20-02-2011 10:49 PM | ||
Unregistered |
Indeed, life is stressful. I guess the important thing is not about the pay cut but how to live within your means. If this can be achieved, pay cut is not an issue. I have seen someone who earns $4,000 and drives a Lexus and another who earns $16,000 but takes a bus. The second person lives within his means and a pay cut will do him no harm. |
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17-02-2011 11:32 AM | ||
Classical Music |
Self Actualization I think one needs to have some free time after work to do "something you like". Through investing your time on that interest, slowly but steadily the interest will grow into something bigger which can define you if your work does not define you. For instance, I know of friends in Australia who like to spend their weekday evenings building a boat. Another friend of mine takes apart CD players and solders on audiophile parts in order to improve the sound quality. For me, I love listening to classical & jazz music and slowly building up a music collection and at the same time, improve my understanding of the styles and moods of different composers and music era. Life is more interesting this way, right? |
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12-02-2011 05:34 PM | ||
Unregistered | I would make it something else besides my job | |
12-02-2011 05:32 PM | ||
Unregistered | I think self actualization is too hard if you mixed it with your primary livelihood. A few rare ones can do it within their jobs, maybe doctors, scientists, inventors. And even they find it compromising to do after a while. For the majority of us, it means something else besides our job. That is the whole point, to have a balanced life you need to allow time for it. If you say you have no time because all your time is spent on work, then basically, that is not self actualization. The examples are endless, like active contributions to any cause that you feel passionate about, helping community etc. Basically anything that you can do freely to develop the ability or potential within you. Hope it helps | |
12-02-2011 05:17 PM | ||
Unregistered |
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now I am in a job that allowed me to do just about any technology project I want and call it my work. I guess that is an example of self actualization. there's a caveat in this story though. my job has limited career advancement prospect. I will need to fuel my need for a career with just interest and interest alone. now, do you want to be me? |
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12-02-2011 05:15 PM | ||
Unregistered | It depends on what kind of business. Some business are simply for money making no matter how you see it eg. Trading. Starting a business can be self actualizing if you believe it will help you to develop and achieve your ability or potential. However, if the motivation is purely just to earn a living or become rich from your business, then it is not. That said, it is usually something besides your primary source of income. Examples, community work, contributing your ideas or experience to organisational groups that shares your passion, help people such as the less fortunate etc. Hope this helps. * * * | |
12-02-2011 02:08 PM | ||
Unregistered |
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12-02-2011 01:52 PM | ||
Unregistered |
Work-life balance should not be a problem I see often people these days are outwardly very capable and resourceful but inwardly, they do not know what they want. I believe in asking yourself one serious question: how much happier would I be with more money (and while considering the sacrifices you have to make in order to earn them)? I tend to think that if more people take the time to ask themselves honestly and develop a balanced perspective, there will be alot less unhappy individuals among us. How much work-life balance is required? It's really up to you. But the worst thing to do is simply to have a herd mentality and compare yourself to peers. Simply put, they are not the ones living your life, you are. The fact that people are talking more and more about the subject of work-life balance simply means that there is a lack of it. Conformity and discontentment eludes hapiness and the desire to seek it. Don't you wonder why at 40s or even 50s, people are still stuck talking about upgrading houses, car etc. when these are supposed to be at the lowest hierarchy of our needs? Why can't people move on to self-actualization projects at such an age when they already started their prime years? I suspect the answer is discontented and it is so sad because when they reach 60s, they would have already missed out. |
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11-02-2011 06:59 PM | ||
Unregistered | In the first place they will have to go through the local school system and do well enough to go to the best IP schools or JCs, then do well enough in SAT to get into the "best business college in the world". (btw, which college is that? ) | |
11-02-2011 03:21 PM | ||
Unregistered |
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These parents know that next time when their children end up picking up old cardboard boxes along the road (another form of paper chase), they would not be around to watch. |
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