As a 59 year old, who isn’t in position to retire, who is missing the “zeros” , but living a good life, I have begun to reframe my life in this respect. Health will be the wildcard , but I am moving forward in the present, intending to live and work at a high level. One of the keys in my mind set, that has changed has been, even if I have years or many years ahead me, In the grand scheme, I’m dying soon! So let’s move forward. Scott thx for this pod.
Thanks for having these conversations and uploading them. Found you on the Gaza/Fareed interview. Really like your blunt honest approach to things. Also lot of jelousy in the comment section here today
Great advice from my elders... from a voice at the comfortable middle of the age bell curve Chip described. Excited to dig deeper. Thanks for the inspiration to consider chips beyond the 6502...
Great interview Thank you @profgalloway Scott Galloway, for sharing your guest Chip Conley. It was a very enlightening & very positive hour spent with you both. I shared your podcast on « X »….Which means a lot from me 🇫🇷🇺🇸
Yes, Chip is wildly privileged. I am somewhat successful, and therefore privileged. I am who you speak about Scott. I have tread on my tires but do I have the luxury of reframing? Most likely. But what if you don't have success and you are not privileged? Do you have any room to reframe?
This happens a lot with Scott Galloway. He possesses a certain modicum of wisdom, but it's so embedded in a capitalist epistemology and common sense that it's often rendered unserious.
If you had taken the time to watch more, he does acknowledge their privileged position and asks for more generally applicable wisdom. Survivor bias always applies to tips from successful people
Who do you learn from? Learning from people who've been successful is useful even if it is not what to do sometimes. A successful businessman employed me when I was a teenager and one of his favourite pieces of advice (he willingly shared and practiced) was "Copy the success of others". Cheers, David.
I'd say it has more to do with shifting purposes in life. It's the realization that the things that were important to you aren't anymore, and a struggle to accept that. I had a period in my late 30s where I struggled with losing my old hobbies, and it took a while to accept I didn't even want them anymore. I consider that period a mid-life crisis, and perhaps not my last (only in my 40s now).
@@kyleolson9636 you brought up a good point that lead to the question of whether or not a major loss in life is a significant factor in mid-life crisis! And this is the sort of discussion I expected to see from Scott, but it wasn't.
One of the best Prof G pods to date for this 65 year old tech mgr. Thank you. Need to hear more like this.
As a 59 year old, who isn’t in position to retire, who is missing the “zeros” , but living a good life, I have begun to reframe my life in this respect. Health will be the wildcard , but I am moving forward in the present, intending to live and work at a high level. One of the keys in my mind set, that has changed has been, even if I have years or many years ahead me, In the grand scheme, I’m dying soon! So let’s move forward. Scott thx for this pod.
Thanks for having these conversations and uploading them. Found you on the Gaza/Fareed interview. Really like your blunt honest approach to things.
Also lot of jelousy in the comment section here today
This was really valuable advice guys. Thank you!
Great advice from my elders... from a voice at the comfortable middle of the age bell curve Chip described. Excited to dig deeper. Thanks for the inspiration to consider chips beyond the 6502...
Great interview
Thank you @profgalloway Scott Galloway, for sharing your guest Chip Conley.
It was a very enlightening & very positive hour spent with you both. I shared your podcast on « X »….Which means a lot from me 🇫🇷🇺🇸
Outstanding conversation 👌👏👍
Yes, Chip is wildly privileged. I am somewhat successful, and therefore privileged. I am who you speak about Scott. I have tread on my tires but do I have the luxury of reframing? Most likely. But what if you don't have success and you are not privileged? Do you have any room to reframe?
how do we deal with the jab crises?
Loved it. When can we see MAE Singapore ?
For helping successful men not being targeted by predatory women, you should invite Rollo Tomassi.
Anyone advising boomers? The lost generate?
What the hell is this.
“What business Airbnb is”
“Airbnb is in the belong anywhere business”
This is exactly the kind of useless BS consultants do
Oh god it gets worse “I should put social alchemist on my LinkedIn profile” he says without irony
You lost me four minutes in, sorry. I'm watching two multi-millionaires talking about what to do after they turn 55.
This happens a lot with Scott Galloway. He possesses a certain modicum of wisdom, but it's so embedded in a capitalist epistemology and common sense that it's often rendered unserious.
If you had taken the time to watch more, he does acknowledge their privileged position and asks for more generally applicable wisdom. Survivor bias always applies to tips from successful people
Who do you learn from? Learning from people who've been successful is useful even if it is not what to do sometimes. A successful businessman employed me when I was a teenager and one of his favourite pieces of advice (he willingly shared and practiced) was "Copy the success of others". Cheers, David.
Sure, they're multi-millionaires, but their advice applies more broadly.
Ha! So you’re only going to listen to life wisdoms from people who are broke & unsuccessful?
Painful to watch. Midlife crisis = no purpose in life. It's that simple. It has nothing to do with how much money you made.
I'd say it has more to do with shifting purposes in life. It's the realization that the things that were important to you aren't anymore, and a struggle to accept that. I had a period in my late 30s where I struggled with losing my old hobbies, and it took a while to accept I didn't even want them anymore. I consider that period a mid-life crisis, and perhaps not my last (only in my 40s now).
@@kyleolson9636 you brought up a good point that lead to the question of whether or not a major loss in life is a significant factor in mid-life crisis! And this is the sort of discussion I expected to see from Scott, but it wasn't.
A lot of "long story short" here.
Most company and leaders have zero interest in hearing about how you grew and how the team grew last month or quarter. This guy is living in lala land
Unless one has managed to get a sort of "airbnb" credential his/her chances are like a donut ring
Could he be selling consultant services!
Waste of time...
Are you referring to the time you spent posting that?