Reading What You Know
My friend Marc recommended that I take a look at The 4-Hour Workweek by Tim Ferris. It is actually a fun read, mostly because Tim is crazy about living a good life, and his enthusiasm is contagious.
The topic is retirement, in a manner of speaking. There's a lot in common between his and my points of view, even though we are pretty different (think extroverted cage fighter vs introverted nerd "with excellent coping skills"). There's also common ground in the decisions we've made, including trading in a work-a-day life for mini-retirements and exciting projects.
When I stopped working my 9-to-5 job, the most interesting challenge was responding to every "so what do you do?". Tim's answer, "I'm a drug dealer" is quite inspired. At first, I wanted to just say, "I'm retired", just for its shock value. But it is not very satisfying. Now I usually end up with, "cool projects." And if they are still interested, I'll tell them about shooting a movie or raising money for NYFOS.
Truth be told, my interest in getting project teams to be more productive and reliable (and have more fun) is turning into a day job. The Celerity approach works quickly and effectively, and I'm partial to it. It uses a coaching model that works far better than any "drop off the book" or "teach the class" approach to organizing project teams that I've ever seen. It also allows me to make a huge difference in a small amount of time, something Ferris would appreciate.
The other book I read recently that touches on retirement and "lifestyle design" (unfortunate phrase) is Lee Eisenberg's The Number. It was a gift from my mom, and I've since given it to others. It starts off as if it wanted to talk to you about financial planning for your retirement, and quickly jettisons that for the more interesting question, "how do you step off the treadmill and figure out what you want to do with your life".
Posted by
BradRubenstein at October 6, 2007 07:53 PM
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