9-5er’s
If everyone worked at their jobs 9-5, there would be no Thomas Edison, Wright Brothers, Mother Theresa, Steve Jobs, Richard Branson, and anybody who's made a difference on the world stage.
People who feel that by quitting their 9-5 jobs they threaten the world financial system should not.
But there are those who want more.
Some want the chance, no, even just a faint possibility of attaining the extra-ordinary.
They will give up their "ordinary" existence in exchange for risk, adventure, danger, living life on their own terms, and ultimately FREEDOM.
The real threat is not that everyone quits their 9-5 jobs, but rather that those who have, the Mark Zuckerburgs, Ingvar Kamprads, Nelson Mandelas, Bill Gates's and Anthony Robbins's return to a 9-5 existence.
But in reality there is no threat either way because those who have tasted the extra-ordinary can never go back, and those who choose to continue to find reasons why they cannot will always find a reason.
As for world financial stability? With the vast majority of the world financial power's citizens working to make someone else rich, and the world economy the way it is now, do you really think there is a risk?
Really?
Death in the Family
Many of us have had it. Grandparents, parents, brothers, or distant relatives you may have never met before.
Today I got a call telling me that my Grandfather won't make it through the day. My reaction? I don't know. I really don't know. I am sad, but not emotional. I'm a bit shaky and I don't know why. I don't feel extreme sorrow, but I feel I might miss him.
I don't know if I want him to have a quick and painless passing away or for him to live longer.
He's been battling cancer for a few years now and I feel like he's suffered enough but to wish for someone to die sends guilt pangs down to my stomach.
For some reason the question keeps popping up in my head "What should I be feeling right now?" As if there is a right answer.
I know there isn't, but the question won't go away.
I wasn't very close to him, but I do love him. I called my three sisters and brother to break the news to them this morning and they're going to try to make it to the hospital before he passes. My younger sister broke out in tears upon hearing the news. I feel bad for being insensitive and stating the facts too plainly.
I'm sorry June!
I'm headed there right now not knowing what to expect upon arriving, but I know I must go. Is it obligation or love? I'd like to say love but I know deep inside that he probably won't be conscious enough to realize whether I'm there or not, if I even make it in time. Is there a reason for me to go at all? Yes, to show solidarity to my family in this time of sorrow.
Us Okazaki's are proud of our family, and he's the one who gave us the name. Our own personal brand: OKAZAKI.
Gramps, please wait till I get there. please.
Tribes
This post is a first and I'll tell you why.
So far I've written the blog posts myself, mostly my thinking on the progress in my life and the direction I'm headed.
Reading books is now a regular habit from which I draw much of my inspiration.
Every now and then I read something that just jumps right out at me. It stirs me up inside and makes it impossible to do nothing about it. The author grips me by the throat and forces me to act. Maybe it only works on certain people who are at in the right state of mind at the time, or are in certain circumstances that harmonize with the author.
I'm now reading a great book, called Tribes, by Seth Godin.
This book is Gold!
I would recommend it to anyone who wants a fresh perspective on being a leader. Even if you don't feel you need a change or inspiration or whatever, GET THIS BOOK! It's been added to my all time favorites list, and although this introduction is longer than I expected, I will now insert an excerpt and hand you over to Seth Godin:
Crowbars
With a long enough crowbar, you can rip nails out of a board.
With a long enough teeter-totter, you can lift a sumo wrestler off the ground.
With enough leverage, you can change your company, your industry, and the world.
The levers just got longer (for everyone). the Web and word of mouth and viruses and outsourcing and the long tail and the other factors involved in social media mean that everyone (every person, all six billion of us) has far more power than ever before. The king and the status quo are in big trouble.
Wait. You might have glossed over that last paragraph--perhaps because it's so short but especially because it's so challenging.
What I'm saying is that one person can make a video that reaches fifty million viewers.
What I'm saying is that one person can invent a pricing model that turns an industry upside down.
What I'm saying is that one person--okay, what I really mean is you--has everything. Everything you need to build something far bigger than yourself. That people around you realize this, and they are ready to follow if you're ready to lead.
Seriously, READ THIS BOOK! If you do read it, and it doesn't do it for you, give it to someone else and tell them the same thing I just told you. It will eventually find the right person.
PS. If you order using the link provided here, I will get a tiny little kickback from Amazon, which I do appreciate. Thanks.
Why Fear is Good
Believe it or not, I have uttered the un-thinkable. Fear is good. Fear has protected me throughout my life, and kept me alive for 30 good, well mostly good, years. It's given me respect for certain things and kept me far away from others.
I wouldn't want to be working with explosives, for example, with someone who has no fear of it, or sitting in the backseat of a car with a driver who has no fear of breaking the law. I lock my front door when I'm not home and before I go to sleep at night for fear of burglary.
I fear sickness, therefore I avoid doing things that could infect me and cause my body to break down. I fear hackers and scam artists, therefore I am skeptical about things I come across on the internet. I fear jail, therefore I keep the law.
Fear is Good!
But thinking about it little more, I realized that as good as fear is, and as necessary as it may be, there is something much better.
You see, all the fears I mentioned above can be categorized as "away from" values, or things that we move away from in order to avoid pain. But if I had a choice, I'd replace them with "toward values", or things that I would rather be doing.
So instead of keeping the law because of fear of imprisonment or other punishments, I can simply strive for "freedom."
Instead of avoiding sickness, I can achieve health. Instead of fearing failure, I can embrace success.
We all will eventually get tired of living with "away from" values for too long, and it just gets depressing. I have a friend, who whenever I talk to him about what he wants in life he starts out with a list of things he doesn't want. "I don't want to live with so and so, and I don't want to be stuck in this situation, and I don't want to be rejected, etc." That's living with "away from" values and will just make you depressed.
The next time you find yourself thinking or saying something that you don't like, think about the exact opposite. What is it you do want in life?
Picture a compelling future that will pull you toward your dreams and catapult you toward your goals, and most of all, LIVE WITH PASSION!
Didn’t Your Dad Teach You To Live Within Your Means?
Well, he was wrong. And this is why.
It's depressing. Everything is falling apart! Have you ever felt like everything around you is caving in? Your credit cards are maxed out, rent is late, and your mobile phone is costing you more than you can afford. If this has ever happened to you, read on.
That's when human nature kicks in. You instinctively start shrinking. Spend less, do less, eat less, be less. Thinking that this is going to help you get back on your feet, you instead find yourself in a poorer state then when you started. You have become less of yourself.
Now you can pat yourself on the back for a job well done if this is what you really wanted.
But I think you'll agree with me that you want more. You want to be more, do more, live more. You want to have more options.
Living within your means is putting a limit on yourself. It's tying a rope around your waist and attaching it to your house so you can always safely find your way back.
The length of the rope is your means.
Staying within it gives you comfort and certainty.
Stepping beyond it represents danger and excitement.
When you are within your comfort zone there is little reason to want more because you accept your new normal.
But it's people like you and me who know that there is more, who won't settle.
Applying the title too literally is not what I'm suggesting, although the fact that you've read this far tells me that it's served it's purpose. I'll explain:
When you find yourself under external financial pressure, don't shrink. Rather, expand. Use the energies that would cause you to shrink and channel it to your creativity and put it to work thinking of new ways to earn more.
External pressure is more effective than self-motivation for most of us to cause us to take action. I'll illustrate that below:
Let's say you want to increase your income by $300 a month.
So you make commitments and plans but things don't go as expected and at the end of the month you are still at the same level: just scraping by, making ends meet. You think: "Oh well, maybe next time."
Now let's switch it around.
You commit to increasing your income by $300 and to solidify your commitment, as soon as you get your paycheck you invest that amount to your plan for increasing your income. You now know that you are going to be $300 short at the end of the month, and start thinking about where it's going to come from.
You know you HAVE to get it or else you are going to face external pressure in the form of your landlord, credit card company etc.
This is where you have to fight the urge to cave in. Take those thoughts and fears and channel them to your financial creativity.
Then the bills come, the ones you can't pay now because you invested that $300 at the beginning if the month. You're teetering on the edge, thinking that this was a bad idea.
Then the magic happens.
The culmination of a month of figuring, thinking and worrying comes together to create something new. Something you wouldn't have thought of if you had not gone through this process.
The key to unlock the door to your financial difficulties.
Now this may seem unrealistic to you, but you will find hundreds, if not thousands of stories of success that happened as a result of strong external pressure, financial or otherwise.
Yours could be on the list next.
Now do yourself a favor and generate some strong external pressure that will propel you to your next level of success. Or, if you have personally experienced it, post your own story below.
Progress always involves risks. You can't steal second base and keep your foot on first. ~Frederick B. Wilcox
A ship in harbor is safe - but that is not what ships are for. ~John A. Shedd, Salt from My Attic
Living at risk is jumping off the cliff and building your wings on the way down. ~Ray Bradbury

