After five years, I finally rebuilt my personal site. I consolidated everything into one place and focused less on positioning, more on carving my personal space in the web (like the old dayz).
The site now has four areas, each with a clear purpose. That removes one of my biggest blockers: deciding where something belongs.
We made a big and risky decision this year. There was an opportunity cost if we don’t act and it could not be delayed further. This decision meant that our 6-months emergency fund was spent, and I’m in-debt for the next two years (if our income and spending remains the same).
As the sole provider, it keeps me up at night. It forced me to re-assess our situation.
That is spilt milk under the bridge. I have no regrets with the decision, that purchase was wise for our fast growing kids.
What I want to focus on now is how to move ahead. How can I reduce the risk?
Expanding my luck surface area
Luck is a big factor on where I am now. I can’t control luck, but I can increase my chances of getting lucky by planting seeds, growing my weak ties, expanding my luck surface area.
Prioritize working on things I can show
Given the choices of things to work on, lean on tasks I can use as portfolio or demonstrate my technical depth.
Document the work I do publicly
I have not been very good at writing and documenting things I do at work. I assume it’s too niche, too AWS, too WordPress.
It does not matter. Work ends when it’s documented, not when the PR is merged.
Rebuild my full-stack web dev portfolio
When I shifted into cloud engineering, I stopped building web apps anymore. I’m not a senior-level cloud engineer, but I’m also no longer the web developer I used to be.
I forgot I enjoy doing it until recently when I had an opportunity to work on a small feature that required a UI. I had so much fun. I also forgot I don’t need to wait for opportunities at work to build apps, to solve actual problems. There are a lot of problems where a little bit of software can make a difference.
I’ll find and make more opportunities to do more of software development, which also gives me another path if cloud engineering does not ultimately work out.
Later in my freelance career, I learned the term value-based pricing. It’s a pricing strategy where the price of my service is set based on the value it provides.
This shifted on how I look at things. I started looking at how businesses generate revenue and focus where I could help increase it or reduce costs, then I anchor my rate based off that. It worked well for me. I gravitated to companies where my skills truly added value, which made my work more enjoyable. Hindi lang basta pera.
Thinking this way has become second-nature.
Now, I try to apply it in reverse: value-based giving.
For instance, if I needed a medicine now, I’d book Grab Pabili to have someone buy it for me and bring it to my house. The time and energy I save are worth more than the total cost of the service. It makes it easy to give extra.
Another way I apply it is when I have to hire for help. I don’t haggle. I hire people to get to the same goal, I want to reach it where everyone feels they are paid fairly. Then add extra upon completion.
I have too many ongoing projects. It perfectly reflects the state of my mind. Everything is in my head, without structure.
No project management, no direction, no goal or pressure to finish.
What’s happening is I start a new project. I get stuck or I get to a point that I have to make a decision but for some reason can’t. I let it simmer in my head. Then I start a new project.
The worst part is that my office has become an ever-growing pile of unfinished projects.
Possible solution
One solution I’ve come up with is to pre-decide in advance what I should do each day and then consistently follow through. I call this approach “Project DOTED,” which stands for “Do One Thing Everyday.”
Criteria
To help with the decisions on what to do, these are the guidelines:
Focus on things that would reduce clutter in my office
Small enough that it can fit in my family and work life.
Notable enough that it chip-off towards a completion of a project
Lastly, avoid new projects. Purchase freeze until things are manageable again.
I have a thousand things I need and want to do. Before I could brute force doing as much as I can by compromising my sleep, but it does not work anymore (comes with old age). No good sleep means not a good day.
I have to manage my energy very carefully if I want to progress in anything, and not be trapped in reactionary day.
For the past couple of days, I’ve been re-assessing how I’m spending my time. It’s not easy to have slow mornings anymore. I’m always in a rush. I’ve been spending more time in my office than at home. I go home
I’ve been working on a migration script for a couple of hours. I thought I’m done with the hard part of API calls, creating a new workspace, configuring the workspace to make it work.
The remaining task involves updating the configuration code itself to point to the new service provider. I didn’t anticipate spending hours on this since it’s a straightforward text manipulation. I expected this to be something I already knew how to do.
Previously, my approach was to exhaust all possible solutions on my own, often waiting until the last minute before asking. I don’t want to risk appearing like a fool.
Now, I’ve adopted a different approach. I ask for help proactively and provide updates on the steps I’m taking in the process. The team can respond if they knew the answer and if they got time.
It’s just a question! A single question could not possibly define my overall skill level.
The responses I got have been helpful, and I was able to complete my task.
I used to be sold to the idea of sharing economy. Uber, AirBnb, and not owning
things. It fits well with my minimalist lifestyle.
I distinctly remember trying my first Uber ride. At that moment, I thought
“Why would I need a car? A car that I have to maintain, and buy insurance for”.
I even considered limiting everything I own in a backpack, which would allow me
to move wherever I want, whenever I want.
Owning a car
Sure, owning a car is more expensive overall. But it buys me freedom. Uber is
convenient only to places where they operate, at the time when there’s a
demand. With a car, I have the flexibility to travel on my terms, have my own
private space. I don’t have to worry about whether I can book a ride to the
specific place I want to go at any given time.
Owning a place
“Most people, Kamala, are like a falling leaf, which is blown and is turning
around through the air, and wavers, and tumbles to the ground. But others, a
few, are like stars, they go on a fixed course, no wind reaches them, in
themselves they have their law and their course”
— Siddhartha
Sure, being able to move at whim seems nice. Having tried it though, I felt
lost. “What the hell am I doing? What am I trying to prove?” is what I remember
thinking when I was moving to my 4th hostel.
Having my own place allows me to establish roots. It gives me a home, a space
where I feel at ease and can be myself, doing things that suit me. Unlike
renting, where even something as simple as putting a nail in the wall requires
permission, ownership offers the freedom to make decisions about the space
without constraints.
Owning a decision
Ownership extends beyond material things, it includes decisions too. When I own
a decision, I take responsibility for the resulting outcome. Regardless if
it’s good or bad.
If in my mind it’s somebody else’s fault, how the hell can that help? Owning a
decision puts myself in a position where I can correct myself when I
acknowledge I made a bad move.
Ownership comes with higher costs — more money, more responsibility, more time
and effort. However, the sense of having more influence over the direction of
my life makes it worth it for me.
I used to think that I needed a separate workspace because working from home was challenging due to my kids. They would close my laptop, type on it, and constantly demand my attention, making it difficult to work.
While it’s partially true, I realized that it’s not the main reason.
My main reason for needing a separate workspace is rooted in my values that family comes first. Given the choice between working and attending to my kids, prioritizing my kids is a no-brainer. Whenever they are around, it’s tough choosing anything else because I know that it’s not forever that they’d want me around. I just got to enjoy it while they do.
I still have to work though. Being physically away from my kids allows me to do my job and be able to provide.
It’s a small nuance, but the end result is still the same — I have to be away working.
This is more on resolving an internal conflict when I have to work long hours. There are instances I question myself “Akala ko ba priority family? Ba’t puro ako trabaho?”. Now, I have a clear answer.
I’ve been wanting to write and publish for a while, but I’ve been overly critical about what’s worth sharing or not.
I often consider things that, in hindsight, prove to be unnecessary, such as:
It has to provide value
I learned that sharing my personal experiences in itself have value. It brings up visibility on my interest that might resonate with other people too.
It has to be worth other’s people time
We’re clearly bad judges of our own creations. We should just put them out there and let the world decide. - Derek Sivers
I could not possibly know what’s worth other people’s time. It’s an imaginary audience in my head that put unnecessary pressure on me. Publish and let people decide.
It has to be structured, easy to read
At this point, it doesn’t matter how my posts are structured. The goal is be comfortable on publishing and sharing stuff. The goal is to keep on sharing. It could be a single sentence or a well-thought of piece. It doesn’t matter.
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In general, writing does not have to be for other people. However, the thought that someone else might read it forces me to structure my writing enough that it makes sense. If I were writing solely for myself, I would write things that would not make sense even to me a few weeks, months, years from now.
Writing for other people is just an excuse to force myself to extract clarity out of what’s inside my head.
I first learned about this word when I attended Vipassana back in 2016.
I don’t only remember it, but it’s ingrained in my head because it’s the word that’s used to break the hours-long meditation sessions that happen a couple times a day for 10 days. I began to yearn for it, especially when back pain becomes unbearable from sitting up straight, or there’s a mosquito right on my nose sucking out my blood, and we’re instructed to just observe. Observe our breathing. See how everything comes and goes.
Anicca means impermanence.
The word resonated with me so much I had it tattooed on my right forearm. When I learned that it is transliterated as “anicca” from Pali, I knew it’s going to be the name of our baby girl.
And here she is.
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Nothing in life is permanent. Being aware and accepting this fact will only help us prepare, and face the things that will come and go.
It’s a belief that makes me balanced. It’s a belief I want to introduce to my kids and see if it’s going to resonate with them too.
I’m actually writing this on Jan 2nd already, but family stuff happened and I’m okay to back-post to fulfill my new year’s resolution which is to publish everyday.
Publish everyday, no matter how insignificant my update is. Why? I feel like I’ve been keeping too much stuff inside my head. Stuff not written down only fills in my limited head space. Once I write it down, I’m free to let go of it. Or look back with what I published when I feel like I need to.
Bad start, but it’s okay
Here’s to a bad start of posting late in the first day of the year. But forgiving myself and still doing it anyway.
For a couple of months now, my days are mostly filled work and family time. I feel guilty with the amount of time I’m spending at work. What I do is every time not spent working is spent on family.
No time to slow down, let alone to stop.
This has been detrimental to me on multiple aspects.
Mentally
With my days filled, there’s minimal wiggle room for exploration and mistakes. This puts unnecessary pressure to myself. With pressure, I don’t operate optimally. Even the simplest tasks take a long time to get started and push to completion.
Emotionally
Even if I’m physically with my family, I cannot be fully present. At the back of my mind, there’s this anxiety of things I need to do.
Not being fully present makes me feel more guilty.
Failing to deliver things on expectations I set hits my self-esteem. A lower self-esteem results to failing to deliver more.
It’s a downward spiral that takes a lot of self-awareness and willpower to get out of.
Physically
With feeling limited of time, exercise was one of the first thing that went away. Without exercise and pushing myself hard, I felt weaker and unprepared for day-to-day challenges. I easily get ticked-off, I easily give-in.
It’s counterintuitive to slow down when I have a lot of things on my plate. But it’s exactly what I need when my days are filled.
If your brain is a highway and you are filling yourself with work, after a while you start to slow down. Your mental rush hour gets longer and longer. You find yourself struggling to accomplish even the simplest tasks.
Today, I took time to stop and reflect where I’m at.
One of the first steps to get out of this rabbit hole of always pressured, always in a rush, and failing to manage expectations.
While doing a weekly review earlier today, I realized most of the stuff in my plans are for other people. I don’t have a day where I get to do things I’m naturally drawn to do. I fill all my days with things I have to do — which I actually don’t have an issue with, but leaves me unfulfilled.
Maybe this is also why when I share that I’m planning to try something new, I get a laugh instead of support. I can’t blame them. My want-to-dos only has been increasing. I should explicitly make time for it.
I’ll try this: I won’t plan work stuff on my Saturdays. I added a note in my weekly planner and calendar to remind me to do things for myself.
What do you want to do that you don’t have to do?
It’s important to have a day where you’re not busy. To think, to plan. If you’re always anxious about your have-to-dos, you won’t get any thinking done. You’ll just react to things without a direction. This will leave you astray, unfulfilled, sad.
Try it on Saturdays. Go to your office with no agenda. But to think, to do things you feel like doing. Without pressure.
“Can you remember who you were, before the world told you who you should be.” - Charles Bukowski
For this year, I’m explicitly deciding to put myself first.
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Self-care
I can’t expect other people to take care of me. It’s a nice-to-have, but I shouldn’t really rely on it. Other people already have their own set of priorities and problems, I can’t reasonably expect another person to put me first.
To change: Prepare and have the capacity to take care of myself
Be a less agreeable person
It’s easy for me to empathize with anyone. This leads me to being an overly agreeable person. By default, I put other’s people needs over my own. It’s genuine, but I’m at a point that I feel it’s a disservice to myself. I’m here to lead a good life, to be an example to my 3 sons. I’m not here to please.
To change: Put my needs first. Less empathy, more enforcing of boundaries. Embrace tension, conflicts, and disagreements. Don’t tolerate any form of disrespect. People may cut me off, and that’s okay.
Indulging myself
Spending for other people is infinitely easier for me than spending for myself. I’m thinking it might be a symptom that deep down I feel I don’t deserve to have nice things. I don’t particularly like the word “deserve” because it reeks entitlement , but in this case I think I deserve it.
To change: As long as I fulfill my duties and roles, I’m allowing myself to indulge guilt-free to things I need, want, and prefer.
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Everything here sounds too selfish to me, but I have to remind myself: The better I take care of myself, the better I will handle life, the better it will be for people around me.
“Way too often we bring the best of ourselves to work and the leftovers home.” - Esther Perel
This has been a slap in my face when I realized it’s true. I’ve been putting all my prime energy at work — the fun, energetic, solve-all-your-problems attitude version of myself. I go home tired, irritated, no energy left for my family. My thought is it was justified since my main role was providing, and I’m doing it fairly well. But turns out it doesn’t align with my values.
Strong values makes easy decisions
What I do now is have “slow mornings”. I do not go to work until my kids wake up, have breakfast, and I spent time with them (with as little gadget use as possible). I also make sure I’m around when it’s bed time, regardless of deadlines and deliverables. Those can wait until my kids are asleep.
One of my core value that I identified is family comes before work. I couldn’t count how many times I ditched work to spend fun times with my kids now. Ditching work is easy if the question is should I have fun with my kids or be guilt-ridden procrastinating while I try to work? Of course my default answer is have fun with my kids. My prime energy is for my family.
What’s my work structure looks like now?
The only time I’m guilt-free working is when they are sleeping. However, working only when they are sleeping isn’t sustainable. I still need to work. After all, providing is still my primary role.
My kids wake up at 6-7am, then I stick around to spend time with them up to 10am. I officially start my work day by then. I try to go home for lunch, late afternoon walk, and dinner, then go back to my office until bed time at 9pm. This is a hard stop of my work hours. It’s very important for me to be there at bed time. Usually, if I still need to deliver something within the day, I’d just set an alarm at 11pm to wake up and continue working.
I preferably not want to work beyond 3am because I wouldn’t have good energy when my kids wake up. If I’m still not done by that time, I’d reset expectations.
Where do I compromise?
I want to be good with family and work. My work enables us live a good life. So where do I compromise? Sleep. Year-over-year I’ve been needing less sleep. I’m at 6 hours/night now. This is why I have more coffee in my blood than water. 😛
There’s a 2 hour gap between my average time in bed and average time asleep because my kids usually takes sometime to sleep. We ask about their day, pray, and say thanks for everything we’re grateful for (usually for new toys). It’s extra fun when they start talking.
Why am I doing this?
Kids belong to themselves. The process of them leaving you starts when they leave your body. - Marriage Story
Well, in my case it started when they left my wife’s body. I can imagine it’s a long steady process of them leaving slowly until they are capable on their own.
“They grow up fast, spend time with them while you can.” is a recurring theme when I read about parenting stuff. This is why I try to spend as much time with them as I can. Soon enough they wouldn’t even want to hang out with me anymore (and that’s okay).
I’ve accepted that the next 10-20 years of my life will be mostly about supporting them. Things I selfishly want to do, I can do later on if I’m still given the time. All the time spent with them is well worth it on it’s own anyway.
Ultimately, it’s a meaningful experience to witness a human being that was part of myself grow to be their own self. And I just want to witness as much as I can.
One thing that significantly changed in me when I had kids is the willingness to build wealth.
My family is never really about luxury. We’ve never really envied other people who has more than us. My upbringing is heavily biased on being contented with what we have (thanks Ma!). There’s natural resistance to excess. And that’s how I am up to now.
Bringing kids to this world though, have this good burden of wanting to provide and secure them the basic necessities of life. That’s how I see my primary role now: a provider. However, there’s really no guarantee up until when I’ll be alive. The best option I have is to build wealth as fast as possible that can cover their life up until they are capable of choosing their own path.
At the core of what I do and why I’m motivated to work hard is actually a disguise on being ready to die anytime.
How I’m preparing to die
The best way I effectively work is when I have a crystal clear vision of what I want to achieve. I’ve identified two goals that, when achieved, I can go peacefully:
House and lot per kid - with a lot of luck, I was able to achieve this recently. Whatever happens now, at the very least they will have a place to live in.
5m per kid - to cover basic necessities and education up to college - this will take some time to achieve. My strategy for this one is get to a term-life insurance until I get to this point. Regardless of what happened to me, they will still be covered.
Of course I want to provide them more than material things. I’m figuring those out along the way. I just consider this as the baseline of what I’m aiming to provide.
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There’s this line in one of my favorite song when I contemplate about death: love is watching someone die — so who’s gonna watch you die?
I sure hope that my kids are the ones who’ll be there. Already equipped for whichever path they choose and ready to whatever challenge the world is going to throw at them.
Whenever I’m in a tough situation, it has become my habit to ask “what’s the worst thing that can happen?”
Let’s say I got delayed on a project. What’s the worst that can happen? I get fired. Then what? I will still be alive by then, I could find another job. I also know that I’ve minimized my risks enough that I could live the same lifestyle for a few months without any income. There isn’t really something to be anxious about.
I read that the fear we feel didn’t evolve as human’s circumstances improved. The fear we feel getting fired is irrationally similar to being in a life-and-death situation.
Fear’s primary purpose is to keep us from things that threatens our lives. If it’s something that can cause irreversible consequences (total disability, jail, death), sure it makes sense to be afraid. But if it’s not, fear just becomes a hindrance to think of solutions. So how do I lessen it?
Acknowledge the worst outcome
Explicitly acknowledging what’s the worst that can happen makes myself realize that hey I ain’t gonna die. I can move on to thinking how I can actually rectify my situation. A significant amount of mistakes can be corrected.
For a delayed project, most people just want to be updated. Sharing what’s the cause of the delay and how I plan to stay on track is a very good first step to do.
I don’t have control on how they will react. But regardless if they understood my situation or the worst actually happened, I’m prepared. The important thing is I was not paralyzed by fear, I started moving again.
I used to procrastinate making decisions because I fear making the wrong one. I preferred to keep things hanging until somebody else takes action. Even for the smallest things like where should we eat? It gets worse the bigger the decision needs to be made.
Something I admire with Julie and her family is they make decisions amazingly fast. Action takes place soon after. I wanted this pace, so I identified what keeps me from deciding and address it.
I adopted these mindset to prevent option paralysis.
1. A wrong decision is better than no decision
Indecision leads to more indecision. With indecision, I am neither moving forward or backward. It stops momentum.
Things moving are better than things in undecided state.
2. Have a default answer
When asked where to eat, I usually say McDo. I don’t mind if it gets rejected or an alternative is presented. It’s way better than kahit saan (anywhere).
It’s the same with starting with a blank canvas. Starting from scratch is harder than editing something existing (at least for me).
3. I can change my mind (pwede mag-bago ng isip)
Yes, changing minds come at a cost. But the information you get by actually trying things is worth the cost (usually).
If it turns out I made a wrong decision, I’ll acknowledge the fault and change my mind.
This is the same strategy with digital marketing. I can’t really know what ad will work until I try it out. I don’t know and have no control of how people will react. I need to try and find out. Stop the ads that isn’t performing, and double down on those that’s working.
The more information I get, the better decisions I can make.
4. Avoid deciding on things I don’t even have control of
Let’s say I liked a particular job ad. The question I should be deciding on isn’t “Should I apply or not?” (the answer is always yes).
The only time I should decide in this scenario is if I’m at a point where a job is offered. Because in that position, I’m the one in control if I should accept or reject the offer.
Applying to the job alone doesn’t particularly change anything in my life. I shouldn’t think too much about it.
5. Letting go is an option too
If you can’t let it go, face it. If you can’t face it, let it go.
I have to be explicit in acknowledging I’m letting this go to let myself know that I’m really letting it go.
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These strategies has served me well. I make fast decisions now. I’m action-oriented. And I enjoy moving things forward (or backward as long as things are moving).
I tried an unstructured life for a few months. No wake up time, no schedule, no commitment on deliverables. I was free to do anything I feel like doing. It seemed like the ideal state to be in, right?
I quickly realized though, this kind of lifestyle isn’t for me.
Day after day pass without anything meaningful happening. I had a list of things I wanted to do when I was super busy, but I have a lot of friction getting started.
My main issue turned out to be not having a structure.
I used to think being free means being able to do anything I want. It’s true. But what isn’t obvious is suddenly you have to decide on a lot things. Deciding on every single thing every day is mentally exhausting. “What am I going to do today? What time am I going to start? How much time should I spend on it?”
Pre-deciding is the key
A full-time job have a built-in structure. I wake up, take a shower, go to office. And in the office I have another set of routine to sit-down, identify what you need to do, do it until end of day.
This works because things are pre-decided for me. I didn’t have to think about it. I just have to follow it. That’s why it’s easier to do things.
I still don’t want the 9-5 lifestyle. It’s too rigid for me. What I end up copying is only pre-deciding on things. I start each week with a weekly planning where I check my calendar with upcoming commitments. I then list things I have to deliver within the week and arbitrarily put them any day depending on when it’s expected.
This significantly reduced the friction on how I start my day. Because it was pre-decided already. I just have to sit down and do it.
Structure sets me free in a way I don’t have to think of what I need to do everyday.
Put me in a bad situation and I’ll find a way to blame it on myself. Be it lack of action, lack of insight, or lack of preparedness.
This isn’t some self-pity indulgence. It’s more of putting myself in a position where I could do something.
Imagine the alternative: blaming it on another person. What I’m doing here is just unloading an unwanted feeling to another person. How the other person will react is out of my control. Most likely, nothing is going to change.
Putting the blame on myself let me focus on things I could have done instead. Learn from it and apply it to similar situations moving forward.
Do this only if you have a healthy sense of self-awareness
Lately, I realized that this is only applicable if a person have a healthy sense of self-awareness. There’s a thin line between this and “everything is my fault” attitude.
The key difference is knowing deep down that any mistake is not tied to one’s being. Simply put even if I failed on certain things, I’m not a failure. That’s not how human works. I know that a single failure couldn’t possibly define my whole being.
With this mindset, I’m always forward looking. I see failures as learning opportunities. I don’t feel helpless.
Rather, the discomfort I feel blaming myself is similar to the discomfort I feel when lifting weights. Both increases my capacity. Mental capacity with the former, physical capacity with the latter.
I heard the idea “fake it till you make it” back in college. I tried it a few times. But every time I do, something always felt off. The whole interaction that comes after is usually stressful. I put myself in a position where I have to be careful with my words, where I can’t be fully myself, or share challenges I encounter with what I have to deliver.
It’s a big disservice to the other person because expectations were not properly managed. If they knew I couldn’t do certain tasks, they could’ve tap other people to do the work instead.
Beyond this, faking doesn’t align with my values. I value truthfulness (even if it hurts). If I don’t practice it myself, how can I expect other people to do the same? This incongruence with how I want to live versus how I’m living makes me uneasy. It’s essentially lying to myself.
A better alternative: face it till you make it
The way I approach it now is saying what I’m lacking upfront. I’m straightforward with things I don’t know. I’m more willing to appear like a fool now. No one is expert on everything anyway.
I lay all my cards. I share what I’m good at and how can I help them achieve their goals. I share my plan on how I’ll address my lack of skills.
It’s a risk if they want to continue to work with me. But it’s a risk they can decide for themselves. The other person can make an informed decision.
If they do decide to go ahead, I’d be grateful for the trust. I’d go extra mile to deliver what they need. If not, that’s okay. There are countless other people. I just need to match with people that will benefit with my current expertise.
I used to be too critical with grammar and spelling (on myself and other people). I had instances when if I’m not sure I’m absolutely correct, I’d choose to stay silent than say what I wanted to say. Out of fear of being wrong.
Misspelled words here doesn’t mean I’m better than this person. I couldn’t even do anything listed here myself. I don’t have his skill.
I understood that “scoop” meant “scope”, “high silling” meant “high ceiling”. I understood the breakdown of work and it’s cost. Which is exactly what I asked for.
Words are just tools for communication. If another person was able to convey what he wanted to say, then the tool served its purpose. No need to be too critical. That’s what matters, right?
In my younger years, my goal was to be self-reliant, self-sufficient, self-made. Focused mostly on self. I want to be able to accomplish things without relying on anyone. And I was fairly becoming good at it.
The mindset I had was anyone can leave me anytime and I’ll be fine. It seemed like a nice idea at that time. However, this has limited the relationships I had to reach up to surface-level only. I was always on guard. It was very easy for me to cut people off as soon as there’s unpleasantness. There was no chance for relationships to grow.
The older I get though, the more it’s evident that self-sufficiency at a cost of relationships isn’t worth it. Okay, I can manage by myself. Now what? It turns out that dealing, facing, fixing the unpleasantness is a big part of what makes life a more meaningful experience.
Losing self
The second lie, is that I can make myself happy. That’s the lie of self-sufficiency. As anybody on their deathbed will tell you, the things that make people happy is the deep relationships of life, the losing of self-sufficiency.
I’ve accepted that I can’t do it all. I’ve been learning how to depend on other people. I try to share my problems even if it’s not natural for me to do. I do this to let them know that they’re safe to do the same. That they can depend on me when they need to.
I also actively reach out. I intentionally keep connections open. I show up to their life events. And it’s worth the effort.
I realized that losing of self-sufficiency is actually expanding of self. There are parts of me that shows only when I’m with people I trust and depend on. I did not lose anything. It’s quite the opposite. I gained a better understanding of myself.
I’m taking a two-month break of taking in new projects. Not out of burnout, but out of desire to try a different direction. I have this itch of starting something of my own initiative. This is especially hard for me because I’m not a visionary. I’m more of the person someone would trust executing a vision.
Timing also feels right as I’m turning 30 in two months. This is the kind gift I want to give myself before starting my next decade.
My focus for the next few weeks
This website
Create structure/framework/process that makes it real easy for me to publish and share
Create a habit of sharing of things I’m doing and learning
I love to teach. Sharing my journey teaches other people too.
Create a habit of writing and publishing
Publishing is the notable change here. By publishing, I’m forced to articulate my thoughts in a way another person can understand it.
This is an optical illusion called Ebbinghaus illusion. It shows that when you put a circle around bigger circles, it looks smaller. But when you put it around smaller circles, it looks bigger despite that there’s no actual difference in size.
There’s this saying that you are the average of your friends. I think it’s the same thing, because we tend to be around people we don’t feel little in.
We are inclined to avoid uncomfortable situations.
If we want to grow, being the circle with bigger circles is a more optimal position to be in. There’s a lot of room for growth.
Unlike being the circle with smaller circles where we already feels big, there’s no incentive to grow.
When I hear the word unfair, it usually comes from the perspective of the one being taken advantage of.
I didn’t realize that being in an unfair situation has a good side too. We can be unfair by giving more than necessary, by giving benefit of the doubt when it’s not warranted, by being the more loving when it isn’t even reciprocated.
I think this is the unfairness we should strive for. To be on the giving end. To be in a position where we have too much, we absolutely have to give without expecting anything in return.
Life isn’t fair. It’s good that we strive for fairness. It’s even better if we strive for unfairness, but on the giving end.
I’ve been dreading having another unexpected stressors for the past weeks because it kept throwing me off-balance. Every single time it happens I get flooded with anxiety, which make me not able to function properly. I end up binge watching a Netflix series which only exacerbate my problem, which causes me more anxiety, until I’m at a full stop. My knee-jerk reaction is to wish for a life without stress.
There are rare moments though when I regain enough self-awareness to understand what’s going on. I realized that my anxiety will not be solved by a stress-free life. Stress are inevitable. My anxiety will be solved by knowing that I have the capacity to handle any stress that come my way. Instead of wishing it to go away, it’s better to wish for increased capacity to handle stress. Being better at handling unexpected turn of things. That is the way forward because it prepares me to whatever lies ahead.
How should I deal with it next time it happens?
Ask yourself “What’s the worst thing that could happen? R u gonna die??”. If not, consider that your brain is most likely exaggerating it’s effect on your life. If the worst thing that can happen is losing your job or client, you can definitely find another one.
Exercise and eat right. Mind and body are obviously connected. The better you take care of yourself, the better you’ll handle life.
Reframe stressors as life’s challenges. It’s like a puzzle that’s waiting to be solved. Solving it will reward you a natural high (a flood of oxytocin).
Pray. Praying is an exercise of self-awareness. When you pray, you put in to words what you‘re wishing for. Putting it to words makes your thought concrete. A concrete thought gives you clarity and helps yourself understand what you are going through. It helps you focus on things you can do for yourself. For the things that’s out of your control, you can leave it to God. Do your part, then let go and let God.
All these will most likely turn my anxiety to ansaya teh.
I’m starting a personal weekly goal of producing something I can show. The idea is based on Patrick McKenzie’s advice with the same title. Ever since I read it a few years back, it stuck with me. His advice boils down to: Don’t end the week with nothing. Prefer to work on things you can show. Ship it and intentionally seek feedback. A week seems the sweet spot with the way I operate. Shorter time means there will be too much pressure and I’ll just abandon it after a few days. Longer time means the project will be dragging. With a week, I can catch up if I miss a few days on not working on something at all, but with the right amount of urgency.
What should I work on? What qualifies a work that I can show here?
Ideally, I want to work on things that utilizes my accumulated capital. Something that demonstrates value I can provide. However I’m sure that it will not always be the case every week. I can work on things that enriches my life in any way. Be it writing a helpful blog I can reference in the future and publishing it. At the very least, I can work on anything I want as long I have a concrete valuable output to show. Just don’t end the week with nothing. This page will act an index what I have to show every week. Week 08: Personal DashboardWeek 09: Julie’s Contract MakerWeek 10: Homebridge integration with Broadlink Week 11: THTF Facebook Bot Week 12: ERPNext implementation at CLP Week 13: Week 14:
Adjusting is normal, expected, and encouraged. It means you’re setting a plan, then adjusting that plan as new information arrives. — You Need a Budget: Rule One
This is from a budgeting methodology. However, this also applies to planning in general.
Things rarely go according to plan. But that doesn’t mean planning is useless. Planning gives you enough insight to know what to anticipate. What was planned isn’t absolute. It can and should be adjusted as events unfolds.
There is a very old story, often told to fill time during training courses, involving a man trying to fix his broken boiler. Despite his best efforts over many months, he simply can’t mend it. Eventually, he gives up and decides to call in an expert. The engineer arrives, gives one gentle tap on the side of the boiler, and stands back as it springs to life. The engineer presents the man with a bill, and the man argues that he should pay only a small fee as the job took the engineer only a few moments. The engineer quietly explains that the man is not paying for the time he took to tap the boiler but rather the years of experience involved in knowing exactly where to tap. — Excerpt From: Richard Wiseman. “59 Seconds”
Individuals’ efforts to pursue their own interest may frequently benefit society more than if their actions were directly intending to benefit society —Adam Smith
I always say, ‘Look, I’d rather you take an extra minute or two and slow up service to get it right.’ Because the one minute behind you are now is going to become six minutes behind because we’re going to have to redo the plate. — For A More Ordered Life, Organize Like A Chef
One of the things that seems counterintuitive is not to rush things especially if you need to rush things.
Rushing leads to low-quality, compromised work that may take you more time in other, not-obvious ways.
I did not know how to do it right, so first I did it wrong.
One thing that prevents me from doing a lot of things is the fear of being wrong. Much more worse than doing something wrong is not doing it at all. Hindi obvious sa akin to dati: being wrong is a really good form of feedback. Kasi it hurts. Ngayon I try to use that feeling as a cue na I need to change something. Feedbacks are key things in getting better. Don’t pressure yourself to do it “right” the first time. If you got it wrong, celebrate! Because now you’ve got something specific to improve on.
Mahalaga pala matuto mag overlook. Of flaws and superficialities, and of things that doesn’t really matter (right now or ever). It frees the mind for more important things.
One thing I learned from Julie is learning how to ask.
I usually over think when I’m about to ask for an extra ketchup or a raise. It doesn’t matter which. I just… over think.
I got from her that it’s just a freaking question and people can just say no if they don’t want to.
Don’t make it such a big deal.
Making it a big deal: This is another thing I need to address. Since I spend a lot of energy before asking, I get offended by those who say no to me. Rejection is something I dread hearing. This one of the reasons why I’m afraid to ask in the first place.
Rejection is fine, don’t make it such a big deal. You can just go ask somebody else. Life doesn’t end on rejection. If you can’t go straight ahead, go find a workaround.
I just sorted out all my debt and budgeted my remaining money yesterday and it felt I’m in control of my life! Haha
There’s this fresh start feature on YNAB that will hide all your previous, probably unaccounted, transactions. It eliminates the burden of what-has-been.
The idea is: you only need to think on what you have now and what will be your future spendings. You just can’t change anything to what was spent, just let it go and clear your mind of it.
Maybe it’s the same with blogging. I have been wanting to write for a long time, I was just waiting for my excuses to dry up haha.
I got most of it wrong. Akala ko you just preset yourself, your skills, your education and that’s it. It’s up to the employer to figure out how they’ll use you. Dalawa lang daw goal ng companies why they hire
Increase revenue
Reduce cost
Use that insight for every decision you do about your resume. Pano mo made-demonstrate na you can increase revenue or reduce cost? What do you bring to the table? Make it easy for them to see what value can you deliver Sell yourself kung baga You don’t sell a product (yourself) by what it can do, you sell a product by what it can do to make your (company’s) life easier/better