It took me a while to realize this, but now I am glad that I realize the importance of a routine. You know, I used to be that guy who would push the snooze button several times until I didn't have a choice and had to wake up. The first hours of my day would be frequently terrible. Always in a hurry, running against the time. Quite frequently I wouldn't have a proper breakfast and showering wasn't a pleasurable and relaxing moment as it should be. My thoughts would be only focused on when I would finally open my computer and start working.
2 years ago at the age of 32 I decided to change this and started implementing a few good habits while cutting the bad ones. When studying about habits, I stumbled upon the idea of "keystone habits". Duhigg, who wrote "The Power of Habits", explains it as the soil from which other habits grow. It's like an habit that once integrated into your life makes it much easier to build or change other habits. In my case, the keystone habit that is helping me to start the day on the right note is a combination of 2: Sleeping well and waking up early. Having at least 7 hours of good sleep provides me with the energy I need to get most things done. Managing to wake up early, gives me the necessary time to prepare my body and mind for the day, and make an effective plan to work towards my goals. In the beginning, I used to just force myself to wake up early and in the end of the day I would be begging for my bed. Slowly this turned this into a habit, and in less then a week I got used to sleep between 11 pm and 12 am and start my day at 6:30 am / 7 am. When I enjoy my work (like now), my day goes more like:
I was a Late Larry till the age of 25. Scrambling every morning, I’d rush to shower, forget to shave, throw on wrinkled clothes, skip breakfast and panic asI sat in traffic, knowing I would miss my train and be late for work….Again. Internally I was extremely driven and wanted success. Externally I looked like an unmotivated goof who just rolled out of bed and didn’t give a think. This morning “behaviour” impacted my job and almost got me canned, more than once. It snowballed to impact my physical and mental health, caused anxiety, and left me with ‘busy’ syndrome with ‘no time’ for friends, family or even dating. I read countless books, blogs and anything on how to fix it, but just couldn't. Running late impacted my job, health, mental ability and social life...All because my morning started wrong. I’d come home exhausted, and stressed about the next morning. This impacted my sleep. I'd wake up in a cold sweat from dreams about being late! It was a vicious cycle. The next morning I’d feel tired from a terrible sleep and would repeat the same thing over-and-over again. Then one day I ran a simple experiment that changed my life. I acknowledged that there was a problem that needed to be fixed. So I created a daily routine for myself in which I wrote out every menial morning task + amount of time required and started following it as religiously as possible. That was the Gist of it. Psychologically, knowing how much time I had kept me on track and got me out the door in the morning. After about a week of trying this out, the result was Total Awesomeness. First, I got to work on friggin time! Once at work, I no longer felt stress or paranoia hanging over my head. I felt energized, organized and more confident.
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I am a bibliophile myself, and prefer spending 1-2 hours to reading a book after a hectic day at work. For me it has a calming effect. There is a satisfaction to ending a day on a productive note, no matter how the day at work has been.
Here are some tips.
Reading and learning will sharpen your axe and continuously feed your brain and soul.
There are two voices inside my brain.
Every time I come up with any thought, there is a voice which comes up with a completely logical opposite thought. The first one responds again. And then there is another round of arguments. THIS IS INCESSANT. I can come up with the best arguments against my own self. I am fully capable of refuting any rational thought I have had with equal amount of rationality. This often leads to a marathon of analysis which truth be told I enjoy too much to realize what a waste of energy it is when it is useless. I am trying to develop a third voice in my brain. The third voice, after listening to the two, says, "How does it matter?" and comes to the point of action!
And finally and seriously, there simply are no shortcuts, no tricks, and no “secrets.” There is only learnings, diligence and hard work. How could one describe the beauty of growing up in the 90s in words. Here is a list of my cherished moments from an unforgettable era.
Hacking is not easy, but it can be done with sufficient knowledge and understanding. Before you start you need to have patience and time to learn the art and properly do it. Don't take the advice of the people who give simple steps as if you are not careful enough you can get caught and for doing it in the perfect way you need to master the art, know the risks and learn to avoid it.It is a long process, but there is a shortcut you can use which I will explain in the end as hacking is more exciting with the actual method. Are you ready?
That is all. I have left out lot of details due to lack of time, but this will give you enough guidance to get it done. This should just take over six months for you to pull off in a normal condition. Before I conclude let me add that you must understand that there are two important things that would make you an 'ethical' hacker:
Here are some of the most beautiful, thought-provoking and powerful quotations I've ever read. These are truly time-honored and I usually go through them once a while in the hope that these reflective quotes will be of service and motivate me in challenging times.
Thomas A. Edison-
Socrates-
Albert Einstein-
Mahatma Gandhi-
Swami Vivekananda-
Thomas A. Edison-
Leonardo da Vinci-
Shakespear-
Benjamin Franlin-
Abdul Kalam Azad-
George Washington-
Stephen Hawking-
Napolean-
Buddha-
Warren Buffett-
Mark Twain-
Abraham Lincoln-
Plato-
Aristotle-
Alexander The Great-
NarayanMurthy-
Napolean Hill-
Computer Science
Software Engineering
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AuthorAshish Abrol is a Technical Evangelist at heart. As a Web Architecture Consultant he specializes in IT Management Consulting and Enterprise Architecture with a speciality in High Performance SOA and Open Source Frameworks. I sure did take a long time to enter actively into blogosphere. Honestly, as a passive player all this time, I have gained a lot from the adept content of some serious bloggers. That strongly encouraged me to contribute back to the community, and learn in the process as well.
-Ashish Archives
July 2020
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