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The Monday Morning Memo

Crystal Days Cannot Be Shattered

November 25, 2024

| Download
https://podcasts.captivate.fm/media/790e6110-41e3-4ccc-a75b-a396e33925c1/MMM20241125-CrystalDaysCannotBeShattered.mp3

 

The future is unknowable. The past is unrecoverable.

If you are anxious, you are living in the future.

Don’t live your life in an imaginary tomorrow. Find joy while it is still today.

If you are depressed, you are living in the past.

Escaping the past is easy. The hard part is choosing to start over.

Let me give you The Seven Secrets to Crystal Days:

  1. Do not let the perfect become the enemy of the good.
    “Perfectionism may look good in his shiny shoes but he’s a little bit of an asshole and no one invites him to their pool parties.” – Ze Frank
  2. Good enough, by definition, is good enough.
  3. Learn to celebrate the ordinary.
    “Celebrate! Celebrate! Celebrate!” – Dewey Jenkins
  4. Success and failure are temporary conditions.
    “Do not let either of them define you.”
  5. The most precious thing you can find is a friend.
    “A friend is always loyal, a sibling that helps in times of trouble.”
  6. Hatred is the only luxury more costly than an enemy.
    “Hatred is like drinking poison and waiting for the other person to die.”
  7. All the little things in life add up to your life.
    “If you don’t get it right, nothing else matters.”

Autumn is upon us. Cold air sweeps summertime over the hilltop fast and sharp like an old woman sweeping dust out a doorway. The dust washes the landscape with brown and orange, speckled with rusty red, the colors of old cars whose enamel has been erased by the rain in the junkyard of time.

I suspect Solomon wrote the book of Ecclesiastes in the autumn. You remember what he wrote, don’t you?

“Everything has its moment.
There is a moment of ripening and a moment of falling away.

A moment of being born and a moment of dying.
A moment of planting and a moment of harvest.
A moment of killing and a moment of healing.
A moment of destroying and a moment of building.
A moment of weeping and a moment of laughter.
A moment of sorrow and a moment of dancing.

A moment of scattering and a moment of gathering.
A moment of togetherness and a moment of distance.

A moment of finding and a moment of losing.
A moment of grasping and a moment of release.
A moment of ripping and a moment of sewing back together.
A moment of silence and a moment of speech.
A moment of love and a moment of hate.
A moment of fighting and a moment of peace.”

Autumn walks among us, quiet and invisible, like a Mexican ghost on the Day of the Dead.

This is the time of year when I become reflective.

Perhaps you do, too.

Roy H. Williams

Andrew Matthews has inspired more than 1,000 global corporations, including Coca-Cola, McDonald’s, Honda, and Citibank. In addition to that, Andrew and his wife produce uplifting books that have sold over 8 million copies in 70 countries and 48 languages by presenting timeless wisdom in fresh, engaging ways. This week, Andrew reveals his creative process to roving reporter Rotbart and explains how anyone – even you – can use that process to connect, inspire, and succeed in every nation of the world. Wouldn’t this be a great day to stop and recharge your batteries at MondayMorningRadio.com?

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Random Quote:

“I was genetically blessed with a certain wiring that’s very useful in a highly developed market system where there’s lots of chips on the table, and I happen to be good at that game. Ted Williams wrote a book called The Science of Hitting and in it he had a picture of himself at bat and the strike zone broken into, I think, 77 squares. And he said if he waited for the pitch that was really in his sweet spot he would bat .400 and if he had to swing at something on the lower corner he would probably bat .235. And in investing I’m in a ‘no called strike’ business which is the best business you can be in. I can look at a thousand different companies and I don’t have to be right on every one of them, or even fifty of them. So I can pick the ball I want to hit. And the trick in investing is just to sit there and watch pitch after pitch go by and wait for the one right in your sweet spot. And if people are yelling, ‘Swing, you bum,’ ignore ’em. There’s a temptation for people to act far too frequently in stocks simply because they’re so liquid. Over the years you develop a lot of filters. But I do know what I call my ‘circle of competence’ so I stay within that circle and I don’t worry about things that are outside that circle. Defining what your game is – where you’re going to have an edge – is enormously important.”

- Warren Buffett, in the 2017 documentary, Becoming Warren Buffett

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