Kick it in the fender and ask him, "Am I 20K low now?"
Printable View
Kick it in the fender and ask him, "Am I 20K low now?"
Fkna! If he was here I would've... Out of state customer. Asshole.
This car is perfect. Best car I have ever driven. Absolute masterpiece. Sell all your shit and get 405k together and call me now.
https://www.icmag.com/ic/picture.php...tureid=1839841
The Story of Mike Flint
Mike Flint was Buffett's personal airplane pilot for 10 years. (Flint has also flown four US Presidents, so I think we can safely say he is good at his job.) According to Flint, he was talking about his career priorities with Buffett when his boss asked the pilot to go through a 3-step exercise.
Here's how it works…
STEP 1: Buffett started by asking Flint to write down his top 25 career goals. So, Flint took some time and wrote them down. (Note: you could also complete this exercise with goals for a shorter timeline. For example, write down the top 25 things you want to accomplish this week.)
STEP 2: Then, Buffett asked Flint to review his list and circle his top 5 goals. Again, Flint took some time, made his way through the list, and eventually decided on his 5 most important goals.
STEP 3: At this point, Flint had two lists. The 5 items he had circled were List A and the 20 items he had not circled were List B.
Flint confirmed that he would start working on his top 5 goals right away. And that's when Buffett asked him about the second list, “And what about the ones you didn't circle?”
Flint replied, “Well, the top 5 are my primary focus, but the other 20 come in a close second. They are still important so I’ll work on those intermittently as I see fit. They are not as urgent, but I still plan to give them a dedicated effort.”
To which Buffett replied, “No. You’ve got it wrong, Mike. Everything you didn’t circle just became your Avoid-At-All-Cost list. No matter what, these things get no attention from you until you’ve succeeded with your top 5.”
The Power of Elimination
I believe in minimalism and simplicity. I like getting rid of waste. I think that eliminating the inessential is one of the best ways to make life easier, make good habits more automatic, and make you grateful for what you do have.
That said, getting rid of wasteful items and decisions is relatively easy. It's eliminating things you care about that is difficult. It is hard to prevent using your time on things that are easy to rationalize, but that have little payoff.
Sounds like you know what's up in your area, just throwing it out there. I never thought I would end up in the Teamsters but if you ever get a chance the benefits are unreall. If you ever get tired of the U.P. there are plenty of local teamster driving jobs in Pensacola.
Fuck driving. Perhaps IAS can start selling big rigs Bobby Stainless style?
Lubing the deals instead of the fifth wheel assembly.
Good money in big rigs. Really good money in these.
https://www.staleycoach.com/_DS_5421.jpg
Hope in 10 years you can buy your place with a 100 other middle aged beaters in the roaring fork.
Its not envy or jealousy that's lead me to pile on, it's Bobby's tacky and classless bragging about money and wealth.
The truly Rich know better than to brag about it.
yeah and this thread in the padded room! jesus!
You don't have to know too many billionaires to realize you aren't "wealthy".
Successful is an objective term. You are either successful or not. Wealthy is very subjective.
I make a pretty good living selling toys 30 hours a week. I got here on my own and I could do a lot worse in this business.
I need enough for my kids expensive ass school and a home in Carbondale. Then Im skiing. Its my goal.
Bingo.
Sent from my XT1650 using TGR Forums mobile app
hee hee! it just keeps getting better!
I would also recommend watching the move K2 a few times .... that will pretty much spin you up on alpine travel and avy awareness.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=grv3d55FOkk