Reddit Reddit reviews How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big

We found 12 Reddit comments about How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big
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12 Reddit comments about How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big:

u/MAGAManARFARF · 23 pointsr/The_Donald

If you all havent read his [book] (https://www.amazon.com/How-Fail-Almost-Everything-Still/dp/1491518855) I highly recommend it. Nearly finished with it and its very inspiring and eye-opening

u/CNoTe820 · 7 pointsr/philosophy

This is the book:

https://www.amazon.com/How-Fail-Almost-Everything-Still/dp/1491518855

Basically his main philosophy is that you shouldn’t have goals, you should just have systems that move you in the right direction. For example, you don’t set a goal to “lose 20 pounds” because every day you haven’t met that goal is demoralizing, plus, when you get there, you probably just have to set another goal that will take a while to reach.

Instead, you can create an eating system like “Cut out carbs and soda, and otherwise eat as much vegetables, fruits, nuts, meat, cheese, etc” without regard for how often you’re eating or how many calories you’re consuming, because eventually your body will adjust and you’ll naturally eat less food and start losing weight. Part of that system sound also be something simple like “get out and walk 30 minutes every day” or whatever kind of reasonable exercise you can add into your schedule without being overwhelming.

Anyway he applies this “goals not systems” approach to all aspects of his life. You wouldn’t say “my goal is to get a girlfriend” you would say “my system is to go on two dates a week” and see what happens from there, then adjust your systems as life changes.

I recently read “Deep Work” and it has a similar approach.

u/wiseprogressivethink · 4 pointsr/TheRedPill

Advice (note: IANAD):

u/TokenWhyte · 2 pointsr/JordanPeterson

I would suggest reading this book from Scott Adams: https://www.amazon.co.uk/How-Fail-Almost-Everything-Still/dp/1491518855

It talks about setting up systems instead of goals, and how it helps achieving stuff and getting new opportunities (which might be completely different from what you thought you would be doing).

Goals are easily prone to failure. Systems set you up for success, whatever that ends up being.

u/Trollatopoulous · 2 pointsr/StopGaming

Forget about stopping gaming for a second. Lift! Start going to the gym and have that in your life besides whatever else is happening. Once you establish that as a habit, you can re-assess your other habits.

More importantly, check your diet, what you put in you is going to determine who & what you are to a large extent. Don't try to go too crazy though because complicating things tends to lead to no results. Stick to eating enough meat, low amount of carbs (some sweet potatoes / brown rice, for dinner), and a good amount of veggies (tomatoes, cucumbers, bell peppers, broccoli, pickled beets, lettuce; mix and match from time to time, I don't mean have all of them in one meal). Whatever you do, you MUST abandon sugary drinks (diet cokes and the like are ok in moderation tho).

Here's a common day's meals template that's dead simple and good for you (and which I eat at least 3 days a week): lunch (bacon, eggs, cottage cheese w/ a splash of light soy sauce, some tomatoes), dinner (chicken thighs & sweet potatoes - oven baked; salad [tomato + cucumber + lettuce + splash of olive oil & vinegar], for drinks just some black tea with a teaspoon of honey in each and water.

Do that, and you'll be on your way to a great life for yourself, I promise. It's also very, very important to have patience. Right now you're probably wanting results fast and won't have the tolerance for putting in the effort required to steer the ship in a new direction. Have the perspective of life's length. You have many, many years to live still and you can enjoy those immensely but it requires you to keep them in mind when after a few weeks of effort you're not seeing the amount of progress you want and will want to revert back to old habits. Believe in the process & don't judge it too soon, it will take months just to get used to it, and then more months to really get the results you fantasise about. That's life, and it won't be any different for anything else - accept it. The sooner, the better. And whatever you do, don't think about it in big steps, but rather small steps. Think about the next hour and the next small tasks, ignore the macro for a second because that can set you back. It's going to be much easier to do it that way. e.g. if you had to lose weight don't think about the amount you have to lose in total, but rather focus on doing things right on that day, or even better - for the next meal, and take it like that, one meal at a time and ignore the bigger picture.

Only after you have diet and exercise under control even think about anything else. Any other "self-improvement" is a distraction until then and wholly unnecessary - even a detriment. Focus only on these two things for now.

Lastly, a great book I'd highly recommend you read to help you better with tactics for your journey is "How to fail at almost everything and still win big" by Scott Adams. It can do a lot for your thinking and will be immensely helpful.

Keep it simple:

  1. Gym
  2. Diet

    That's it, and read the book. Everything else will come after that.
u/JonathanMcClare · 2 pointsr/getdisciplined

This is something Scott Adams has talked about a lot. In fact, he wrote a book about it.

His main advice is to use systems, not goals. Don’t focus on specific goals. Focus on doing the things you can do day to day that will inevitably result in good things. You will always have some specific things in mind and you may achieve those things, but your happiness doesn’t hinge on it. If you follow a good system you will enjoy long term success one way or another.

You’re also not in the forever unhappy state of never being where you want to be. Goals, by definition, are things that haven’t happened yet. You focus on doing what you can do right here and now so you are constantly winning.

u/evomatic01 · 2 pointsr/DecidingToBeBetter

He is most commonly known as the creator of the comic strip "Dilbert" but he is much more complex. Recently he has gained notoriety for being one of the only people to correctly predict Trump's victory in the 2016 election based upon Trump's masterful powers of "persuasion". He is a pretty smart dude. I highly recommend his blog and also his book.

u/getbusymate · 1 pointr/GetMotivated

Read How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big and focus on the system to get you there, not the goal itself.

u/Murica4Eva · 1 pointr/The_Donald

If you're curious about what to read, read this:
http://www.amazon.com/How-Fail-Almost-Everything-Still/dp/1491518855

He's an odd dude, but he has amazing insights you will carry with you all the same, and they will help you be successful.

u/SilverStarv5 · 1 pointr/The_Donald

How to fail at almost everything and still win big (league)

Where have I heard that before?