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    “Whenever anything negative happens to you, there is a deep lesson concealed within it, although you may not see it at the time. Even a brief illness or an accident can show you what is real and unreal in your life, what ultimately matters and what doesn’t.”

    Eckhart Tolle, The Power of Now (Page 178) | Read Matt’s Blog on this quote ➜

      “We do not learn only from great minds; we learn from everyone, if only we observe and inquire. I received my greatest lesson in aesthetics from an old man in an Athenian taverna. Night after night he sat alone at the same table, drinking his wine with precisely the same movements. I finally asked him why he did this and he said, ‘Young man, I first look at my glass to please my eyes, then I take it in my hand to please my hand, then I bring it to my nose to please my nostrils, and I am just about to bring it to my lips when I hear a small voice in my ears, ‘How about me?’ So I tap my glass on the table before I drink from it. I thus please all five senses.'”

      C. A. Doxiadis, Sunbeams (Page 29)

      Epictetus Quote on Learning and How Our Willingness To Appear Clueless Is Key To Maintaining Curiosity

        “If you wish to improve, be content to appear clueless or stupid in extraneous matters—don’t wish to seem knowledgeable.”

        Epictetus, The Daily Stoic (Page 38)

        Beyond the Quote (Day 395)

        The moment you believe yourself to be knowledgable is the moment you kill curiosity. After all, if you know, you know. What more is there to be curious about? You can only be curious about things you don’t already know. Or, maybe better said, if you think you already know, then there’s no more “know” to add. The problem with believing you know is that it implies the task is completed. It’s a statement of being done. But, acquiring knowledge/ learning is lifelong—never something that is completed. Which is precisely why you shouldn’t even wish to seem knowledgable in any area of your life.

        Read More »Epictetus Quote on Learning and How Our Willingness To Appear Clueless Is Key To Maintaining Curiosity

        John Dewey Quote on Education and How The Process and The Goal Are One And The Same

          “I believe finally, that education must be conceived as a continuing reconstruction of experience; that the process and the goal of education are one and the same thing.”

          John Dewey, Educated

          Beyond the Quote (Day 390)

          Becoming educated and getting a degree are two different goals. What most of us have been taught to aspire to isn’t education—it’s accreditation. We’re taught that what’s most important isn’t what you learn along the way, but what paper you receive at the end—the one that says you’ve been “educated” by this College or that University. Which isn’t exactly unreasonable as those educational institutions are supposed to represent a certain standard of education. But, at the end of the day, after all of the “accreditations” have been handed out, what matters most isn’t the paper in and of itself—it’s the person behind the paper.

          Read More »John Dewey Quote on Education and How The Process and The Goal Are One And The Same

          Educated: A Memoir [Book]

            Educated by Tara Westover

            By: Tara Westover

            From this Book:  16 Quotes

            Book Overview:  Born to survivalists in the mountains of Idaho, Tara Westover was seventeen the first time she set foot in a classroom. Her family was so isolated from mainstream society that there was no one to ensure the children received an education, and no one to intervene when one of Tara’s older brothers became violent. When another brother got himself into college, Tara decided to try a new kind of life. Her quest for knowledge transformed her, taking her over oceans and across continents, to Harvard and to Cambridge University. Only then would she wonder if she’d traveled too far, if there was still a way home.

            Buy from Amazon! Listen on Audible!

            Great on Kindle. Great Experience. Great Value. The Kindle edition of this book comes highly recommended on Amazon.

            Post(s) Inspired by this Book:

            Seth Godin Quote on Learning and How School Can Get In The Way Of Our Education

              “As soon as we associate reading a book with taking a test, we’ve missed the point.”

              Seth Godin, Whatcha Gonna Do With That Duck?

              Beyond the Quote (Day 384)

              Forcing yourself to learn is like trying to force the last of the ketchup out of the ketchup bottle. You can shake, squeeze, tap, and torture the bottle all you’d like, you simply won’t be able to get all of it out when in a rush. A lot of the ketchup will be stuck throughout the container and will only come out with time. This is why you flip the bottle upside down when you put it back away—so that gravity will move it down for the next time. Learning works the same way.

              Read More »Seth Godin Quote on Learning and How School Can Get In The Way Of Our Education

                “A tree growing out of the ground is as wonderful today as it ever was. It does not need to adopt new and startling methods.”

                Robert Henri, Sunbeams (Page 14)

                Seneca Quote on Philosophy and How Only Those Who Prioritize It, Truly Live.

                  “Of all people only those are at leisure who make time for philosophy, only they truly live. Not satisfied to merely keep good watch over their own days, they annex every age to their own. All the harvest of the past is added to their store. Only an ingrate would fail to see that these great architects of venerable thoughts were born for us and have designed a way of life for us.”

                  Seneca, via The Daily Stoic

                  Beyond the Quote (Day 373)

                  “Philosophia” is the Ancient Greek word for the “love of wisdom.” Wisdom is the quality of having experience, knowledge, and good judgment. It can be thought then, that those who make time for Philosophy are those who make time for better living. For, what is better living composed of but better experience, better knowledge, and better judgement?

                  Read More »Seneca Quote on Philosophy and How Only Those Who Prioritize It, Truly Live.

                    “They say all that is old is not gold. I say, even if all that is old is gold, forget about it. Choose the new—gold or no gold, it doesn’t matter. What matters is your choice: your choice to learn, your choice to experience, your choice to go into the dark. Slowly slowly your courage will start functioning. And sharpness of intelligence is not something separate from courage, it is almost one organic whole.”

                    Osho, Courage (Page 149)

                    John C. Maxwell Quote on Experience and How It Isn’t The Best Teacher

                      “What I had been taught all my life was not true: experience is not the best teacher! Some people learn and grow as a result of their experience; some people don’t. Everybody has some kind of experience. It’s what you do with that experience that matters.”

                      John C. Maxwell, Leadership Gold

                      Beyond the Quote (305/365)

                      “Experience is the best teacher” works when you’re talking about touching a hot stove. I can describe to you the feeling of getting burned with conviction, give you examples, and use sound logic until I’m blue in the face—it still won’t compare to what you come to understand when you touch the hot stove. The same is true when we’re talking about swimming. I can teach you all of the best strokes, floating strategies, and swimming techniques in the field—it still won’t compare to what you learn by actually being in the water.

                      Read More »John C. Maxwell Quote on Experience and How It Isn’t The Best Teacher

                        “If terrible things have happened to you, you ought to have grown wise. If the worst possible events have befallen you, you should be the wisest of the lot. But instead of growing wise, most people become wounded. In a state of conscious response, it is possible to use every life situation—however ugly—as an opportunity for growth. But if you habitually think, ‘I am the way I am because of someone else,’ you are using life situations merely as an opportunity for self-destruction or stagnation.”

                        Sadhguru, Inner Engineering (Page 56)

                          It has always seemed to me odd that the world does not realize the immensity of a state of ‘I do not know.’ Those who destroy that state with beliefs and assumptions completely miss an enormous possibility—the possibility of knowing. They forget that ‘I do not know’ is the doorway—the only doorway—to seeking and knowing.”

                          Sadhguru, Inner Engineering (Page 12)

                            “Go to what will teach you the most, not what will pay the most. It’s about choosing opportunities that you’ll learn the most from. That’s the rubric. That’s how you get better. People sometimes try to sweeten speaking offers by mentioning how glamorous the location is or how much fun it will be. I’d be more impressed if they told me I was going to have a conversation that was going to blow my mind.”

                            Ryan Holiday, Medium

                              “If the primary purpose of school was education, the Internet should obsolete it. But school is mainly about credentialing.”

                              Naval Ravikant, Medium

                              Naval Ravikant Quote on Education and Why The Desire To Learn Is So Scarce

                                “Even today, what to study and how to study it are more important than where to study it and for how long. The best teachers are on the Internet. The best books are on the Internet. The best peers are on the Internet. The tools for learning are abundant. It’s the desire to learn that’s scarce.”

                                Naval Ravikant, Medium

                                Beyond the Quote (231/365)

                                This is (arguably) one of the main reasons why so many people subject themselves to expensive educations—because they don’t have a strong enough desire to learn on their own. Assuming higher education isn’t a necessary prerequisite for the career they desire (doctor, lawyer, engineer, etc.), as Naval points out above, all of the best information is already available. With a strong enough desire to learn, a way can almost always be found.

                                Read More »Naval Ravikant Quote on Education and Why The Desire To Learn Is So Scarce

                                  “It is better to start as a fool and learn from your mistakes than to fake being a genius and ignore your errors.”

                                  James Clear, Blog