Average means ordinary or usual. Average is what many people aspire to be. Don’t rock the boat, don’t stand out, don’t make waves. I’m guessing you want more. You want each day to be special, to mean something. You’d like your life to follow a path that you create.
Here’s the answer: ignore common wisdom. Just forget it. Common is average. Your life can be more by being different. Here are 4 ways to break from the pack and create a satisfying retirement lifestyle that is under your control.
Short cuts usually get you lost. Too many people figure they know how to get something for nothing. Hard work is for suckers. The path to glory and greatness lies through other's efforts or money. Don’t bother perfecting your skills. Don’t waste time learning what you need to know. Look for the easy way. Look for the shortcut. Just don’t be surprised if you find yourself in the forest with no way out.
There are no shortcuts on the road to a non-average life. You have to want it enough to work hard for it. You accept there is no way to bypass the effort involved. You see the sign for the shortcut, and choose the other path.
Experts often know less than you. Our society worships experts. If someone is an expert, whatever he or she says must be better than what you think or believe. You would be wise to stop worrying and just do what they say, buy what they recommend, and live how they have determined is best.
Bunk. An expert is often self-declared. He may have no track record or experience to have earned that label. She has no idea what works best for you in your unique set of circumstances. Consider that maybe you are the best expert there is in figuring what is right for you. Stop listening to every talking head. Start listening to yourself.
Newer isn’t always better. We upgrade, replace, or redo out of boredom with the old. Commercials have convinced us our life will be a whole lot better with the latest whatever. Newer is always better. Our clothes will be whiter, our teeth brighter, and our home life more pleasant.
Not true. Today’s appliances are made to fail, whereas the stuff from 20 years ago would last forever. Computers will work just fine years after Microsoft wants you to upgrade to a new OS that makes all your drivers obsolete. With decent care, your car can easily go 125,000 or more and be fully paid for. To resist the constant call to buy what is new and improved takes above average will power.
You can’t spend your way out of debt. This is not what our consumer society wants you to do. In 2006 the average household spent 133% of what it earned. I’d suggest there is a very direct correlation between that fact and the recession of the last few years. Our entire way of life is built on credit, for housing, cars, education, giant TVs, vacations…everything. Sometimes credit is helpful and necessary. Few of us can buy a home with cash in our pocket.
The problem arises when we attempt to fund our day-to-day lives with credit we can’t pay back. Your life is out of your control. Decisions you make are predicated on how you can balance this bill against that credit card, against that obligation. Your entire lifestyle can collapse overnight if you lose your job. The solution is so obvious it seems almost silly to say it. But, with the average American household having total credit card debt of $15,000, apparently not.
You were made to be more than average. You have the potential to excel and exceed expectations. It just takes above average will power, determination, and a clear vision of what you want to accomplish. Ban good enough from your vocabulary.
I'd love your comments and feedback on Don't Be Average. Pick one of the points above and tell me if you agree or disagree. Please take a few minutes to add your thoughts.
If You have your own blog I encourage you to include a link with your comment.
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I don't know if I am average or not...actually I had never thought about it. I do know that I love being lost. Some of the most exciting adventures in my life have happen when I was lost. But I do agree...good common sense is never out of style (and style is what I love to write about.)
ReplyDeleteStop on by.
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http://www.retireinstyleblog.com
Like you, some of the most fun I have had is not knowing quite where I would end up. Who needs a map all the time? Who learns anything new by following the same rut?
ReplyDeleteBeing lost on purpose and being lost because you are following the wrong path and don't know it makes all the difference in the world !
I liked your blog...I'm a sucker for good fiction! Thanks for stopping by.
I love the idea "newer isn't always better." My mom and dad, who are in the 80's have a refrigerator that has been working consistently since 1945! My mom is proud to say it was the first new frig brought into Council Bluffs, Iowa after the war. She's used is ever since, though now it's just a spare in the garage.
ReplyDeleteI also agree that there are no shortcuts. I recently started studying tai chi, the ultimate form of exercise to teach you patience. The instructor is constantly reminding the class to "go slow" and "Tai chi isn't about how many of anything that you do." We are so geared to go for quick results, such as taking a pill to solve a health problem, rather than go the slower route of self-healing methods, that many of us have forgotten how to "go slow."
A 1945 refrigerator that still works...Joan, you've made my point perfectly! Newer often means made with inferior parts designed to be obsolete within a few years. Obviously, this isn't always true. I prefer my 2010 laptop over the one I bought 8 years ago. But, a disposable society has to rethink what should be replaced and what we are simply bored with.
ReplyDeleteI've never tried Tai Chi but I've heard great things about it. I should give it a try. Thanks for the insight.
Personal note: visit Joan's excellent blog: http://tipsforboomeryears.com/