Mark Manson
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
That's cool in that it gave me a lot of great experiences and cool opportunities, and it also made a lot of money. But as anybody who's said yes to too many things knows, the consequence of that is that A, you get spread too thin, so you start doing a lot of things and none of them very well. You get burnt out because you're just overdoing it. You're overexerting yourself.
That's cool in that it gave me a lot of great experiences and cool opportunities, and it also made a lot of money. But as anybody who's said yes to too many things knows, the consequence of that is that A, you get spread too thin, so you start doing a lot of things and none of them very well. You get burnt out because you're just overdoing it. You're overexerting yourself.
That's cool in that it gave me a lot of great experiences and cool opportunities, and it also made a lot of money. But as anybody who's said yes to too many things knows, the consequence of that is that A, you get spread too thin, so you start doing a lot of things and none of them very well. You get burnt out because you're just overdoing it. You're overexerting yourself.
That's cool in that it gave me a lot of great experiences and cool opportunities, and it also made a lot of money. But as anybody who's said yes to too many things knows, the consequence of that is that A, you get spread too thin, so you start doing a lot of things and none of them very well. You get burnt out because you're just overdoing it. You're overexerting yourself.
That's cool in that it gave me a lot of great experiences and cool opportunities, and it also made a lot of money. But as people Anybody who's said yes to too many things knows the consequence of that is that A, you get spread too thin. So you start doing a lot of things and none of them very well. You get burnt out because you're just overdoing it. You're overexerting yourself.
That's cool in that it gave me a lot of great experiences and cool opportunities, and it also made a lot of money. But as people Anybody who's said yes to too many things knows the consequence of that is that A, you get spread too thin. So you start doing a lot of things and none of them very well. You get burnt out because you're just overdoing it. You're overexerting yourself.
That's cool in that it gave me a lot of great experiences and cool opportunities, and it also made a lot of money. But as people Anybody who's said yes to too many things knows the consequence of that is that A, you get spread too thin. So you start doing a lot of things and none of them very well. You get burnt out because you're just overdoing it. You're overexerting yourself.
That's cool in that it gave me a lot of great experiences and cool opportunities, and it also made a lot of money. But as people Anybody who's said yes to too many things knows the consequence of that is that A, you get spread too thin. So you start doing a lot of things and none of them very well. You get burnt out because you're just overdoing it. You're overexerting yourself.
That's cool in that it gave me a lot of great experiences and cool opportunities, and it also made a lot of money. But as people Anybody who's said yes to too many things knows the consequence of that is that A, you get spread too thin. So you start doing a lot of things and none of them very well. You get burnt out because you're just overdoing it. You're overexerting yourself.
And then third, you lose track of what matters to you, right? If the default is yes to everything, then you're not really prioritizing anything over anything else. So after about four or five years, I started to feel the repercussions of all of that. I felt extremely burnt out. I became very unhealthy. I was no longer excellent at anything. I was good or above average at a lot of things.
And then third, you lose track of what matters to you, right? If the default is yes to everything, then you're not really prioritizing anything over anything else. So after about four or five years, I started to feel the repercussions of all of that. I felt extremely burnt out. I became very unhealthy. I was no longer excellent at anything. I was good or above average at a lot of things.
And then third, you lose track of what matters to you, right? If the default is yes to everything, then you're not really prioritizing anything over anything else. So after about four or five years, I started to feel the repercussions of all of that. I felt extremely burnt out. I became very unhealthy. I was no longer excellent at anything. I was good or above average at a lot of things.
And then third, you lose track of what matters to you, right? If the default is yes to everything, then you're not really prioritizing anything over anything else. So after about four or five years, I started to feel the repercussions of all of that. I felt extremely burnt out. I became very unhealthy. I was no longer excellent at anything. I was good or above average at a lot of things.
And then third, you lose track of what matters to you, right? If the default is yes to everything, then you're not really prioritizing anything over anything else. So after about four or five years, I started to feel the repercussions of all of that. I felt extremely burnt out. I became very unhealthy. I was no longer excellent at anything. I was good or above average at a lot of things.
And then third, you lose track of what matters to you, right? If the default is yes to everything, then you're not really prioritizing anything over anything else. So after about four or five years, I started to feel the repercussions of all of that. I felt extremely burnt out. I became very unhealthy. I was no longer excellent at anything. I was good or above average at a lot of things.
And then third, you lose track of what matters to you, right? If the default is yes to everything, then you're not really prioritizing anything over anything else. So after about four or five years, I started to feel the repercussions of all of that. I felt extremely burnt out. I became very unhealthy. I was no longer excellent at anything. I was good or above average at a lot of things.
And then third, you lose track of what matters to you, right? If the default is yes to everything, then you're not really prioritizing anything over anything else. So after about four or five years, I started to feel the repercussions of all of that. I felt extremely burnt out. I became very unhealthy. I was no longer excellent at anything. I was good or above average at a lot of things.
And then third, you lose track of what matters to you, right? If the default is yes to everything, then you're not really prioritizing anything over anything else. So after about four or five years, I started to feel the repercussions of all of that. I felt extremely burnt out. I became very unhealthy. I was no longer excellent at anything. I was good or above average at a lot of things.
And then third, you lose track of what matters to you, right? If the default is yes to everything, then you're not really prioritizing anything over anything else. So after about four or five years, I started to feel the repercussions of all of that. I felt extremely burnt out. I became very unhealthy. I was no longer excellent at anything. I was good or above average at a lot of things.
And I lost track of what drove me, what motivated me. So my 30s, I think, was... very much getting a lot of clarity on what I stand for, what I want to do with my life. Because when you're young, when you're in your 20s, you think about missions and purpose and all these goals and dreams you have, right? And it's all very exciting and it's all in the future, right? I've got plenty of time.