3 Lessons I Learned This Week
Newsletter
Hey friends,
Big news – I just got married π Thereβs a cute pic on my Instagram profile here:Β https://www.instagram.com/p/C-6WJTCsSQI/
Weβre currently on our honeymoon in Costa Rica, so in the interests of being present etc, Iβm going to resurface an issue of this newsletter from November 2023 where I learned some interesting things from some entrepreneur friends at a mastermind in Mexico.
Btw, if you happen to have been married for a while, whatβs your secret to a long, happy, fulfilling marriage? What are some lessons youβve learned that you wish youβd known at the start?
Like I did when I turned 30, Iβd love to share some of the relationship advice with this newsletter. So if youβre open to sharing, Iβd love to get some tips / advice, and to share some of it too.
Anyway, here goes:
Iβve spent the last few days hanging out with an incredible group of entrepreneurs and creators in Cabo, Mexico. There were 7 of us, and everyone there had built aΒ muchΒ bigger business than mine, and wasΒ wayΒ wealthier than I am, so it was the perfect group for me to learn from.
Through various structured and unstructured conversations, I picked up a few learnings that Iβm taking away, that I thought Iβd share in this email.
Takeaway #1 β Money doesnβt buy much more happiness beyond a certain point
Okay, so everyone knows thisβ¦ but itβs still one of my favourite things to ask about when I meet people with way more money than me β in this group, some of the guys had sold their businesses for tens of millions of dollars, and some for hundreds of millions of dollars, so they were literally at least 10-100x wealthier than I am.
They all said, pretty candidly and without trying to virtue-signal, that making more money basically made no difference to their happiness levels. Yes, one of them was able to buy a house for his parents, which was pretty fulfilling. And another was able to move into a fancier house and buy a nicer car. But broadly, making tens to hundreds of millions of dollars didnβt seem to have much of a before-and-after effect on their day-to-day happiness.
This is MEGA REASSURING β we all know that pursuing money at the expense of health, relationships, balance or enjoyment is probably not a sensible thing to do. But in a world that encourages us to want more and more and more, and where βsuccessβ is still often measured through numbers, itβs easy to forget that and make decisions for the sake of more money β decisions like staying in a job you hate, or getting into a business that you donβt particularly enjoy, or making lots of sponsored YouTube videosβ¦
All the guys in the group basically confirmed that βdoing something for the sake of more money doesnβt buy happiness, and in fact, it detracts from it if youβre doing something you donβt enjoy and find meaningfulβ.
Obviously, all of this is with the caveat that if youβre struggling to pay your bills, making more money will substantially change your life because it removes the stress of not being able to pay your bills. But beyond the point where youβve got your basics taken care of, money buys a lot less happiness than we think it would.
Again, this is nothing new β if youβre into personal development, psychology, finance etc, you (like me) already know all this. Itβs just nice to be reminded of it (at least for me lol).
Takeaway #2 β Happiness comes from working on something meaningful
All the guys who sold their businesses for tonnes of money said they were much happier when they were working on building the business, rather than when they sold it.
When youβre working on building a business, you wake up everyday excited to build something with a team of people you like hanging out with. But when you sell a business, becoming a βperson of leisureβ is a lot less fulfilling than you think it would be.
Without exception, every one of the gentlemen in the group returned, post getting rich, to building a new business. And theyβre all happier and more fulfilled as a result.
Again, this is VERY REASSURING. It shows that if youβre enjoying your work (and obv, making enough money to comfortably sustain your familyβs needs), then thereβs not a huge difference between where you and I are at, compared to where people with 10 or 100 or 1000x as much money are at.
So if youβre enjoying your work, donβt sacrifice that for the sake of more money. And if youβre not enjoying your work, donβt think that making more money is going to make you much happier β instead, find a way to enjoy your work, and if that doesnβt work, consider moving into a role that you find more fulfilling. If youβre looking for practical tips on that front, my upcoming bookΒ Feel-Good ProductivityΒ has plenty π
Takeaway #3 β Prioritise your Health and Relationships
One of the gents in the group shared an experience of hitting rock bottom. His business was doing great, but his personal live was falling apart. He said: βNo one ever wakes up one morning and thinks βyou know what, Iβm going to screw up my life todayβ. Instead, their life gets screwed up by the micro decisions they make over many months and years β and often those decisions are when theyβve over-prioritised their work and under-invested in their health and their relationshipsβ.
Again, you probably know this. I certainly do. But itβs SO HELPFUL to get the reminder. Because even though itβs sort of obvious that βdonβt screw up your personal life for the sake of your work because it wonβt be worth itβ, plenty of us donβt act in line with that.
For me, the more people I meet whoβve experienced this first-hand, the more it sinks in that work shouldnβt be the only thing we care about, and that a balanced and healthy life where we take care of our physical and mental health, and prioritise our relationships with friends and family, is WAY NICER than a life predominantly spent in the pursuit of riches.
This is a very useful reminder to me too, as I write this. Iβm writing this email in a taxi from CancΓΊn to Tulum in Mexico. Itβs 8pm, and because I had some time to kill on this 2h drive, I thought βgreat, let me bust out the iPad and write this weekβs newsletterβ. IΒ didnβtΒ think βgreat, let me bust out the iPad and plan the next weekend road trip with the boysβ. IΒ didnβtΒ think βgreat, let me bust out the iPad and figure out which gym I can use when Iβm in Tulumβ. I thought βgreat, let me do some more workβ.
I had some spare time, and my default action was to do more work, rather than to think about taking meaningful action for the sake of my health or my relationships. Kinda funny how that happensβ¦
Have a great week!
Ali xx
Hi Ali Abdaal, I happened to come here, and ended up reading your newsletters because of one of your You-Tube videos which was about “Side hustles” which inspired me so much π. So I decided to start my own newsletter. Because of your pep-talks I am taking an action from today…