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To Do or Not to Do – Always the Question

by Alan C. Fox 3 Comments

direction-priorities-peopletoolsThis morning I met with Lonnie, who has been my personal trainer for more than fifteen years.  The most important part of our time together is the half hour or so during which we simply sit and talk.  He knows that I prefer to postpone the actual physical exercise.

“I have news,” he said.

“Yes?”  I thought – this can’t be very good.  At least for me.

“Carol and I have decided to move to North Carolina.  We made the decision based upon something you said years ago.”

“What did I say?”

“It was right after we first started.  You said that early in your business career you had some money coming in, and had to decide how to use it. Remember?”

I did.  I had three potential uses for the money and I wrote each one at the top of a column of paper (this was before spreadsheets).  I then listed the advantages and disadvantages of each alternative.  I don’t remember the specifics, but I do recall that the score was 28 to 13 to 8.

“Yes, I remember that exercise well.  I looked at my columns and realized that in my heart I wanted to do the third alternative.  The one which had the lowest rational score.”

‘And that‘s exactly what you did.  You went with your heart.  And so did Carol and I.  In North Carolina we can live a better life, and be closer to family.”

Partly because of my (good) advice, I was going to lose Lonnie as a personal trainer and, because of geography, as a personal friend who I have seen two or three times a week for fifteen years.  Even so, I was delighted for him and Carol.  They were excited about their choice, and I concluded years ago that my priority with my friends and family was to support their dreams and decisions, and to delight in their happiness rather than allow my personal feelings of loss to intrude.

All of us face choices in our lives.  Whether or not we think about it consciously, many times throughout each day we make decisions about what to do, and how to do it.  My decisions are governed by my sense of priorities which I have developed and refined over many years.

For example, survival is my top priority.  My health is a close second.  Money is somewhere down the list.

I know that if you are a vegan then you are going to make different food choices than I might.  So it would be a fool’s errand for me to tell you what to eat, just as it would be foolish of me to argue with Lonnie and tell him why his decision might not work.

When I consciously set my priorities and then live by them my life runs better in the long run.  And one of my strong priorities is the long run, which is why I intend this to be the first blog of many on how I set priorities in my life.

I hope that one of your conscious priorities will be to keep reading my blog every week.  I want the world to be a better place for all of us, and I intend to help by sharing my insights on how you can improve your life by setting clear priorities for yourself, and then learning how to live by them.  It’s fun and, over time, pretty easy.

Lonnie – I wish you and Carol the absolute best.

Love,

Alan

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Poof

by Alan C. Fox 4 Comments

My son Steven, a doctor, called me this past Saturday.

“You better check on Grandpa.  He’s had a pain in his stomach for three or four days and I think he should go to an emergency room.  He needs to have tests that can’t be done at an Urgent Care.  Take him to a good hospital.”

An hour later I was on an airplane back to Los Angeles. My dad is 102 years old. The caretaker who usually stays with him had been on vacation for almost two weeks and she wouldn’t be back until the Tuesday after Labor Day weekend.

“Hi, Dad.  How are you?” I asked as soon as I arrived at his house.

“I’m fine.  But I’ve had this pain in my stomach for three or four days.  My doctor is out of town.  If it wasn’t a long weekend I would just wait to see him on Monday.”  Understandably, Dad doesn’t like hospitals. He especially doesn’t like the expense. He hates to pay his Medicare co-pay. Even so, I followed Steven’s advice and drove Dad to the emergency room at the UCLA Medical Center.  He didn’t complain, which was a pretty good indication that he was in significant pain.

We found the usual surge of holiday weekend patients waiting to be seen.  Dad was examined after about forty-five minutes.  The emergency room doctors ordered an MRI of his abdomen as well as an ultrasound.  They also started him on three IV antibiotics, including Vancomycin.  (I paid the $75.00 co-pay charged by the emergency room).

I’m not a doctor. I don’t know much about the practice of medicine.  I do know that a few seconds after the nurse took Dad’s blood pressure (which, incidentally, is better than mine), he suddenly became unresponsive and stopped talking.  Then his eyes rolled back into his head.

The nurse called for a doctor.  The next thirty seconds seemed like a lifetime.  Or a deathtime. I was terrified.   I thought to myself, “This is it.  In a few minutes my father is going to be dead.”

The doctor arrived, and didn’t seem especially concerned.

I know that any of us can die at any given moment. Even so, none of us are prepared for the sudden death of a loved one, or for the moments just before.  I remembered my young assistant Cecile who died ten years ago when her sports car flew off a dark mountain road and landed two hundred feet below.  I wasn’t prepared for her death, and I certainly wasn’t prepared for my dad to die in a hospital emergency room two days ago.

Our experience of time is always subjective, but after forever my father came out of his daze.

It’s now Monday, and Dad is scheduled to go home tomorrow.  With the help of antibiotics he has experienced his usual quick recovery, an outcome for which I’m very grateful.

My message to you, and to myself, is this:  Cherish every moment.

Poof.

Alan

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Do Your Hot Chocolate Right

by Alan C. Fox 1 Comment

perfect-Hot-Chocolate-PeopleToolsThis morning, while I was still in bed, Sprite brought me hot chocolate. It was perfect.

Later, at breakfast, she said, “I’m glad you liked it. I was worried I hadn’t added enough cream.  I was already halfway to the bedroom when I decided to go back and add more because I wanted to make sure it was just right.”

The hot chocolate was delicious, but that is not my point. In life, it matters that you do things right, not merely to enjoy a better result, but to experience the pleasure – indeed, the enchantment – of doing your very best.

My father is 102 years old.  He was a professional musician who played the French horn.  He still teaches young students how they can improve in the art of playing a wind instrument.  At a recent seminar at the University of Arizona, my Dad said to his class, “I don’t care if you are practicing your instrument on a desert island with no one to hear you within a thousand miles.  You still have to do it right.  Every time you put that mouthpiece to your lips you need to focus on doing your best.  You are creating habits which will serve you either poorly or well.”

When I was a kid my mind was always working, especially when it came to finding shortcuts.  Why take thirty minutes to complete an assignment if I could figure out how to finish it in ten and then read a comic book?  I used to value speed above accuracy, and saving time more than doing a complete job.

I was still “shortcut Alan” in law school.  To graduate I needed to finish one final paper.  I was working full time during the day and studying for the bar exam at night, so my research was minimal.  I triple spaced the paper and used three inch margins.  My professor was, shall we say, disappointed.  Luckily, he flipped a mental coin and gave me full credit for the paper so I could graduate and take the bar exam the following week.  Thanks, Professor Ratner.

When I practiced law I was a good attorney, but I wasn’t great. I was still keen on finding short cuts.  As a result, I didn’t enjoy my work very much because I realized, on some level, that I wasn’t doing my best. Also, I was always concerned that my work would be criticized.

Thankfully, I’ve changed.  I admit that sometimes I postpone a business task when I don’t have the time to complete it properly.  But I always look at original sources to verify the numbers, and I look at the problem from different points of view.  Over the past fifty years I’ve learned to review the finished product carefully.

Doing it right is even more important in my writing.  I write quickly. I could create a first draft of this blog in twenty minutes.  But then I wouldn’t be doing my best.   So I slow down, and I keep on revising and making further improvements.  Then my editor takes a pass.  Finally, I polish the final draft until I’m completely satisfied.

I’m still tempted to take short cuts, but I don’t because I want to give both my business and you everything I can.  More importantly, I want to experience the deep fulfillment of doing my very best.

Hot chocolate, anyone?

Alan

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