Exploring Titans' Tools: Insights from "Tools of Titans" by Tim Ferris
enlightening snippets and actionable advice from Ferriss' exploration of habits, routines, and strategies for success.
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In today's issue we will discuss
Weekly Book Highlights from Tools of Titans by Tim Ferris.
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📚 Weekly Book Highlights
In this week's edition of Curiosity Logs, we're delving into the wealth of wisdom found in "Tools of Titans" by Tim Ferriss.
Tools of Titans is a remarkable book penned by Tim Ferriss. It brings together the habits and strategies of highly successful people. Ferriss, an author and entrepreneur, is well-known for his podcast "The Tim Ferriss Show". This book is a compilation of the wisdom he has gleaned from his diverse array of guests.
Here is some interesting snippets from the book👇
Fortunately, 10x results don’t always require 10x effort. Big changes can come in small packages.
Your inbox is a to-do list to which anyone in the world can add an action item. I needed to get out of my inbox and back to my own to-do list.”
When you have a lot of experience with something, you don’t notice the things that are new about it. You don’t notice the idiosyncrasies that need to be tweaked.
“Weirdness is why we adore our friends. . . . Weirdness is what bonds us to our colleagues. Weirdness is what sets us apart, gets us hired. Be your unapologetically weird self. In fact, being weird may even find you the ultimate happiness.”
‘Be so good they can’t ignore you.’
Jobs was still at NeXT: “Life can be much broader, once you discover one simple fact, and that is that everything around you that you call ‘life’ was made up by people that were no smarter than you. And you can change it, you can influence it, you can build your own things that other people can use. Once you learn that, you’ll never be the same again.”
am a big believer that if you have a very clear vision of where you want to go, then the rest of it is much easier.
Arnold was able to use his biggest “flaws” as his biggest assets
When deal-making, ask yourself: Can I trade a short-term, incremental gain for a potential longer-term, game-changing upside?
Is there an element here that might be far more valuable in 5 to 10 years (e.g., ebook rights 10 years ago)? Might there be rights or options I can explicitly “carve out” and keep?
“If [more] information was the answer, then we’d all be billionaires with perfect abs.”
The best plan is the one that lets you change your plans.”
When you’re earlier in your career, I think the best strategy is to just say ‘yes’ to everything. Every little gig. You just never know what are the lottery tickets.”
DEREK: “Well, I meet a lot of 30-year-olds who are trying to pursue many different directions at once, but not making progress in any, right?
“So, my advice to my 30-year-old self is, don’t be a donkey. You can do everything you want to do. You just need foresight and patience.”
Once You Have Some Success—If It’s Not a “Hell, Yes!” It’s a “No”
“Because most of us say yes to too much stuff, and then, we let these little, mediocre things fill our lives. . . . The problem is, when that occasional, ‘Oh my God, hell yeah!’ thing comes along, you don’t have enough time to give it the attention that you should, because you’ve said yes to too much other little, half-ass stuff, right?
Like, ‘Oh my God, I’m so busy. I don’t have any time for this shit!’ To me, that sounds like a person who’s got no control over their life.” TF: Lack of time is lack of priorities.
I do things, but I stop before anything gets stressful.
What you do is more important than how you do everything else, and doing something well does not make it important.
People don’t plan for success.”
Tony sometimes phrases this as, “The quality of your life is the quality of your questions.”
P.S. I’d love to know: What is the single snippet above that sounds most interesting or impactful to you? Share in comments or reply this email.
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