Five Questions about Life Choices We Must Ask Ourselves Today
Not all of them rank the same
This article is originally published in Midori by the Sea’s Newsletter. You can subscribe it here.
Talk to any entrepreneur, successful people and craftsman, you will hear them talking about how they work their asses off all the time. Malcolm Gladwell’s book the Outliers also talks about how it takes around 10,000 hours to master our crafts.
But there’s also a contradictory message from society reminding us to strike a work-life balance. Questioning if there’s a point in missing our family life, screwing up our health, just for the sake of working.
It sounds like a tough choice to make. Assuming we are pretty ambitious people, how do we make the right life choices?
Self-limiting choices vs life-expanding choices
People often say ‘life is made of up choices’. It’s true, but not all choices rank equally.
Choosing to do a job that gives you a lot of money but no time for family and ourselves, that’s a self-limiting choice. The smarter choice should be to find a job that gives you enough money but also enough time. The smartest choice is to find a job that rejuvenates you, gives you enough money and time.
A life-expanding choice is often based on knowing how much is enough for us (not for others), and how much with make us thrive.
From there, we need to make smart choices that allow us to do that. For example, evaluating if the current skill set will allow us to find a perfect job. or to do extensive research into how much is enough money and what job should that be.
Of course, some of the choices we made could turn out to be wrong. Here I must remind you to stop blaming yourself. No matter your choices are ‘right’ or ‘wrong’, we always need to periodically review and tweak our choices anyways.
There’s always a second chance.
What I’ve learned about choices from failing Dry January
I discovered how toxic my relationship with alcohol was during dry January. I used it to reduce social anxiety, as escapism. But I also realised I love a glass of good wine, it’s a genuine appreciation.
On three occasions, I made a conscious choice that passing the great red wine my friend brought back from France will make me regret it, so I let my Dry Jan fail, drank responsibly and picked up alcohol-free habits again the next day. It is a life-expanding choice because I got to try some premium wine, and I don’t feel guilty about it because I switched to non-alcoholic drinks otherwise, and I’ve learned so much about the alcohol-free industry and myself, that I know me drinking a lot less is not just a January thing, it will be a life-long thing.
If anything, failing dry Jan empowered me to make a choice on taking or passing the alcohol. I become conscious of it, I know how much I need.
Here’s my video about how failing dry Jan taught me how to drink moderately for a lifetime:






