Thursday, January 9, 2014

I FULLY agree! THESE THINGS ARE TRUE -- and I will apply them even more in 2014!






Found this on http://finance.yahoo.com/news/dilbert-creator-scott-adams-goals-120000967.html after reading about this in the swedish newspaper svd.

Have taken the liberty to quote it in full, should it ever disappear from the original site  - I have also bolded the stuff I really really agree with... all in all:   COULD NOT AGREE MORE!

Dilbert creator Scott Adams: Goals are for losers



Passion won't make you rich. It's more likely to make you broke. Scott Adams, creator of "Dilbert," one of the world's most famous syndicated comic strips, doesn't believe the common advice that if you want to be successful, you should follow your passion. In fact, he thinks that's bad advice.
That doesn't mean Adams believes you should settle for a Dilbert-like existence in an office cubicle, doing a job you don't like. Adams' life story demonstrates how you can take chances, lots of them, and find success -- without taking risks you can't afford.
CreditCards.com talked to Adams about his new book, "How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big: Kind of the Story of My Life."
Q: Failing is expensive. You've had a long list of failures, from inventions and investments to two restaurants. How could you afford to keep trying and failing?
A: If you're planning to try lots of stuff, most of it's not going to work. I picked things that were not expensive, so if they didn't work, they didn't break me. Before I had any Dilbert money, I made sure I was well within my budget. I kept my day job. For years, I wrote Dilbert in the morning before I went to work.
Q: Why do you say that passion is bull?
A: Adams: Passion is just something that rich people say was the secret to their success, because anything else makes you sound like a jerk. It sounds bad at a party to say, "I was smarter than the poor folks." They can't say it was family connections, either, so they say it was passion.
Q: So you're not passionate when you start a new idea?
A: Adams: I'm always excited when I start, but I wouldn't say it's passion. When things don't work out, I lose all my excitement. In retrospect, it's the success that causes the passion, not the passion that causes the success.
Q: Can a combination of skills make you financially successful?
A: Adams: Yes. I would rely on math, diversification. Pay off your credit card. "Passion" is bull. What you need is personal energy. The more passion you bring to your personal finance, the worse you do.
All the errors of investing seem to center around your human emotions, especially that you'll miss something everyone else is getting. You misjudge your real cost. You want to be as dispassionate as possible when making your investments. Passion clouds your judgment. People fall in love with companies. One-third of the people investing in Apple are doing so for emotional reasons.
Q: What's the first thing you would recommend to someone who wants to be successful?
A: Adams: Everything you do in life is a little better if you're bringing your sharpest mind. Work on your body. Learn as much as you can about diet and fitness. Get enough sleep. Those things are going to translate into everything you do.
Q: What other personal finance advice do you have?
A: Adams: Make a lifelong system of learning as much as you can. I'd pull back from professional investment managers. I attended a party, and one the people I met was a personal finance adviser. He would recommend managed stock funds. The people are paying a management fee, they also pay a 1 percent to 2 percent fee for the personal financial management. I asked if he bought those funds, and he said no, he buys index funds.
Q: Were any of your failures in the personal financial area?
A: Adams: Two of my failures were investments. One was Webvan, where you would order online and they would show up in a few hours with groceries. Management came out and said one of their district centers had become cash positive. Very soon after, they went out of business. What they were telling us just wasn't true. You can analyze financial statements all you want, but you can't believe them. It was "the next Amazon" versus bankrupt. That's how big the lie can be.
My second investment failure was when I was making serious Dilbert money. I was approached by a company, and I let them manage half my money. They bought WorldCom, Enron, they bought a number of things almost synonymous with bad investments. Their pitch was that they had superior knowledge. Nobody had knowledge, because Enron was lying. I finally took my money and put it in unmanaged funds.
Q: What about debt? Have you ever had a problem with it?
A: Adams: I'm super cautious. I lived below my means in the early days, sharing an apartment. I even had a windowless room. I'm very big on living below your means.
(my comment:  OH I WISH.. should start doing that, will do that; NOW!)
I'm just always sure I'll need more money. I'm not panicked. I just see the world as a riskier place. I'm very conservative.
Q: Have you been lucky?
A: Adams: I've managed the odds to look lucky. For example, I lived in small town upstate New York, I left and went to San Francisco. That simple. People think they are already living in the best place. They say, "Move from here? Are you kidding?" You need to move to where the opportunity is.
Rather than trying to be the best in the world at a particular skill, I've combined fairly average skills. Nobody's going to accuse me of being a real artist. I've never taken a writing course. At a party, I'm not the funniest guy in the room. You put those three things together. It's a combination of average skills, which combined become very powerful.
People say how lucky I am to be the Dilbert cartoonist. They don't see that cartooning was one of a dozen things I tried. I tried all these high-risk things not likely to work. Most of that stuff didn't work. The person who tries one thing and then quits has very different odds than a person who tries a lot of things. You come out of every different thing you try with a pretty valuable skill.
Q: CreditCards.com: Can you give an example?
A: Adams: When I was doing my programming, writing computer games, I came out with skills that helped my day job, and some skills I'm still using. All this required a more than average knowledge of skills. It's the combination of them that makes them powerful. I went from 1 in 1,000 odds to a 1 in 5 by the time I decided to become a cartoonist.
Q: You seem to be able to think longer term than most people do. Were you always that way?
A: Adams: That's the genetic portion of that, some people think of the future and some people don't. Continually educating yourself is the point. I've been planning for my retirement since I was 8 years old. My financial planning spreadsheet goes to age 105. There's never been a time in my life when I couldn't see my whole life unfolding.
Q: Can planning farther ahead be learned?
A: Adams: Yes, they've shown that by creating digitally aged pictures of people. When people saw themselves as digitally aged, they saved more.
Q: Why do you say goals are for losers?
A: Adams: Goals are for losers, systems are for smart people. Losing 10 pounds is a goal. A better system is to learn about food. Figure out what works and make it a lifelong process.
In the investment category, it's a perfect analogy. It's really hard to go in ignorant and pick winners. I was pretty sure in my 20s that I could apply my great intellect and instinct and pick winners. By the time you're 40, you're just buying index funds and diversifying. That's a system.

Monday, January 6, 2014

Ready to rock n roll!

Bring it on!
I am rested, full of energy and have started studying (repeating) Tournadre's Manual of  Standard Tibetan... Chapters 1-21 have to be under my belt, b4 I can even begin to consider myself ready for the summer course at Rangjung Yeshe Institute.  It is easier this time, partly due to taking the Classical Tibetan course on-line last spring.  It seems to make more sense, which is not making a big claim, since the first time around it made no sense.  Do I make sense?  Ha ha, or ཧ་ཧ་ as you would say in Tibetan...

Sunday, December 29, 2013

Today's Thoughts.

Been bumming around. Felt wonderful, finally I feel rested again.  I have fixed up my Sangha's site, with the help of Sangha-friend Max, so now we have an English version: http://www.ktg.nu/en.

Been pfutzing around with my pictures too, and realized I have to have better order in the house. So, now I have re-imported every raw picture I still owned into Lightroom and rename the directories according to date and content.
Feels good!

And... Staffan and I have ordered our tickets for next summer. PHEW!  7400 SEK per person for trips going from Stockholm on the 8th of June to Delhi, then Katmandu, then Delhi, then Bangalore and then Delhi back to Stockholm via Doha on the 22nd or August.
Quite the trip this time.

From today on - I will study one chapter of the Manual of Standard Tibetan so that I remember something from last time spent in Kathmandu and Rangjung Yeshe Institute
My Saraswati will hopefully keep me safe on all my ventures...

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

...from the net: two stories of the Kagyu Lineage.

Naropa and Tilopa...

Tilopa was about to take his leave, but Naropa, out of desperation and devotion, clung to Tilopa without any shame or embarrassment and again requested him to be his teacher. Saying neither yes nor no to Naropa's request, Tilopa walked away. Naropa tried to follow Tilopa, but although Tilopa appeared to be walking normally, and although Naropa was running, he was unable to catch up, no matter how fast he ran. Naropa could see the form of Tilopa in front of him, but he was unable to get closer. As this area in India was particularly hot and arid, it became very difficult for Naropa to keep running after Tilopa, and although he subjected himself to thirst, hunger, and fatigue, he was not able to catch up.
Eventually, Naropa saw Tilopa sitting on a very high cliff. He went over to him and prostrated, again requesting Tilopa to be his teacher. Tilopa responded by saying, "If you were really desperate and determined to learn about the teachings, you would obey my order to jump off this cliff without any hesitation because you would be able to understand how important it is to follow the commands of your master." Naropa jumped off the high cliff and fell to the ground. All his bones and joints were broken into many, many pieces. Tilopa went down to Naropa and inquired, "Are you experiencing any pain?" Naropa replied, "The pain is killing me!" This is how Naropa got his name. ("Na" in Tibetan means "pain," "ro" means "killing" and "pa" makes the word a noun.) Tilopa gently touched Naropa's body and all his broken bones joined together and were healed.
After undergoing so much suffering, Naropa once again asked Tilopa to give him the profound teachings. Tilopa said, "You are not yet pure enough to be introduced to the nature of mind!" With a wrathful expression, Tilopa removed his slipper and slapped the face of Naropa so hard that Naropa fainted. When he regained consciousness, Naropa's mental state of realization was equal to that of his teacher.
Becoming very peaceful, Tilopa lovingly explained to Naropa why he had to be so very wrathful and subject him to so much suffering. He explained, "The fact that I led you into so many painful circumstances does not mean that I am a cruel person. Your negative karma could not be purified by your own effort alone. Only by your actually experiencing hardship could you purify the negative karma that prevented you from realizing the ultimate nature of buddhahood. Throughout all your experiences of hardship, you did not develop any doubts, hesitation, or wrong views, and you diligently obeyed all commands. In this way you were able finally to overcome the conflicting emotions and experience realization."



Karma Pakshi

Karma Pakshi
The 2nd Gyalwa Karmapa
(1203 - 1283)
was a child prodigy who had already acquired a broad understanding of Dharma philosophy and meditation by the age of ten. His teacher, Pomdrakpa, had received the full Kagyu transmission from Drogon Rechen, the first Karmapa's spiritual heir.
The second Karmapa spent much of the first half of his life in meditation retreat. He also visited and restored the monasteries established by the first Karmapa and is famous for having introduced to the Tibetan people communal chanting of the OM MANI PADME HUNG mantra of compassion.
Karmapa travelled widely in China, Mongolia, and Tibet and became famous as a teacher. Returning to Tibet towards the end of his life, he had an enormous (sixteen-meter) statue of the Buddha built at Tsurphu, to fulfill a dream he had had long before. The finished work was slightly tilted and Karma Pakshi straightened it by sitting first in the same tilted posture as the statue and then righting himself. The statue moved as he moved.