4 Unexpected emotions in retirement

4 Unexpected emotions in retirement

I’ve helped many people transition into retirement over the years and when I ask a new retiree how things are going, the response is generally positive.  That said, retirement is a huge transition and there are always unexpected feelings or emotions that crop up.  That doesn’t necessarily mean that there’s something wrong with your retirement.  It just means that you’re normal.  So don’t be surprised if you feel one or more of the following:

The Problem: I feel guilty.

This is surprisingly common and I’ve seen it manifest itself in two ways.  The first is guilt if you’re not doing much or making the most of your time.  You finally have some free time and you struggle with how to use it.  You feel guilty because watching T.V. or running errands doesn’t quite feel like sucking the marrow out of life.

The second is guilt if you’re doing fun stuff that your friends and family aren’t doing because they’re still working.  I’ve actually had clients hesitate before responding to me when I ask “What did you do today?”  The answer is “I went golfing” or “We saw a matinee and then went for a walk” but they are hesitant to say that because they know I spent my day behind a desk.  When prodded, they say they don’t want to make others feel bad or come across as boastful.

The fix

For the first type of guilt, don’t worry!  You’ll get better at it.  You control a much bigger piece of your time in retirement and that takes some getting used to.  Work hard to do things that leave you feeling happy and fulfilled, but keep in mind that not every minute of your day has to be spent bungee jumping or traveling.  Sometimes the best way to spend a day is binge watching House of Cards on Netflix.

For the second type of guilt, just allow it to pass.  Don’t become an insufferable braggart, but don’t feel guilty about enjoying your life either.  You worked hard and made good decisions.  Enjoy your time.

The problem: I’m second guessing my decision.

Buyer’s remorse is a real thing.  Chances are you’ve felt it if you’ve ever bought a house or had to make some similar big decision and feared making the wrong choice.  It can creep up after retirement as well and cause you to question whether you should have retired in the first place.

The fix

I have a client who has been dealing with this lately and she shared something that I thought was really insightful.  She said, “Whenever I second guess my decision, I focus on why I retired in the first place.”  Her choice would have been to work for five more years, but two things happened: Her mom was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s and her grandkids were all at an age when hanging out with grandma was just about the best the thing ever.  If she had stuck to her timeline and worked for five more years, there’s a pretty good chance that her mom may no longer be around and her by then teenage grandkids will have priorities other than grandma.  In other words, she gave something up, but got something far greater in return. There are pros and cons with most decisions in life.  Retirement is no different.  Keep that in mind.

The problem: I feel disappointed.

Most of us have an idealized view of retirement.  Add years of anticipation to the mix or a personality that enjoys the structure and challenge of work and it’s not uncommon to feel a bit underwhelmed after entering retirement.

The fix

The best way to avoid disappointment is to retire TO something rather than FROM something.  If all you do is subtract things—work, obligations, commitments—you simply create a void in your life. That void can open you to self-doubt, regret, lack of purpose and boredom. Nature abhors a vacuum. If you take something out, you need to replace it with something else (e.g. travel, school, a second career, hobby, etc.).  The goal is not to do nothing. That just creates a void. The goal is to do what excites you.

And test those plans out before you retire.  I most often see disappointment arise when a person has prepared for retirement using all lesson and no lab.  In other words, all of their retirement plans are in their head or on a sheet of paper, and they haven’t spent any time actually testing and refining those plans.  Reality can’t compete with 40 years of idealized assumptions.

The problem: I feel like a fish out of water.

No matter how prepared you think you are for retirement, you will probably still struggle.  It’s a huge transition.  The routine you’ve had for the last 40 years is out the window.  That can be a bit disorienting for many people.

The fix

When talking with a client recently, she compared retirement to becoming a parent for the first time.  “Before becoming parents we read books, painted the nursery, sought advice from other parents and bought all the cribs, carriers and countless other things that parents need.  We thought we were totally prepared.  And then we had our first child and all that went out the window.  Retirement is similar.  As prepared as you think you are, you really can’t grasp what it takes or what it will be like until you’re actually living it.  Your experience will be totally different than the guy next door.”  Great advice.  Yes, there are tons of things that you can and should do to prepare, but the battle is always different than basic training.  Don’t get discouraged.  You’ll figure it out and get better at it with practice.  Focus on living the life that you want to live. Imagine your ideal life and then work backwards from there to figure out the most direct path to where you want to be. Focus intently on the things that matter to you and throw yourself into them wholeheartedly. That kind of focus and tactical thinking will help you rapidly flatten your learning curve and smooth your transition into retirement.

Remember that retirement is not a date on the calendar, it’s a life stage that will last for years.  Think back to when you first became an adult.  Were you better at it at 28 than you were at 18?  Of course.  The same will be true with retirement.  It might feel a little awkward at first, but you’ll get better at it over time.

~ Joe

Don’t throw good life after bad

Don’t throw good life after bad

In business, a sunk cost is a cost that has already been incurred and can’t be recovered.  Economists tell us that we shouldn’t factor these costs in when making a rational decision about how to proceed.  Since we’re human and hate losses, however, we often use these previous costs as justification to invest more.

The more we invest in something, the harder it becomes to abandon.  To change would be to admit that those previous investments were wasted.  That’s a tough pill to swallow, so we engage in what economists call a sunk cost fallacy or what psychologists call irrational escalation.  You and I might more easily refer to it as throwing good money after bad.  Or for my British readers, in for a penny, in for a pound.

Most of the discussion around sunk costs has to do with money, but money isn’t the only metric.  Time is another resource we invest.  So is effort.  We invest those things in relationships, life pursuits, plans for retirement, a career.  Sometimes those investments pay off and get us to where we want to be.  Other times we realize, if given the chance to do it over, we would have chosen differently.  In those cases, just like the business person should not throw good money after bad, we should not throw good life after bad.  Or good time after bad.  Or good friendship after bad.

The time, energy, effort and emotion we previously put into all those things are sunk costs.  We shouldn’t use the fact that we invested badly as an excuse to continue to invest badly.  Yes, changing course will force you to admit the mistake.  That might cause pain, stress, confrontation or ridicule, but it will be temporary and you will have the opportunity to move forward in the right direction.  If you continue in your error, you won’t have the short-term moment of pain as you admit error, but you will have the long-term pain and regret that comes from persisting in your error.  Which is worse?  The latter, by far.

It’s Monday morning.  You’re starting a new week.  Maybe you’re heading off to work.  Maybe you’re already retired.  Either way, be honest with yourself.  Is there anything on your calendar this week that you’re doing, not because you want to or because you think it’s the right thing for you and your life, but because you’ve invested a bunch of time/money/life pursuing that path and you don’t want to admit failure?  I do.  This article is your permission to stop.  If not today, someday soon.  For today, at least make a decision if not an action.  Decide “this is not what I want to do.”  And then start figuring out exactly what it is you do want and what needs to change to make that a reality.  In short:

  1. Admit your mistake. Choose temporary over permanent pain.
  2. Decide what it is you really want out of life.
  3. Have the courage to pursue that, regardless of what came before.

~ Joe

The best tool for retirement health expenses

The best tool for retirement health expenses

There is a lot of uncertainty with healthcare lately, but two trends will likely continue: It will continue to get more expensive and you will continue to be responsible for more and more of the costs.  Even with Medicare, it is estimated that the typical retiree will need between $200,000 and $400,000 to pay for health expenses during retirement.  With that in mind you should seriously consider using a Health Savings Account (HSA) to help fund your retirement health expenses.  You might be using one now, but if you’re like most, you’re not using it to its full potential.  Let’s change that.

What is an HSA?

An HSA is a tax advantaged medical savings account available to people enrolled in high deductible health plans.  Think of it as an IRA for your medical expenses.  Unlike IRAs, however, HSA money is triple tax free: going in, as it grows and coming out.  That is a huge advantage.  The only caveat is that you need to spend the money on qualified health expenses or you’ll pay taxes and a penalty.  The list of qualified expenses is rather long and even includes things like long-term care insurance premiums.  Here are a few quick facts on HSAs:

  • Contributions are tax deductible.
  • The assets in the account grow tax free.
  • Withdrawals for qualified medical expenses are tax free.
  • If you take the money out for non-qualified expenses, you will pay taxes and a 20% penalty.
  • Unlike FSAs, HSA dollars are not “use it or lose it.”
  • Contributions can be made by either you or your employer.
  • 2017 annual contribution limits are $3,400 for an individual and $6,750 for a family.
  • Those over age 55 can make an additional $1,000 catch-up contribution each year.
  • Money in the HSA can be invested in stocks, bonds and mutual funds.

A few things change at age 65…

  • Distributions after age 65 are never subject to a penalty, even if not spent on qualified medical expenses. For non-qualified expenses just pay the taxes and use the money for whatever you want.
  • At 65 you can pay for all Medicare premiums except Medigap with tax free HSA distributions.
  • Once you enroll in Medicare, you can no longer make contributions to an HSA, but you can continue to use the existing money in your HSA.

Your best strategy

HSAs are growing in popularity, but they are not being used to their full potential.  Because of the HSA triple tax advantage (in, out and during), the money should be invested for growth and allowed to compound as long as possible.  Instead, here’s how most people use their HSA: 1) Add some money, 2) Leave the money in a no risk/no return money market, 3) Use the money as soon as they incur a medical expense.

Here’s how you should use your HSA: 1) Contribute the maximum amount allowed each year, 2) Invest the money in stocks, bonds and/or mutual funds, 3) If possible, pay for your current medical expenses out of pocket and allow your HSA money to grow until you retire.  By doing that you are getting the most bang for your buck and creating a pot of money for retirement that can be used tax free for medical expenses or for anything else as long as you pay the tax.

~ Joe

My 5 favorite travel tools

My 5 favorite travel tools

The family and I have been traveling in Iceland for the last few weeks.  We had an amazing time (more in a future post), but I was again reminded that whoever said “The joy is in the journey” never spent much time flying coach.  If you do any amount of traveling, you know that travel days are often hard.  You’re tired, rushed and a bit stressed.  In my family, we deal with this in two primary ways.  First, we know in advance that travel days are hard, so we do our best to both act and react with an extra measure of grace toward each other and those around us.  Second, we have some key tools that help make travel easier.  Below are 5 of my favorite travel tools.  Click the orange links to learn more.

TripIt:  Every trip involves booking things like airline tickets, rental car, hotel, Airbnb, dinner reservations and event tickets.  Each of those bookings usually has some sort of confirmation number, e-tickets, instructions, directions and contact information.  I used to print it all out and shove it in my carry on.  Now I just use the free TripIt app on my phone (available on both Apple and Android devices).

Here’s how it works.  Step 1: Book stuff like your flight, hotel and rental car (or anything else for your trip).  Step 2: When you receive the booking confirmation email, forward it to plans@tripit.com.  Step 3: TripIt automatically and instantly creates an itinerary for your trip with each piece of booking information organized neatly in a timeline.  Click on a particular piece of information and it will pull up all the details associated with it.  Voila!  No more paper printouts.

You can create unlimited itineraries and if you get the pro version of the app ($49 per year), it will also give a number of helpful notifications like flight status alerts, terminal and gate reminders, check in reminders and even a notification when it’s time to leave for the airport.  It will also alert you if your flight is delayed or cancelled (usually before the airline does) and will suggest alternate flight times and numbers so you can call the airline quickly and rebook before everyone else at your gate starts trying to do the same thing.  This has saved my bacon more than once.

TSA Pre Check: I’m grateful for airport security, but rigorous screening can leave you looking and feeling like you lost a very public game of strip poker.  And because it takes time to remove certain items from your bags, take off your belt/shoes/jacket/etc. and get a full body scan, long waits in security lines have become the norm.  You can avoid all of this by signing up for TSA Pre Check.

Here’s how it works.  Step 1: Go to www.tsa.gov/precheck, fill out a quick application and schedule an appointment at one of hundreds of available enrollment centers.  Step 2: Go to your appointment, pay an $85 fee, get fingerprinted and agree to an in-depth background check.  All of this only takes about 10 minutes.  Step 3: Once the background check is complete, you will receive a letter in the mail with your Known Traveler Number (KTN).  Include this number when booking your flight and “TSA Pre Check” will be printed on your boarding pass which allows you to use the Pre Check Lane.  That means shorter wait times (usually 5 minutes or less), you don’t need to take off your shoes, belts or light jackets and you don’t need to remove things like liquids and laptops from your carry on.

Bose wireless noise cancelling headphones:  As the Grinch said “There’s one thing I hate!  All the NOISE! NOISE! NOISE! NOISE!”  The thrum of a jet engine accompanied by the screaming baby in 9C can leave you feeling a bit out of sorts and exhausted at the end of a travel day.  Tune it all out with these Bose headphones.  They’re a little pricey, but I absolutely love them.  The best way to describe them is that they’re magic.  Turn them on and constant noises like jet engines almost completely disappear and variable noises like people talking or a baby crying are greatly reduced.  They’re wireless (no chords to mess with) so they automatically pair with your phone or tablet.  Flip them on to watch a movie or listen to music and because the aircraft noise is being cancelled out, you don’t need to crank up the volume to hear.  They also work great when you’re trying to sleep on the plane or even when you’re at home and want a little peace and quiet.

Anker portable charger:  Our phones have become indispensable travel companions.  When I hiked the Grand Canyon last year, my cell phone was my camera, camcorder, pedometer, trip organizer (via TripIt) and, not least, an actual phone in case of emergency.  Most trips last longer than your cell battery, however, and you’re not always close to a power source.  Whether you’re at an airport with no charging stations or at the bottom of the Grand Canyon, this portable charger works great.  It has two USB ports so you can charge multiple devices at once and it contains enough power to recharge my iPhone 7 times.  Anker was founded by former Google employees and has quickly become the world leader in mobile charging by doing a few things very well.  They have chargers in multiple sizes and make great (long and strong) phone cables as well if you don’t like the short one that came with your phone.

Amazon Kindle:  Whether at the airport or at the beach, there’s usually plenty of time to read while traveling.  Rather than taking a book or two, I just bring my Kindle, complete with my Kindle library as well as any books I borrow from my local library and deliver to my Kindle before the trip.  It’s light, holds thousands of books and has a charge that lasts for weeks.  I prefer the basic e-reader version because there’s no glare, but if you’d rather have the Kindle that’s also a tablet, the Kindle Fire is a good option as well.

Safe (and enjoyable) travels!

Joe

 

Note: Since I have my own books for sale on Amazon, I am a part of their Amazon Affiliate program. Some of the links above are affiliate links, which simply means that if you buy a product after clicking one of the links, Amazon (at no additional cost to you) will pay me a small commission that I use to help cover the costs of this site. That’s not why I recommend the products, of course, but I wanted to make you aware of it.
Systems and Habits

Systems and Habits

Quick review

I’m doing a 3-part series on how to overcome obstacles and achieve the real, significant and lasting change necessary to live the life you want, both now and in retirement.  It’s a 3-part series, because we’re covering 3 big ideas.  Idea #1 was minimalism: Deciding what doesn’t belong in your life—stuff, expenses, obligations, hassles, commitments, projects—and getting rid of it.  Idea #2 is Essentialism: Deciding what IS important and DOES belong in your life and then doing it more often and better.  And finally, Idea #3 is Systems and Habits: Taking the essentials from Step 2 and creating systems and habits that make doing those things consistent, automatic and nearly effortless.

Book Recommendations

For each part of the series, I’ve shared a book that dives deep into the issues at hand.  For this final part, I’m sharing two books.  The book focused on systems is How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big by Scott Adams (Quick note: The book presents several powerful ideas, but also a few that are a little wacky).  The book focused on habits is The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg.

Why systems?  When you have a system in place, you have a repeatable process that is designed to get a desired result.  Apply that to life.  If you have certain desired results you want, both now and in retirement, why not create a system that is designed to produce those results?

Why habits?  Will Durant once said: “We are what we repeatedly do.  Greatness then, is not an act, but a habit.”  Once you have the systems in place, you want to make them effortless.  You achieve that by doing it over and over until it’s automatic.

Systems

Let’s look at systems first.  In How to Fail, Adams makes the provocative statement that goals are for losers.  If you really want to be successful at something, you should focus on systems instead.  He explains:

“For our purposes, let’s say a goal is a specific objective you either achieve or don’t sometime in the future.  A system is something you do on a regular basis that increases your odds of happiness in the long run.  If you do something every day, it’s a system.  If you’re waiting to achieve it someday in the future, it’s a goal.

“Language is messy, and I know some of you are thinking that exercising every day sounds like a goal.  The common definition of goals would certainly allow that interpretation.  For our purposes, let’s agree that goals are a reach-it-and-be-done situation, whereas a system is something you do on a regular basis with a reasonable expectation that doing so will get you to a better place in your life.  Systems have no deadlines, and on any given day you probably can’t tell if they’re moving you in the right direction.”

“My proposition is that if you study people who succeed, you will see that most of them follow systems, not goals…If you know some extra successful people, ask some probing questions about how they got where they did.  I think you’ll find a system at the bottom of it all.”

Examples of goals vs. systems

Goal: Lose 20 pounds.
System: Eat right.

Goal: Run a marathon in under 4 hours.
System: Exercise daily.

Goal: Make a million dollars.
System: Be a serial entrepreneur

Examples of successful people who use(d) systems

  • Warren Buffett: Investing
  • John Wooden: Coaching
  • Jeff Bezos: Business
  • Michael Phelps: Swimming
  • Stephen King: Writing

So here is this idea in a nutshell.  If you focus on the goal, you’ll struggle.  So focus on the systems—the things you will do day in and day out—that are going to help you achieve the goals.  When you do that, the goals become a natural byproduct of using your system. 

Yes, the lines are sometimes blurry between goals and systems, but don’t get hung up on it.  Again, Scott Adams:

“The systems-versus-goals point of view is burdened by semantics, of course.  You might say every system has a goal, however vague.  And that would be true to some extent.  And you could say that everyone who pursues a goal has some sort of system to get there, whether it is expressed or not.  You could word-glue goals and systems together if you chose.  All I’m suggesting is that thinking of goals and systems as very different concepts has power.”

Benefits

So systems have power.  I think that’s partly because they give you more at bats.  You’re swinging every day.  This may produce more strikeouts in the long run, but it will also produce more walks, singles, doubles, triples, and the occasional home run.  It also affords you the opportunity to practice, learn, test and refine.  What are some other benefits of systems?

  • Mindset: According to Adams, “Goal-oriented people exist in a state of continuous pre-success failure at best, and permanent failure at worst if things never work out. Systems people succeed every time they apply their systems, in the sense that they did what they intended to do.”
  • Being Proactive: When you do something every day (or regularly), you’re obviously being more proactive. You feel better about something when you’re doing something about it.
  • Progress: Systems show more short term progress. Studies show that progress is the most powerful human motivator.  When you see progress, you’re motivated to do more and it creates a virtuous feedback loop.  Goals, especially big ones, are long term affairs.  The finish line is way off in the future.  You might never get there.  That can cause you to procrastinate, lose focus, get distracted and give up
  • Motivation: Again, progress = motivation.
  • Automation: Systems help you to automate processes and make them easier.
  • Improvement: The practice and repetition involved with systems helps you improve.
  • Iteration: You’re constantly learning, so you can integrate that into your system to make it better.
  • Energy: When you can celebrate little successes on a regular basis, that boosts your energy and makes you excited about doing more.
  • Self-awareness: Research shows that we’re terrible at predicting what will make us happy. Systems help you test your predictions (dreams, plans, goals) so you can get a clear understanding of what you want out of life.
  • Structure: Systems give structure to your activities so that you’re focusing your time on the things that will give you the skills, benefits and results that you want.
  • Productivity: Systems and structure make you productive. If you know what you’re going to do tomorrow or next week or next month and how you’re going to do it, you’ll get way more done than the person who wakes up and randomly bounces from one task or decision to another.
  • Skill acquisition: “I want to travel someday” doesn’t do anything to build your skillset now. “I plan and take one trip each quarter” helps you acquire the skills necessary to become a good traveler.
  • Simplicity: With systems, big, complex things (write a book, save $1 million, travel the world, etc.) are broken down into bite sized chunks that seem easier and less intimidating.
  • More time doing stuff: Goals are things you achieve later. Systems are things you do today.  If you have a goal to travel, you will hopefully do that someday.  If you have a system for traveling, you will be doing that today.  At a minimum, this gives you more time to enjoy travel (or whatever).
  • Focus: A system keeps you focused. It’s a repeatable process that you do day in and day out.  It keeps you from getting sidetracked with 100 other things.

Things you should systematize

There are two primary areas where you should implement systems.  First, you should have systems for things that you currently do on a regular basis.  This could be things like paying your bills, responding to email, eating and exercising.  You should have a system for each of those things that helps you to be both efficient and effective.

Personal Example: I used to pay my bills randomly as they arrived using a checkbook and a bunch of stamps.  Now I pay my bills once a month in about 10 minutes using online banking.  Less time.  No stamps.  Better system.

Second, you should create systems for things that you want to do.  Do you want to lose weight?  Save more?  Read more?  Travel?  Don’t just have a goal to do those things someday.  Create systems that allow you to do them today.

Personal example: I wanted to lose a little weight, but diets don’t seem to work long term and “Lose 20 pounds in 6 months” doesn’t help me overcome the temptation to stop at Dairy Queen today.  So I downloaded the app Way of Life and I had it ask me two questions every day: “Did you overeat today?” and “Did you do something active?”  Super simple system with daily accountability.  No foods were excluded, I just couldn’t overeat.  No specific exercises required.  I just had to do something active.  Walking around the lake counted just as much as an hour of high intensity weightlifting.  Result: I dropped 20 pounds in four months.

Application for retirement

How can you apply this to retirement?  Think about the major retirement goals that most people have.  Financial independence. Travel.  Hobbies.  Volunteer work.  Relationships.  Health.  Rather than keeping those as goals that you hope to achieve someday, how could you create systems now so you can start making progress?  I don’t want to give you the answer, because what works for me won’t necessarily work for you.  So give it a shot.  Think about what you want out of life and retirement.  How can you change that from a “someday” goal to an action that you’re doing by the end of today?

The Power of Habit

This post is already longer than most, so I’ll try to distill The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg down to the key idea that will help us turn our systems into habits that are effortless.

How Habits Work

Your brain is always looking for ways to save effort.  One way it does this is by “chunking” activities.  Simply put, it takes a sequence of actions and converts them into an automatic routine.  Duhigg gives the example of backing out of your driveway in the morning.  There are perhaps 20 separate actions involved in that process, but you probably do it without giving it any thought because your brain has “chunked” those activities and it does them automatically without even thinking.  It becomes a routine.  Your brain wants to try to convert pretty much any routine into a habit.  It does this in a three-step loop:

  • Cue: Step one is a cue that tells your brain to go into automatic mode.
  • Routine: Second, there is a particular routine (physical, mental or emotional) that you perform.
  • Reward: Finally, there is some sort of reward that helps to tell your brain whether this particular loop is worth remembering in the future and making into a habit.

Here’s an example related to exercise:

Cue: Your alarm goes off.

Routine: You get out of bed, put on your running shoes and go for a run.

Reward: After the run, you make and enjoy your morning coffee.

In this example, your brain soon starts to crave coffee right when the alarm goes off so it goes into automatic mode and completes the routine so it can get the reward.  Voila!  A habit is born.

How to Create or Change Habits

According to Duhigg, cravings drive habits.  If you want to create a new habit think about the routine you want to create and then come up with a cue and a reward.  If you want to change an existing habit, keep the cue and the reward the same, but insert a new routine.

Whether creating a new habit or changing an old one, the important thing is to get your brain to crave the reward.  The craving drives the habit loop.  It outweighs the temptation to skip the routine.  When a habit is created, the brain stops fully engaging and the activity happens automatically.  Once the habit is formed, you have to actively work to keep it from happening.

Keystone Habits

Certain habits start a chain reaction in other behaviors.  Duhigg calls these Keystone Habits.  For example, people who begin a habit of exercise discover that, in addition to exercising, they also naturally start to eat better, sleep better, be more productive at work and feel less stressed.  With Keystone Habits, you don’t try to get everything right.  You try to get several of the most important things right and the rest starts to fall in place.

Keystone habits can vary from person to person, but here is a list of 11 common (and sometimes surprising) Keystone Habits given by Duhigg:

  • Have family dinners
  • Make your bed every morning
  • Exercise regularly
  • Track what you eat
  • Get enough sleep
  • Save money
  • Develop daily routines
  • Prayer/meditation/reflection
  • Plan your days
  • Cultivate willpower or self-discipline
  • Journaling

That’s a wrap!

Well, let’s end things there.  We covered 3 big ideas that have the power to completely transform your life.  I know because I’ve seen them working in my own life and I’ve heard from many of you who have started to implement them as well.  Keep up the good work!

Joe

Quick Links:

Simplify your life:  The More of Less by Joshua Becker

Do more of what matters: Essentialism by Greg McKeown

Make the important things effortless: How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big by Scott Adams and The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg

 

Note: Since I have my own books for sale on Amazon, I am a part of their Amazon Affiliate program. The links above are affiliate links, which simply means that if you buy a book after clicking one of the links, Amazon (at no additional cost to you) will pay me a small commission that I use to help cover the costs of this site. That’s not why I recommend the books, of course, but I wanted to make you aware of it.