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Matt Hogan's Blog Posts

Meaning > Fun

The work of living your best life is to set higher standards and then not compromise them.

Higher standards than who? Compared to what?

Compared to the standards you might hold yourself to when living your worst or mediocre life.

When you commit to a higher standard, you’re committing to a harder path.

And why would you want to do that?

Not because taking hard paths is fun, but because taking hard paths is meaningful.

And meaning is, ultimately, what most of us are after.

You don’t hear people asking: “What’s the fun of life?”

People ask: “What’s the meaning of life?”

And while I don’t think there’s a universal explicit answer to this question, what I do know is that always doing what’s easy won’t lead you there.

Doing what’s hard (more likely) will.

So long as it’s hard work that’s meaningful to you. Work that’s aligned with your priorities, strengths, aptitudes, and interests. Work that’s reflective of your higher standards.

This isn’t to say you can’t update and revise your standards as you grow, change, and mature.

It’s merely to say if you give yourself an easier option, that’s the one you’ll ultimately take.

Don’t allow yourself to fall into that trap. Set your standards and hold yourself to them.

Compromise at your own risk.

When Things Go Bad

I don’t know who needs to hear this but, this is one of the most powerful questions I’ve ever come across:

What good can come from this?

There’s always something.

With Every “Give,” Comes A “Take”

When the answers are given to you, the challenge of solving the questions is taken.

When money is given to you, the test of figuring out how to make it for yourself is taken.

When a privileged path to success is given to you, exploring/wandering/getting lost is taken.

Those who get it easy don’t get the depth that comes from overcoming the hard.

Most of us wish everything was just given to us. But, forget what gets taken as a result.

Pull vs. Push

When you follow your curiosities, learning takes care of itself.

When you’re forced to be curious, learning needs to be taken care of.

When you believe strongly enough in a project or cause, working takes care of itself.

When you disbelieve in a project or cause, working needs to be taken care of.

When you give yourself a vision for the future, the days take care of themselves.

When you live without a vision for the future, the days need to be taken care of.

When you follow what naturally pulls you, you won’t have to push yourself all the damn time.

A Hard To Grasp Truth About Fitness

Equal actions often produce unequal results in different people.

Otherwise, everybody could copy precisely what their favorite fit person was doing and get precisely the same results.

As nice as that would be, it isn’t the reality.

Some people never lift a weight and appear fit. Others lift religiously and appear unfit.

While this is a hard truth to grasp, the secret to escaping this demoralizing thought process is actually quite easy: stop comparing yourself to others.

Because while equal actions may produce unequal results, positive actions always leads to positive results in the individual.

And so while your results may not look the same as the person whose lifestyle you’re copying, what also isn’t the same is the person you become after taking those positive actions.

No self-improvement effort is ever wasted. Not even the ones that fail miserably.

The biggest waste isn’t to have tried and failed—it’s to never have tried at all.

For what those initial efforts offer us is something that never trying never could: insight.

Remember this when others are:

  • Eating what you’re avoiding
  • Skipping workouts when you can’t
  • Drinking what you shouldn’t
  • Choosing lethargy when you couldn’t

What some people can do to stay fit isn’t what YOU might have to do to stay fit—keep taking positive actions anyway.

Long-Term Trust > Short-Term Money

Long term trust is exponentially better than short term money.

Because when I trust you, I tell other people about you.

And when I don’t, I also tell other people about you.

What gets said in each conversation has the potential to either exponentially help or hinder your growth in whatever business you’re involved in.

Am I going to refer 10 friends to you or tell my 10 friends never to cross paths with you?

Because whatever I tell them is probably what they’re going to tell their 10 friends, too.

Rather than forcing a sale, always say what you would do if you were them.

And be damn honest about.

When you treat others the way you want to be treated; you’ll always get paid in full.

Regular Updates Required

When was the last time you gave your mindset a software update?

Like your smartphone, regular updates are essential for optimal functionality of your mind.

Many people, however, haven’t updated their mindset in years.

They’re using the latest model iPhone with 2008 software installed. It’s ridiculous.

So, before you go bastardizing your mind for driving you nuts—as extremely old software might—invest in its upgrade!

You can download mind updates via books, podcasts, seminars, conversations, classrooms, etc. And in most cases, you can do so for free.

Here’s the thing: your mindset isn’t bad, it’s not broken, it’s not wrong—it’s just, in many cases, outdated.