Steve Pavlina: 30 days to success

After reading Steve Pavlina’s 30 Days to Success I’ve decided to do a 30 day trial of my own.

For the next 30 days I am going to:

* Go to bed before 10 PM each night, before midnight Thurs-Sat.
* Wake up by 5:30 AM each morning, 7 AM on Saturday.
* Give up e-mail until after 7 PM.
* Give up forums until after 7 PM.

I will post updates on here about how I’m doing with these things once a week.

Crap, I just realized that the going to bed and waking up are going to be thrown completely out of whack by the Denver Lindy Exchange at the beginning of June (lots of swing dancing for a weekend, including dancing until 4+ AM). I’ll just have to pick it back up after I get back. So maybe I should say this is a 24 day trial. Then, I imagine I’ll have to do another 30 day trial to get back into the habit, if I end really wanting to keep doing these things.

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Another goal

I’ve thought of an addition to my goals and resolutions: Apply to my life everything I supposedly know from my “connection, communication, and life” articles (Part I and Part II)! :-P

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Genesis Space Probe

We work for hours, days, months, and years to reach our goals. We put so much on the line. All too often we depend on something seemingly insignificant for everything to be worth it. I’m not saying NASA didn’t think the parachute system was worth thinking about, on the contrary, I’m sure they worked hard creating and testing the thing a whole lot to make sure it would work as planned. But when someone like me thinks of something like a space probe I don’t think about a parachute. Parachutes seem simple, but when a $264 million mission relies on a simple parachute it kind of puts things into perspective. I just hope NASA can get enough out of Genesis that the mission will be considered “worth it”.

Space Probe Fails to Deploy Chute, Slams into Earth

How does this apply to the kinds of things I do? Software development? Swing dancing? Eating? Okay maybe those last two shouldn’t be in the list. Then again, a lot goes into eating (chicken, egg, farmer, sell, purchase, cooking, blah blah) and we all hope that when we swallow, it’ll go down the right tube. :-P See? It applies to everything. Anyway… I don’t think the only ones who can learn from this are the folks at NASA. Of course, while it teaches us about working hard on preventive measures I think we also need to think about “What if this fails?” None of us like thinking about that, but what if? If I put everything on the line for one project to go big and it doesn’t, am I finished? Living in the streets? What if? What if everyone hates my blog? I’d just have to live in denial, posting for my own pleasure (which I guess is what I do anyway. no big deal).

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