The best way to change the long term is in the short term. What you do today matters.
Because what you do today is probably a reflection of what you do everyday.
When I workout I have the mindset that this workout is magically how every workout in my life will be, and magically every workout is like that, my best.
So invest today as if this is how you’ll invest everyday, do that every day, and the long term will take care of itself.
One of the greatest lies we tell ourselves is that we’re falling behind. That someone else is ahead.
As a young man I associated strength with force; louder voices, sharper opinions, firm lines in the sand.
There’s a strange kind of pride we’ve developed in being exhausted. But even lions, the king of the jungle, rest.
I can't remember a time in my life when I didn't have ambition.
We sometimes believe strength means self-sufficiency — that being independent means being isolated.
We often try to outrun the storm, emotionally, physically, spiritually.
We’re entering an age where machines do our thinking before we’ve even had a chance to try.
In church the other day, the pastor gave a sermon that really stuck with me. He talked about two people.