Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts

The Tao of Seneca: Practical Letters from a Stoic Master, Volume 1, book review





ASIN: B01AIXJ0U

How strongly I recommend it: 10/10

Go to Amazon or Audible pages for more details and reviews.

About the book
The Tao of Seneca (volumes 1-3) is a collection of letters written through the words of Seneca to his friend Lucillius.  All three volumes are introductory books to Stoic philosophy. The book contains numerous advice that can be applied to your life. In addition to this, the book is written in eloquent language that makes it a pleasant read. Many people in the past and at present read Seneca’s letters, among them Thomas Jefferson, NFL coaches, Silicon Valley entrepreneurs and many others. Stoicism is practical operating system for thriving in high-stress environments, says Tim Ferriss. Actually, I learned about the book from his blog, where Tim included all three volumes into his book club section. Having read the 1st volume, I can say that it makes you to reconsider your thinking process and values, change your attitude to life. The book contains numerous amount of ideas, for this reason I am sharing only those ideas that resonated with me in a form of bullet points. By this way it will be very practical for any person who wants to learn these ideas and review them from time to time. By the way, you can download all three volumes for free in Tim’s blog where he shared them. Thank you Mr. Tim Ferriss for sharing these amazing books with the world!

Here is a sample letter from the book read by Tim Ferriss in his podcast, listen to it and feel the taste of the book.


Book notes and key lessons I have learned
Wisdom
  • No one is able to borrow or buy a sound mind.
  • Submit yourself to reason, if reason will be your ruler, you will become ruler of many.
  • Instead of reading many books, read, reread and digest few master thinkers’ books.
  • Serving to philosophy (thinking) is freedom, serving to desires and emotions is a slavery.
  • Wisdom is always desiring the same things and always refusing the same things.
  • The best ideas a property of all people.

Thinking
  • We suffer more in our imagination than in reality.
  • We have a habit of imagining, exaggerating and anticipating suffering and pain.
  • Believe in what you prefer to believe, and do not harass your soul.
  • We agree too quickly with other’s opinions but do not test ideas that cause our fears.


Self-improvement
  • Strive and be persistent at improving yourself everyday by studying, training and changing yourself.
  • Inwardly strive to excellence and self-improvement, on your exterior conform to society.
  • Find mentors according to whom you can improve yourself, you cannot fix crooked without a ruler.
  • Your greatest obstacle and trouble is you, where ever you go, you take this burden with yourself. Thus improve yourself instead of trying to escaping from yourself.
  • Men complain about their hardships but not about their laziness and foolishness.


Gratitude 
  • Every day wake up with joy and gladness, because you are alive.
  • He who accepts voluntary poverty (minimalist and voluntary content life) is rich.
  • Be grateful to be rich, otherwise you will be poor even if all the wealth of the world belongs to you.
  • Your wealth does not matter if it is bad in your own eyes.


Wealth
  • No man is born rich, as nature gives to newborn only milk and rags.
  • To be rich, have what is necessary and then have what is enough.
  • It is not the man who has little, but the man who craves more that is poor. Be content and you will be rich.
  • Live according to nature and you will be rich. Live according to opinion and you will be poor.
  • He who needs riches least enjoys it most.
  • Hunger costs a little, greed costs a lot.


Friends
  • Judge a person before making him your friend, only after that trust him. Many people do the opposite.
  • To make a friend loyal, regard him as loyal, and he will become loyal friend to you.
  • Evaluating a person by clothes or riches is like evaluating a horse by its saddle, look at person’s soul and character instead of his possessions.
  • Be friends with poverty so fortune cannot catch you off guard.
  • Wise man is self-sufficient, though he wants to have friends.


Social status
  • Every king descends from a race of slaves, and every slave has had kings among his ancestors.


Fear and hardships
  • Practice fear setting on regular basis.
  • Repeatedly practice voluntary poverty and the worst case scenarios and ask yourself: “Is this what I am afraid of?”
  • While fortune is kind, fortify yourself against her violence by facing your fears.
  • Regular experience of fear will make tough decisions easier, whether it is quitting job, starting business, changing career or anything else.


Time and life
  • Nothing is ours except time.
  • Largest portion of our life passes while we are doing ill, a goodly share while we are doing nothing, and the whole while we are doing that which is not to the purpose.
  • Certain moments are torn from us, some are gently removed, and others glide beyond our reach.
  • The most disgraceful loss of time is due to carelessness.
  • You cannot lengthen your life, but you always can live noble and content life, no matter how long you will live.
  • Live everyday as a separate whole life, so you will live numerous lives, not one life.
  • Keep resolutions you have made instead of coming up with new ones
  • The only chain that is binding us to life is the love of life.
  • While we are postponing, life speeds by.


Death
  • Young and old should look directly in the face of death; there is no rule by which death takes people’s lives.
  • Death does not come suddenly, you die every day. Every day that has passed is in death’s hand.
  • You do not know where death is awaiting you, so be ready for it everywhere.


Ideas on how to read the book
This book is so dense with ideas that it needs to be consumed by small bites. Instead of swallowing it, read or listen to one or two letters per day, this is the advice of Tim Ferriss. Pause in places where you need to think through ideas. Reflect on where you can apply ideas in your life. Review key ideas on regular basis so you can instill them into your life.

Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity – by David Allen





ISBN: 0143126563

How strongly I recommend it: 7/10

Go to Amazon, Audible or Wikipedia pages for more details and reviews.

About the book
Getting Things Done written by David Allen teaches you how to use your time in the most effective way, do all your tasks and not miss a sing one. The book has gained so much popularity that people started to refer to it as “GTD” abbreviation. If you feel that you have too much to handle but not enough time, then this book is just for you. However all methods presented in the book as one complete system of time management requires forming several habits at once, and this task is not so easy, for this reason I gave it seven points out of ten.  

What I learned from the book
Have a tool for collecting information and capture all things. Depending on what is practical for you, select a tool for recording all tasks and ideas. It can be small notebook, mobile phone or any device that is reliable and always available to you. In case of electronic devices, be careful as they may run out of energy when you need them most to check your to-do list. Thus preferably the best tool to write down ideas is plain small notebook or card size paper which never runs out of energy. However, notes in electronic devices can be modified as much as you want, you cannot do that with notes in your notebook.

Dump all ideas into your tool. After selecting your tool, start dumping all goals, projects, tasks and ideas into this medium. Do not keep any idea in your mind. The more your mind is free of floating ideas the easier to you to focus on your activities at hand. Writing down all ideas will give you mental clarity.  Consider all routine tasks, commitments and schedules that cannot be avoided. Also consider big goals you want to reach and projects you want to realize. Then review all small to-dos that may have important details and criteria. Check your notebooks, mobile phone notes, emails, voicemails and social media accounts that may contain your ideas and to-do lists. Do this activity of writing down ideas on regular basis. Get into habit of getting everything out of your head. If your daily life is out of control, then you cannot think strategically or plan your actions effectively.  

Sort out your list. After collecting all your goals, projects, commitments, routine tasks and to-do lists, start sorting through them. If you do not sort out and continue just collecting all ideas then it is plain procrastination practice. Spare free time and go through your list of ideas. Depending on importance and urgency, make a decision on each idea, do it (if it takes 2 minutes or less), postpone it till certain date, delegate it, trash it, file it for someday to-do list. Just make decision on every item you have listed. After sorting out all ideas, organize related goals, ideas and projects into small manageable chunks or steps in form of specific actions. Out of all tasks, take only few really important and urgent ones for your current day. Follow this principle; do not try to do several tasks in one day. If you do everything, then, you won’t accomplish anything.

Just do it. After selecting up to three or four tasks, just do them. In one day, focus only on doing selected tasks and ignore the rest. Do all your selected tasks as soon as possible until the end of the day. To increase your productivity cut all distractions: email, cell phone, Internet, music, TV set etc. Do not let yourself get distracted from your task at hand. If you get interrupted when you are working on your task, write down any request or given tasks into your tool, and return to your task. Learn to do one task at a time, and forget about multitasking.

Always carry your tool with you. All actions you have done so far will be in vain, if you do not carry your notebook or device with you all the time. Have only one place to collect all incoming tasks and ideas, otherwise you again will have a mess and scattered to-do list everywhere. Cultivate a habit of carrying your tool with you to capture ideas and tasks immediately once you get them.  
                                                                                                  
Practice weekly, monthly and yearly reviews. Collect and process all your ideas. Review your performance and effectiveness of your system. Update your task lists. Get clear about your goals, update your to-do list and complete all your tasks. Consider your life stage, your five year vision, 1-2 year goals, your responsibility areas and current projects.   

Here is a presentation of Getting Things Done book idea from the author himself: