challenges the notion that life's obligations force us into despised activities, advocating instead for strategic life choices that align more closely with personal joy and fulfillment.

Read along with the original article(s) here: https://isaacmorehouse.com/2015/10/08/stop-doing-shit-you-hate/

Quotes to ponder:

"It’s something I constantly preach as a better alternative to trying to find and do what you love."

"If you set yourself to finding that, instead of pointing to the obvious ways it might be misunderstood, you just might get some value."

"Things can always suck less. See if you can figure out how."

Episode references:

200+ Gary Vaynerchuk Quotes: https://garyvaynerchuk.com/top-garyvee-quotes/

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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[00:00:40] This is Optimal Finance Daily, Episode 2674. Stop doing f- you hate by Isaac Morehouse of IsaacMorehouse.com. And I'm your host and personal finance enthusiast, Diana Merriam. Welcome back to a bonus Sunday episode. I do this once a week so we can hear a little more content

[00:00:59] to optimize our lives, an extra episode from one of the other shows where we read articles to you. Today I'm sharing one from Optimal Living Daily. If you enjoy it you can follow or subscribe in your favorite podcast app for daily episodes. So with that here's Justin from Optimal Living Daily as we optimize your life.

[00:01:29] I shared this pitty little quote from entrepreneur and social media super user Gary Vaynerchuk yesterday. Stop doing f- you hate. I'm fairly resistant to cat posters and motivational image quotes online but this single sentence caught my eye. It's something I constantly preach as a better alternative to trying to find and do what you love. In fact, I think this simple sentence contains one of the most powerful truths in the universe for unlocking your own potential and fulfillment.

[00:01:58] Here comes the resistance. This Facebook so of course this couldn't go without objections. A commenter quickly claimed that paraphrasing. This idea is laughable to anyone who has ever had to pay bills. A tragic response.

[00:02:13] Charitable interpretation. Perhaps the most important skill if you want to gain maximum value from the stream of ideas in the world is a principle of charitable interpretation. It's simple but really hard to understand.

[00:02:27] But really hard and really rare. Assume people aren't idiots who have never thought of objections. Assume the best possible interpretation of their words. In this case one could uncharidably assume that Gary V means to immediately cease doing anything uncomfortable even if necessary for survival.

[00:02:48] I hate preparing food and eating as often in annoyance. Is Gary telling me to die? It doesn't take much cherry to move beyond such a silly interpretation.

[00:02:58] The source must know that a single sentence can never cover every context. He chose to share it anyway because he must believe there is still some nugget of truths in it.

[00:03:08] If you set yourself to finding that instead of pointing to the obvious ways it might be misunderstood, you just might get some value.

[00:03:15] Who doesn't have to pay bills? Everyone has to pay bills. Scarsity exists everywhere for everyone. Sure the trade-offs change. For some it's a ham sandwich or a bus ticket. For others it's a private jet or a Caribbean island.

[00:03:33] Everyone needs stuff to maintain what they see as an acceptable lifestyle and stuff is not free. If by pointing out that the acquisition of material needs and comforts requires work, using you reveal that no one should attempt to avoid stuff they hate doing, you've already refuted yourself.

[00:03:51] A large part of the reason to do things that aren't fun is because it enables you to do more things that are. The quote is a reminder of the why behind the process of doing these stuff so you can do less of it. It's a process.

[00:04:09] Even if in the present you feel compelled to do things you hate in order to pay bills, this quote provides an inspirational challenge and a reminder. It nudges you to ask yourself what things you do that you hate. It pushes you to plot a path to escaping them.

[00:04:25] Even if at this snapshot in time you have to do something you hate, the message here is that your life extends through time. You have tomorrow and the next day and the next. Do you want to do stuff you hate forever?

[00:04:37] Can you put together a plan of action or some tests to see how you might exit those activities? Do you hate your bills? If paying bills keeps you from doing things you enjoy, maybe the bills themselves are the problem.

[00:04:52] If you hate paying bills, can you conceive a way to do a lot less of it? A great many people are lifestyle slaves. You keep doing work you hate because you have to pay for a car you think is necessary because the neighbors in the place you chose to live would be leery of someone driving a beater and so it goes spawn and on.

[00:05:12] If you really love these things and gain value over and above the suffering you endure to obtain them, well fine. If not, Gary's quote is a good reminder. If you hate paying for the car and cable bill, quit. Build a new lifestyle in a cheaper house or city. Create a new standard that doesn't appeal to those around you but only the things you really value.

[00:05:34] What's the alternative? If the commenter's objection is an inescapable truth, what's the implication? If it's impossible to quit doing things you hate because of bills, then life must be an inescapable cycle of hated activities. Yet a great many people don't seem to hate every minute of their life.

[00:05:53] To deny the value of this quote is to say that you have already eliminated every possible hated thing from your life. There's no improvement you could make. Has this ever been true of anyone?

[00:06:05] The number of things you do that you hate whether going to a soul sucking job or attending a boring social event or family reunion is higher than you suspect. When you begin to examine your life, you realize you spend tons of time and inordinate mental energy on things that make you unhappy.

[00:06:23] Many of these you can shed right now with minimal consequences. Others require planning and an escape process. What's really holding you back? If you admit that it's possible to do fewer things you hate, you become vulnerable. Now the burden shifts on to you to make it happen.

[00:06:41] If you embraced this philosophy, the pressure is on to implement it. But what if you fail? What if you say you want to quit doing what you hate and go pursue something you like and it doesn't work out? Better play it safe and not try.

[00:06:55] Fear failure and embarrassment is the major roadblock. You will fail. So what? It's a process of experimentation. It's comfy and has some rewards to be a martyr or a critic. It's also dangerous.

[00:07:09] The other truth is that doing things you hate or merely tolerate is easier than doing things you love. You might imagine doing what you love is easy, a lucky life for the fortunate. It's not. It's a ton of work. Sometimes you don't quit because you don't want to work that hard.

[00:07:26] This is not to say you need to do work you love, but all depends on what work means to you and what your other values are. Doing work you love and being unhappy are not necessarily the same thing.

[00:07:38] It does mean you need a great deal of self-knowledge and self-honesty to find your values and the courage to move ever closer to living them. It's not just about work. Don't limit your notion of things you hate to work.

[00:07:52] You probably have habits and relationships and other things you hate. Quit those two. There are a million reasons to laugh at the advice. I doubt any of them will improve your life after the short-lived glow of the clever dismissal.

[00:08:06] Things can always suck less. See if you can figure out how.

[00:08:11] You just listen to the post titled Stop Doing You Hate by Isaac Morehouse of Isaacmorehouse.com

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[00:09:33] If they get Isaac going back to the Paying Bills example, I kind of laugh at that one because I don't hate paying bills at all.

[00:09:43] A little of the reason is that what he was saying if you really hated it maybe you stop having those things and I like having those things I pay for, like access to water, electricity in the internet.

[00:09:55] Those are bills I pay and I definitely don't hate those things. I don't think any of us do.

[00:10:01] So maybe it's the actual paying of the bills then that we hate.

[00:10:05] And in that case, I don't really do it because I have all my bills scheduled on auto pay. They get deducted from my bank account automatically.

[00:10:13] So I don't really understand that example personally. And actually brings up a different point.

[00:10:18] Is there a way to take things you truly hate in your life and make them even just a tiny bit more tolerable?

[00:10:25] Moving away from the bills example, let's go to some chores like doing the dishes.

[00:10:31] Me personally I don't enjoy doing the dishes. I wouldn't quite say I hate doing it but I'm more on the dislike side.

[00:10:38] So is there a way to make the dishes just slightly more enjoyable? Could I listen to a podcast while I'm doing it?

[00:10:44] Or instead of something distracting like a podcast, maybe turn it into a mindfulness exercise where every time a thought pops into my head when I'm doing the dishes,

[00:10:52] I let the thought go and then focus back on the act of washing dishes. That way I'm getting a meditation in for the day.

[00:11:00] I think many, many aspects of our lives could be improved if we just take a moment to think about how we could add something fun to something we usually don't like.

[00:11:09] Another one is driving. I never particularly liked driving alone, but now I kind of miss it because that's another opportunity for me to catch up on some podcasts that help me grow.

[00:11:20] So think about what you feel like you hate and whether or not you could stop doing it or do it less or if it's something that's good for you or it needs to get done,

[00:11:30] then maybe pair it with something you actually enjoy. Let me know how it goes. Thank you for listening. Hope you're having a great day.

[00:11:35] I'll be back for the Friday show tomorrow. We're off to my life. I'll wait.