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d-36385House OversightOther

Personal productivity and life‑lesson memo with no actionable investigative leads

The passage consists of self‑help advice, reading recommendations, and anecdotal reflections on property ownership. It contains no names, dates, transactions, or references to public officials, agenci Advice on tolerating minor setbacks to achieve larger goals. Reading recommendations (Zorba the Greek, Seneca). Personal anecdote about an empty San Jose home and mortgage payments.

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #013994
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage consists of self‑help advice, reading recommendations, and anecdotal reflections on property ownership. It contains no names, dates, transactions, or references to public officials, agenci Advice on tolerating minor setbacks to achieve larger goals. Reading recommendations (Zorba the Greek, Seneca). Personal anecdote about an empty San Jose home and mortgage payments.

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personal-financeproductivityhouse-oversightselfhelp

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
or “should” do? e » Can you let the urgent “fail”—even for a day—to get to the next milestone for your potential life-changing tasks? e » What’s been on your to-do list the longest? Start it first thing in the morning and don’t allow interruptions or lunch until you finish. Will “bad” things happen? Small problems will crop up, yes. A few people will complain and quickly get over it. BUT, the bigger picture items you complete will let you see these for what they are— minutiae and repairable hiccups. Make this trade a habit. Let the small bad things happen and make the big good things happen. — OCTOBER 25, 2007 Things I’ve Loved and Learned in 2008 Dos was one of the most exciting years of my life. I did more dealmaking and met more people than in the last five years combined. This produced many surprise insights about business and human nature, especially as I uncovered dozens of my own false assumptions. Here are some of the things I learned and loved in 2008. Favorite reads of 2008: Zorba the Greek and Seneca: Letters from a Stoic. These are two of the most readable books of practical philosophies ve ever had the fortune to encounter. If you have to choose one, get Zorba, but Lucius Seneca will take you further. Both are fast reads of 2-3 evenings. Don’t accept large or costly favors from strangers. This karmic debt will come back to haunt you. If you can’t pass it up, immediately return to karmic neutrality with a gift of your choosing. Repay it before they set the terms for you. Exceptions: tiber-successful mentors who are making introductions and not laboring on your behalf. You don’t have to recoup losses the same way you lose them. I own a home in San Jose but moved almost 12 months ago. It’s been empty since, and I’m paying a large mortgage each month. The best part? I don’t care. But this wasn’t always the case. For many months, I felt demoralized as others pressured me to rent it, emphasizing how I was just flushing money away otherwise. Then I realized: You don’t have to make money back the same way you lose it. If you lose $1,000 at the blackjack table, should you try and recoup it there? Of course not. I don’t want to deal with renters, even with a property management company. The solution: Leave the house alone, use it on occasion, and just create incoming revenue elsewhere that would cover the cost of the mortgage through consulting, publishing, etc. One of the most universal causes of self-doubt and depression: trying to impress people you don’t like. Stressing to impress is fine, but do it for the right people—those you want to emulate.

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