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[[Comment vivre]] relire le chapitre 16.
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{{boîte déroulante
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|titre = Relire le chapitre 16. [[Comment vivre]] est un grand livre d'explorations.
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|contenu =
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<poem>
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You know what your great book is.
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Whether the Bible, Tanakh, Upanishads, Quran, Think and Grow Rich, Seven Habits of Highly Effective People, or another, follow it diligently.
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Your book is wiser than you.
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It’s describing natural law — the way our world works.
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It’s not just someone’s opinion.
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It has the definitive answers to the choices you’re confronted with each day.
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Don’t think you know better.
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People say they want to make their own decisions.
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But imagine that you have a life-or-death medical situation, so you rush to the doctor, and the doctor says, “There are hundreds of different approaches we could take. You decide. It’s up to you.”
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You would say, “No! You’re the doctor. You’re the expert. You know best. You decide. Tell me what to do.”
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Your book is the expert on how to live.
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It’s helped millions of people.
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Defer to its wisdom.
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Your book was meant for people exactly like you.
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You’re not an exception to humanity.
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Its rules apply to you.
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It guides you on a good life.
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If your book is ancient, you may think it’s not enough since it doesn’t mention modern life.
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But nothing is truly new.
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Morals seem like they’ve changed in recent history.
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But really, morals haven’t changed in longer history.
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If you update the language and some references, books written thousands of years ago sound like they could have been written today.
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The human condition remains the same.
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Your book has all the wisdom you need.
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Read metaphorically, and apply it to your modern life.
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You don’t lack direction.
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You have too many directions.
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An open mind, like an open mouth, needs to eventually close on something.
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Stop swerving and chasing new leaders.
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Stay on a single steady path.
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Following your book is how to live.
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First, make a “born again” split.
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Let go of your old identity.
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Let your new self be incongruent with your old self.
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Let your friends and family know that you’ve changed.
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Bring your book with you everywhere as a constant reminder and reference.
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Refer to its rules in every situation, every day.
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Memorize its crucial sentences.
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Keep them at the forefront of your mind.
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Following rules is smart.
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It’s efficient.
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You don’t need to stop and re-think every situation.
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“Follow your passion” is terrible advice.
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Fleeting interests are a bad compass.
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Passions pass so quickly that to follow them would have you dashing around like a dog chasing bubbles.
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Don’t follow your heart.
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Your heart has been hacked.
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Your intuition is usually wrong because it’s just emotion, subliminally influenced by amoral inputs.
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Emotions are a wild animal.
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You need rules to tame them.
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Rules give you freedom from your desires.
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When you rise above your instincts, you still feel them but no longer do what they say.
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Following your emotions is not freedom.
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Being free from following emotions is freedom.
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When you stop following emotions, and just do what’s right, then you’ll finally get what you always wanted.
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It was the emotions that were distracting you all along.
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So what’s the right thing to do?
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An action with good results?
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An action that feels good?
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No.
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The action prescribed by your book.
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No need to judge or decide.
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Just follow the rules and trust the path.
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Rules must be absolutely unbreakable.
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If you try to decide, each time, whether it’s OK to break the rule or not, then you’ve missed the whole point of rules.
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Rules are to save you from deciding.
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That’s why hard rules are easier to keep.
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Discipline turns intentions into action.
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Discipline means no procrastination.
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Discipline means now.
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Choose the pain of discipline, not the pain of regret.
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An undisciplined moment seems harmless, but they add up to disaster.
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Without discipline, the tiny things will be your downfall.
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Self-control is always rewarding.
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Self-control is always the right thing to do.
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This is a universal law.
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Your self-control is highest in the morning and diminishes during the day, so review your book’s rules every afternoon.
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Physical discipline helps mental discipline.
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Align your outer self with your inner self.
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Cleaning your house helps clean your mind.
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Discipline gets you to your destination.
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Without it, you’re led astray by everyone else.
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If you don’t obey your constraints, persuasive people and technology will pull you their way.
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People beg you to bend your rules to fit their agenda.
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So blame your book when you refuse.
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Saying “the book says so” helps your burden of responsibility.
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If someone challenges your choices or asks you to explain, just say “the book says so” and carry on without the exhausting debate.
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Some people may surpass you by breaking the rules.
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But remember: the miserable, broken, destitute people in the world are the other outcome of breaking the rules.
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Many more fail than succeed.
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Rules may keep you from some stupendous heights, but they will always keep you from falling too low.
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Define a good life as more than shallow pleasure.
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A good life is contribution.
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A good life is resisting temptation.
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A good life is being the best you can be.
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A good life is diligently following your book.
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<poem>
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}}
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Liste de lectures de [[Derek Sivers]] > https://sive.rs/book

Version du 30 janvier 2022 à 18:51



Liste de lectures de Derek Sivers > https://sive.rs/book