Chase the Money, but Don't Let the Money Chase You!

in #money7 years ago

steve-jobs.jpg

Steve Jobs is one of the greatest entrepreneurs of all time. He's also dead. This sole, intractable fact should give anyone pause. It doesn't matter how smart you are, how much you achieve, or how much money you make, if you're dead, you can't enjoy any of it.

Sure, the media and the general public often waxes poetic about Steve Jobs and the heroes of industry and technology. They'll remind you that while Jobs may no longer be with us, his legacy will be forever entrenched in our hearts and minds.

And to that, I say, so what? I can guarantee you that Steve Jobs doesn't give a crap about his legacy, wherever his soul is right now. To borrow a phrase from the Stanly Kubrick classic "Full Metal Jacket," the dead only know one thing -- it's better to be alive.

The Turning Point

While Jobs is celebrated with countless biographies and movies, many fail to appreciate what ultimately led to his physical downfall. In a revealing piece for Mashable, author Seth Fiegerman stated the following about Jobs' decision to simultaneously lead both Pixar and Apple:

"It was rough, really rough, the worst time in my life," Jobs said of juggling the two top jobs, according to Walter Isaacson's biography of the Apple CEO. It was this period of his career, Jobs mused in the book, that may have led to the health issues that ultimately took his life four years ago today.

I had a young family. I had Pixar. I would go to work at 7 a.m. and I'd get back at 9 at night, and the kids would be in bed. And I couldn't speak. I literally couldn't, I was so exhausted. I couldn't speak to [his wife] Laurene. All I could do was watch a half hour of TV and vegetate. It got close to killing me. I was driving up to Pixar and down to Apple in a black Porsche convertible, and I started to get kidney stones. I would rush to the hospital and the hospital would give me a shot of Demerol in the butt and eventually I would pass it.

Unresolved and unmitigated stress may actually be the biggest, perhaps sole, catalyst for all of our life-threatening ailments. I find it disheartening that Jobs knew that he was physically endangering his life, and therefore, the stability of his family, yet he continued to pursue his job relentlessly.

What was he aiming for? Was something missing in his life? Whatever it was, I hope it was worth it.

Chasing the Money

Every one of us chases the money. It's a necessity, a fact of life. If we don't do it, we can't live. We can't pursue our dreams, nor take care of our families.

But when money becomes a religion, you are no longer chasing the money out of your own volition. Instead, you are letting the money chase you.

I think this is a dangerous scenario. Our bodies are meant to operate at a certain level and frequency. When we continuously push beyond these limits, something is necessarily sacrificed.

That sacrifice may not mean much to you personally, but I guarantee it means the world to your family and loved ones.

In the end, we all fade away. It's far better to spend what time we have in the moments that matter.

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I gotta say, we are living in a rat race causing most of us to burn out :(

Very wise words friend.

Nice article , the reading experience was great keep up the good work

Wisely said!! Thank you for your daily thoughts! Resteemed..

I agree with the general idea here, although it's interesting to note that what really killed Jobs was his initial refusal to do traditional cancer treatments.

He had a rare form of pancreatic cancer that, unlike most pancreatic cancer, was very treatable. He chose to treat it with "natural remedies" for nine months or so before going into chemotherapy - and by then it was too late, the best they could do was stave off death for a few more years.

The very thing that made him brilliant - his willingness to ignore the rules and force new change into the world - led him to a death perhaps decades earlier than he needed to die. Weird..

Always click links with Steve Jobs in the thumbnail

Exactly! I freekin love Steve Jobs! @bullishmoney

Food for thought. But i tot money is supposed to chase u, which is a sign of success and you won't have to stress urself going for it.

I'm speaking through a different perspective...that you should always control your ambitions and related actions, not the other way around.