6 Reasons To Be Selfish

Being selfish has a bad reputation that is strictly associated to an excessive, self-centred attitude at the expenses of other people’s needs. After all, if we were to Google the word “selfish” this is what comes out:

Selfish

/ˈsɛlfɪʃ/

adjective

(of a person, action, or motive) lacking consideration for other people; concerned chiefly with one’s own personal profit or pleasure.

Whilst this is the most widely accepted and recognised form of selfishness, I think it is worth mentioning that there are two types of selfishness:

  1. Bad Selfishness: That reflects the above definition;
  2. Good Selfishness: Making yourself your first priority, but not necessarily at the expenses of other people’s needs nor it is a lack of consideration of other people.

In this article we will focus on the latter. So, here’s 6 reasons why you need to be selfish.

Put your own oxygen mask on first

Whenever you are flying on an airplane, during the safety instructions you will be told to put your own oxygen mask on first in case of a drop of pressure in the cabin.

This is because if you run out of oxygen first, you can’t help others with their oxygen mask.

This is a clear example of how it is extremely important to look after yourself first before you can look after other people, and this principle can be translated into everyday’s life too. How are you supposed to help others and take care of them if your energy and self-esteem are drained? In other words, you can’t pour from an empty cup.

You won’t live by the expectations of others

Being selfish means forcing yourself to reflect on your values, your priorities and identifying what makes you happy the most so you can live an happy life. This means to have integrity by living by your values and beliefs.

A lack of selfishness in these circumstances leads to a failure to identify your core values and setting your priorities straight, resulting in you having to live by someone else’s values and letting them take control over your priorities so that you have to live by their expectations. Some people will always prefer you to see you as the illusion they’ve created in their heads, rather than who you actually are. Don’t let their delusion disrupt your reality.

You’ll be more resilient

Resilience is the process of adapting to stressful situation or crises and recovering from them. A good example of resilience is the property of an elastic band to return to its original shape after being stretched.

Whenever life throws shit at you it is important to maintain your integrity and have self-control over that stressful event as this will allow you to carefully analyse the situation, process it in a healthy way and formulate an ‘exit plan’ to go back to normal. This is only possible when you process your feelings first and make sure you are in a good place before you start to take on other people’s problems.

You’ll improve your relationships

Whether it is friendship, love, family or even work, being a little bit selfish will improve these relationships as it enables you to trace some boundaries. It is fundamental to put yourself first in a relationship (to a certain degree), especially when you are dealing with obsessive and possessive people with whom you have some kind of relationship, who wants your full attention, tries to manipulate and brain wash you.

These kinds of toxic relationships can go as far as making you doubt about your self worth, your values and your desires.

So, be a bit selfish and enforce some boundaries. If something is affecting your well-being, it might be time to say goodbye.

Increases your self-worth

Another reason why it’s good to be selfish is that you get to live according to your values and gives you the opportunity to set a clear path to get to your goals. This will enable to discover why you matter and how worthy you are: worthy to have a better relationship, worthy to have a better job, worthy to love and be loved, but most of all worthy to be happy. It will help you make good decisions which are centred to you.

Once this becomes clear you will be able to easily identify all the things in your life that are simply not worth your attention.

Selfishness improves your mental health

When you add a little bit of selfishness in your life, you will become a better person as you will live by your own values, you hold yourself accountable for your decisions and emotions, you set clear boundaries with others so that don’t step in the way of your goals, you know how much you are worth and you become more aware that you deserve to be happy, and that happiness won’t come from anyone but yourself. This will greatly benefit your mental health and you will also be an inspiration for others, encouraging them to be a little bit selfish too, hence, helping them to take care of themselves.

Conclusion

Being selfish has a bad reputation, but the reality is that you can be a good selfish person. You can be that kind of selfish person that acknowledges that it is OK, if not fundamental, to consider and process your feelings and emotions first before helping others; it is OK to do what makes YOU happy; it is OK to quit a toxic environment that manipulates you for an advantage that is not yours; it is OK to say goodbye to people in your life that don’t respect you for who you are and what you are worth.

This is not a ticket to be on the extreme side of being selfish, but just an encouragement to be selflessly selfish.

Letter To A Little Goldfish

[Private & Confidential]

Dear Little Goldfish,

You might think that this letter is not for you and that you don’t know me. I need you to trust me on this and continue reading as you will soon realise that both your assumptions are wrong.

I know that you are both a day-dreamer and a highly pragmatic person, you are full of ambitions and dreams you keep wondering whether they will eventually come true or not. I also know that you feel different. You love to bits your origins, your family and your home but there is something inside you that just weighs you down, and you don’t know what it is. Let me tell you that I don’t have all of the answers, but I have some that clearly explain as to why you feel that way. The best part? I can’t spoiler them to you because I am afraid you might miss the point here, and you might not enjoy the journey that will give you all the answers to your questions.

I came across a really interesting fact recently, a fact that forced me to reflect and think about you. I also know for a fact that you often think about me, so here I am writing to you. Aren’t we so romantic? Anyway, the fun fact is this:

A goldfish will grow to a proportional size of their tank. This is because they secrete hormones such as aminobutyric acid and somatostatin, which act as a signal of how many other goldfish are in the tank and how much volume of water they occupy. In nature, this is a survival mechanism so that they all grow with a similar size and they don’t run out of resources. So essentially, if you put a goldfish in a small tank, it will stay relatively small; whereas, if you put it in a big tank, with the right conditions and care it will grow bigger to a proportional size of their tank. I know you love science, and you might not accept my words as an evidence for it, so you can find below some references.

I don’t know about you but this interesting fact reminded me of my little self as being a small goldfish forced to stay small in a narrow tank full of other little fishes. Do you know what is even more interesting? the fact that I didn’t realise I was in a small tank until I accidentally jumped in a bigger tank. Don’t get me wrong, it wasn’t fun and games! It was scary, challenging and nerve wracking trying to survive in a bigger tank with other fishes, but looking back I have soon realised that the jump made me stronger, bigger and more resilient. Since then, I have jumped in several other larger tanks, which challenged me even further and made me grow more and more. I sometimes try to go back to my original tiny tank, but the truth is that I don’t fit anymore and cannot survive in there.

Still think this letter is not for you? I know you are only small but I am sure you understand very well what I am talking about. The only thing I would like to tell is to DARE! Don’t get intimidated by other people’s perception of reality and don’t be daunted when you fail. There is only one way to succeed and get better, and it is through failure. So, look forward to fail as it is equal to say to look forward to learn, get better, grow and succeed. Yes, it will feel uncomfortable at first but it will help you grow and get you closer to your dreams.

Surround yourself with people who believe in your true potential and can support you throughout the process. The last thing you want is toxic people in your life trying to convince you that you are meant to stay small, just because they have never dared to jump into the bigger tank.

Dear little gold fish, I know you will soon realise that being alive is the greatest gift of all as you only get to live once, even though others might try to convince you that there is an “after-life”! So live your life to the fullest and play it with your rules. And most importantly: enjoy the process!

So, what are you waiting for? JUMP!

Love always,

The Big Goldfish.

7 Tips To Be More Productive

Being productive is a skill that requires a lot of experimenting and practicing. It is about demolishing your bad habits that make you waste a lot of time and energy, as well as fine tuning the ones that make you prone to be more efficient with less time and energy.

Over the years I have always tried to experiment habits that would help me to be more productive, as most of the times I was finding myself with an endless list of things to do, but at the end of the day very few of them were completed.

These are my top 7 proven tips that I have tested over the years in order to be more productive.

Be Productive, Not Busy.

The number one point I want to get across is a reformulation of your vocabulary. I fall into this trap very often and it took me a while to actually realize that most of the times I was busy but not productive at all. This is because I used to be very disorganized, jumping from one task to the other without completing it, not concentrating on the major tasks I had to complete first.

Being productive means to be smartly busy, this leads to more fulfilment and having more tasks done.

Make A Sensible List

If you have a little bit of time left, how about start writing your own bucket list
Photo by Glenn Carstens-Peters / Unsplash

Making a list is crucial when it comes to be more productive. Try to generate a list of clear and specific tasks to get them done.

One of the fundamental skills of productivity is time-management. This means that every task needs to have a specific time-to-complete attribute, as we will discuss later on in this article. So, be as specific as you can, otherwise it is difficult to tell if you have actually completed the task and it will also be challenging to allocate a specific time to it.

For example, if I were to write down “Work on new project”, you can tell that it is highly generic and vague, making it extremely difficult to allocate a time-to-complete attribute to it. This will mess up all the other tasks and the prioritization process too. Instead, try to reformulate it to a much simpler sub-task, like “Write down proposal” or “Set objectives of the project”. Likewise, the generic task of “Sort Out Life Admin” can be reformulated as “organize receipts for tax return” or similar related tasks.

Keep your list nice and short, it should not have more than two major tasks and no more than 5 total tasks in it. If you finish your list before you can always add tasks in there, but the more there are the more overwhelming it gets.

Parkinson’s Law

Eventually everything hits the bottom, and all you have to do is wait until someone comes along, and turns it back again. ⌛️
Photo by Aron Visuals / Unsplash

Parkinson’s law states that a given task takes the time that you allocate to it. I am not going into great details on how it works and how to use it in this article. If you are interested to read more about it, you can find the detailed article here.

Long story short, assign the time that you think it will take you in order to complete that task. Try to challenge this time, make it shorter. You will be amazed on what your brain can achieve under strict deadlines.

Prioritize

Now that you have generated a list and you know approximately how much time you need for each task, it is now time to prioritize the tasks listed in it. My personal trick is to set a quick and easy task at the very top. Usually it is a task that doesn’t usually take more than 5-8 minutes to complete and it can be something like “Reply to Dr X about patient Y” or “Update calendar with confirmed meetings”. This will give me the chance to quickly tick something off my list and it will fuel my brain with motivation for having already completed a task. Also, it will give you the chance to switch to “work mode”.

After your “warm-up” task, place one of the major tasks after that. Ideally try to cram the major tasks before your lunch break placing the ones that require more time to complete on the top of the list and the ones that require less time to complete at the bottom.

Learn To Rest

Small coffee on a saucer
Photo by Elizabeth Tsung / Unsplash

It is a very common misconception that productive people do not rest and that they work with no break all they long. It is actually counterproductive and shifts the equation from productive to just busy.

Take short, regular coffee/walk breaks in between tasks, this will help to reset the brain and get ready for the next task.

2 Minutes Rule

Some tasks take more time than others, and you might be tempted to write them all down, regardless of how much time they will take. As I have said above, you ideally want to aim for a short and concise list without flooding it with non-related, easy tasks that take up too much space.

Try to allocate a slot of 20 minutes for all the tasks that take 2 minutes or less in order to complete them, like washing your cup of coffee, or brushing your teeth, or tidy up your desk.

In other scenarios and if you are not working with a list, try to complete there and then those small tasks that take 2 minutes or less, instead of procrastinating.

Work Smart

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Photo by Austin Distel / Unsplash

Productivity is all about working smart and optimization, and this also mean foreseeing and avoiding repetitive, and time consuming activities.

The first example that comes into my mind is when writing/replying to emails. Email conversation can be quite time-consuming, especially when your first email is not self-explanatory and does not have an algorithm with a clear plan of action. Let’s consider these scenarios when writing an email for a business meeting.

Scenario 1

Me: Dear X, can we please have a catch-up meeting? When would that best suits you? Kind Regards, A.

X: Dear A, thank you for your email. Sounds good, should we do this week? Kind Regards, X.

Me: Dear X, thank you for you reply. Sure. I am free Wednesday afternoon? Would that suits you? Kind Regards. A

X: Dear A, Wednesday afternoon I am free from 5-7. Kind Regards X.

Me: Dear X, I have another personal meeting around that time, could we do earlier? Kind Regards, A.

X: Hey A, how about 13:00? Kind Regards, A.

Me: Could we make 14:00 just to be sure I can make it on time? KR A.

X: In that case it is better if we move it to Thursday, would 14:00 be OK? X.

Me: On Thursday I can only do 10 am. Would that work. A.

X: 10 am it is. Should I prepare any particular document? X.

Me: If you could present spreadsheet Z would be great, as we need to discuss XYZ. A

X: All set. Will see you there. A.

This conversation would actually take at least 20 to 30 minutes, which is way too time consuming and there is a better way to to that. See Scenario 2.

Scenario 2

Me: Dear X, hope this email finds you well. I was wondering if we could have a 20 minutes catch-up meeting to discuss XYZ. To do that I need you to have spreadsheet Z ready.

If you want to have the meeting this week I am available at the following times: Wednesday at 14:00, Thursday at 7:30 or 10:00. If those times are not suitable for you next week I am available on Monday at 13:00 and Friday at 20:00. If those times are still not good for you, please get in touch with co-worker P (CCed in this email) and arrange a meeting with him, he will then write and forward to me a summary of the meeting with the outcomes.

Let me know if any of those times are good, if not get in touch directly with co-worker P.

Kind Regards

A

As you can see this is clear, concise, self-explanatory, with a clear algorithm of steps to follow and it only takes 2 minutes to write. This principle can be applied to pretty much every aspects of your life, and it is a huge time saver.

Positive Thinking & Law Of Attraction

Being positive is not about sugar coating the sour events that happen in our lives, being overly optimistic and thinking to achieve the unreachable, giving a pretty pathetic version of ourselves. Instead, it is about believing in yourself and in your skills, it is about accepting failures and do better next time, it is about being resilient and overcome difficulties with a calm and proactive state of mind.

I think that positive thinking goes hand in hand with the attraction law. The attraction law states you will likely attract to you whatever you will put your energy and time on.

Essentially what happens to you is the result of what you actively think about during the day. If you think positively, than you will attract positive things in your life; if you practice negative thinking, then you’ll get crap.

There are many philosophical and psychological theories that widely accept the power of positive thinking and how this influence the law of attraction.

Paulo Coelho in his book “The Alchemist” describes the positive thinking and the law of attraction as a “mysterious force”:

“It’s a force that appears to be negative, but actually shows you how to realize your destiny. It prepares your spirit and your will, because there is one great truth on this planet: whoever you are, or whatever it is that you do, when you really want something, it’s because that desire originated in the soul of the universe. It’s your mission on earth. […] The Soul of the World is nourished by people’s happiness. And also by unhappiness, envy, and jealousy. To realize one’s destiny is a person’s only real obligation. All things are one. And, when you want something, all the universe conspires in helping you to achieve it” – Paulo Coelho, The Alchemist

Hence, if we focus on positive thoughts and emotions, we will likely attract people and things that make us happy. Likewise, if we think negatively and put ourselves down we will attract negativity and misery in our life, setting us apart from what we truly want.

This is also highlighted in the buddhism, which states that every thing is subject to change, and that we are part of an eternal flow of energy, and as such we can decide at what frequency we can vibrate so that we can attract to us things that vibrate with our same frequency.

When we have a positive attitude we start to focus on what really matters in order to make our goal happen. At this point our brain acts as a filter, ignoring all the superfluous and unnecessary thoughts that would held us back from our goals. When we think positively we are able to pick up opportunities that present to us in very subtle ways, sometimes under the form of a person you know, under the form of a person you don’t know, an event, a meeting, an advertisement online, or a dream.

On the other hand, when we have negative thoughts we are soaked in a sense of self pity and we tend to concentrate on all the negative emotions that will only set us apart from our goal. Also, it doesn’t let us have an open mind to pick us favorable opportunities that may present to us in less obvious ways as described above.

Get Your Sh*t Together And Make It Happen

I can think of a plethora of examples in my life where positivity led to joy and happiness, and negativity led to misery and disappointment.

Of course thinking positive helps you to achieve your goals, but it is not the only factor. You also need to work for it! It is pretty useless to have positive thoughts but sitting on the sofa sipping your coffee and watching Netflix waiting for something amazing to happen in your life. You have to work for it! A positive mindset helps you to make the whole journey much easier, helping you to have your eyes fixed on your goal.

When I was younger I used to be religious, shifting from catholic to evangelist, but always believing in God and thinking that I was part of a plan and a bigger picture. I am not going into the nitty gritty about how I have realized that I was atheist the whole time, I will probably leave this story for another article. I used to work hard, and I was also pretty successful too. It was like I could achieve anything I wanted because I was asking for help in my prayers: admission to the music conservatoire? Bang, Pass!; finding seasonal jobs that could fund my summer trips abroad to learn English? Yes, here you have it!, my admission to medical school in Italy? Poof, admitted! Mind you, I wasn’t just praying and expecting Jesus to knock at my door giving me what I have asked him for, instead I worked my a*s off too: practicing endless hours playing piano, helping my brother out in the construction industry for paid, seasonal work, practicing admission tests over and over again. OK, that was easy as it was something partially within my control. However, believing in something really helped me in things that were out of my control: cancer diagnosis, deaths, and earthquakes that knocked our roof down. Even though in those circumstances I had all the reasons to be down, negative, sad and angry, these emotions lasted a very briefly because I knew that someone else (God) was already taking care of these things, and that something good was about to happen.

Today I don’t believe in God anymore, and looking back I am nothing but thankful to have believed in it because it has been a good way to get in the habit of being positive: believe that it will happen and work hard for it. It is extremely comforting to think that things will eventually work out the way you want because you believe that they will.

The Problem Is The Solution

In Italy we say

Not all bad things come to hurt you“.

Negative things can and will happen, and this is not because you haven’t believed in yourself hard enough. Sometimes the problem is the solution! Can you think of any example when things didn’t work out the way you wanted and eventually (months or years later) realized that it was actually a good thing for you? Or when they didn’t happen when you were hoping for, and started to meet new people or developed new skills and more resilience that made it happen? I can think of at least a dozen of examples.

Sometimes life turns its back on you because this is its own way to help you.

Why is it difficult to think positive?

We as human beings have a predisposition towards negative thoughts. By default we are programmed to see the glass half-empty and this is something that we have been carrying ever since we were apes and it was once related to our survival instinct: running away from a branch on the ground that looked like a snake, and the avoidance of dark environment to avoid predators we could not see clearly – just to mention a few. Although many centuries have gone by and our ape brain has developed (hopefully) this predisposition towards negative thinking stayed with us, so we are more prone to give more attention to dark emotions like anger, sadness, disappointment, and jealousy than to bright emotions like happiness, joy, and thankfulness.

Dark emotions and negative thoughts stay with us far longer than positive thoughts or events. Just to put thing into perspective, consider the following examples:

Your boss just gave you a promotion, you start to feel happy, kind, proud – time to celebrate! But chances are that tomorrow you will feel as though nothing ever happened; Now consider the opposite, your boss made you redundant, you start to feel sad, angry, disappointed, been let down, do you think that tomorrow you will feel as though nothing ever happened? I don’t think so! It’s highly likely that you will feel the same dark emotions even though you are starting a new job and you will look at the company that made you redundant with a sour taste in your mouth, overriding the memory of joy and happiness you had when you received the promotion.

The negatives stay with us far longer than the positives do. More amazingly, it seems like we can easily switch from good to bad, but we can hardly switch from bad to good. There is an interesting research done in social psychology that took two groups of participants who were talked through a surgical procedure they had to do. Group 1 was told that the surgery had a 70% success rate, and Group 2 was told that the same procedure had 30% of failure. At this point Group 1 was happy to go for the procedure, and Group 2 declined.

But here’s the twist: participants in Group 1 were told that the procedure had a 30% chance of failure, and Group 2 were told that it would have a 70% rate of success. Whilst participants in Group 2 sticked with their original opinion (declining the operation), Group 1 changed their idea and decided to opt out.

Another theory of why we are more prone to think negatively is because there is always a sense of self pity associated with it. We like others to feel sorry for us and we also like to feel sorry for ourselves. We like to be heard, understood, and acknowledged that we are going through a (sometimes self-induced) tough time.

How to start thinking positively

Thinking positively is a habit, and as such it needs practice… a lot of practice since we have to overcome out primitive negative instinct. If you naturally have a negative attitude, don’t expect to become a positive and resilient person out of the blue. It needs patience, practice and… positivity.

Study show that simply writing a list of things that you are grateful for everyday drags you out of the negativity.

Try to train your mind to see the glass half full, and extrapolate the positives out of a negative outcome (there are always some positives!).

Also, surround yourself with positive people that can inspire and encourage you to be the best version of yourself. Negative people are well known to suck the energy out of you, and those are the ones that have a problem to every solution. Politely trace a line between you and them and learn to be immune to their negative aura and their stubbornness of not wanting to change.

Be kind! Remember, you harvest what you sow. If you practice hate, and jealousy it will hit you back in life in one way or the other. If you learn to be kind, gentle, and helpful then your hart will be filled with positive emotions and you will receive nothing else but good outcomes.

Just Start: Anti-Procrastination Guide

Let’s admit it, procrastination is a real thing and it is something that everyone will fall into at some point in their lives.

I love writing these articles, and it is such a great and satisfying moment when I get to hit the “Publish” button or when I receive DMs from people appreciating my work. But sometimes I also really struggle to break through my procrastinating state, sit down and start to write.

I also love taking care of my skin, but getting up from the sofa at bed time thinking that I need to go through my multi-steps skincare routine is very daunting, especially when the only thing you want to do is to get in your bed and sleep.

It is totally normal and natural, we are not machines. Our motivation and drive to do stuff is the bio-product of different concentrations of hormones like Dopamine and Serotonine.

Before I jump into the steps that you need to take to break through procrastination and getting things done, we should understand how a mind of a procrastinator works. There is an awesome TED talk by Tim Urban that actually explains extremely well. It is called “Inside the mind of a master procrastinator“, I will link the video down below. In a nutshell, he explains how in our brain there is this instant-gratification monkey that will distract us from getting stuff done and it glues us in the procrastination limbo. The only thing that this monkey is scared of is the Panic Monster, which usually kicks in the day before a deadline, and it makes the instant-gratification monkey run away, leaving the critical-thinking part of us taking control and getting things done.

So here are my top tips to JUST START:

Stand up, let’s do it

As simple as it sounds, just standing up and saying “OK, let’s do it” will break that procrastination cycle you are chained to. It will ignite the intention of actually doing something productive and will switch your brain to work mode.

5 minutes rule

There are times when it is extremely hard to find the motivation to get things done. And it is totally OK to be in those moments. In those moments there is one technique that really works for me: I tell myself that I am going to do this task for only 5 minutes and sometimes I even set the alarm clock. I also tell my self that at the end of these 5 minutes I can also go back to my procrastination mode, but I never do. The reality is that, once I start, I actually end up liking what I am doing and these 5 minutes become 20 minutes, 1 hour or more. I actually end up wishing I had more time for it and that I started earlier instead of procrastinating. If you don’t feel like continuing after these 5 minutes it is totally OK, at least you had 5 minutes worth of work done.

Pomodoro technique

Photo by T. Q. / Unsplash

This technique was created in the 1980s by the Italian entrepreneur Francesco Cirillo. This is a time-management principle that tries to break down your work day in a 25 minutes slot referred to as pomodoro – from the Italian “tomato” – which refers to nothing else but a tomato shaped kitchen timer that Francesco Cirillo used to keep track of these 25 minutes.

The algorithm of this principle goes as it follows:

  1. Decide on the task to be done
  2. Set the pomodoro timer (traditionally to 25 minutes).
  3. Work on the task.
  4. End work when the timer rings and put a checkmark on a piece of paper.
  5. If you have fewer than four checkmarks, take a short break (3–5 minutes) and then return to step 2 otherwise continue to step 6.
  6. After four pomodoros, take a longer break (15–30 minutes), reset your checkmark count to zero, then go to step 1.

Break big tasks into small tasks

Back to school with a bullet journal
Photo by Estée Janssens / Unsplash

I can’t stress enough how important and beneficial this practice is. If you have been reading my previous articles about productivity and time management you will actually notice that this is a recurrent topic and a technique that I actually like to use for many different reasons. Breaking big tasks into small tasks will trick our monkey brain to see it as something that won’t take too much time. Also, it makes your tasks more measurable so that you can keep track of your progress.

Build accountability

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When I first started to write this blog I was afraid that I couldn’t keep up with that, not wanting to have the commitment to write one article every single week. But, once I started to publish the articles and having positive feedbacks for this blog, I feel like there are people that every Monday they will refresh my blog page expecting a new article to read. Also, during the week I do have people asking me what my next article will be about and I roughly tell them a general topic even though I have no idea what I am going to write about. This creates a sense of accountability that motivates me to sit down and write these articles.

Thomas Edison used to announce to the press about his projects he was working on, when in reality he didn’t even started. This used to motivate him to go home and work hard to meet the expectations that he created himself.

This sounds a bit like a self-inflicted commitment and punishment, but when I really want to do something and I know that I am going to procrastinate once I am at home, I try to talk to as many people as I can to build this accountability. I also often set some deadlines asking people to watch out for that day to see my final project I am building this momentum on. This sets up some external expectationsadding that extra healthy pressure that will motivate you do get things done. This also creates a reputation that you will need to live up to.

Think about your reward

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Rewarding yourself for your work is important and it doesn’t have to be anything special. For me is to call my family whilst having a nice cup of coffee when I deep clean the house every Sunday, or having a nice ice-cream for working 3 hours straight on a coding project, or a glass of wine after seeing 30 patients in one day.

Now stop reading and move your a*s

Now that I have given you all the tools, tips and tricks to get started, pick one or more of the above, get you a*s off the sofa and start!