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Let me tell you a story about two friends.
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There were two friends that grew up together.
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They went to the same school.
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They had matching hobbies.
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They even had the same ambitions.
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You could say that they were identical in every way.
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However after they were done with their education, they went their separate ways.
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Many years later, this is how they ended up.
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One friend became extremely successful in every aspect.
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He became financially independent through a series of businesses he started.
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He made a circle of quality and trustworthy friends.
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He was healthy and fit enough to run a marathon.
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And most importantly, he was happy and content with his life.
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The other friend however, became the exact opposite.
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He failed at every business he started and wasn't even able to pay his bills.
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He barely had any friends.
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He became overweight and taking the stairs was enough to tire him out.
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And worst of all, he was miserable and frustrated with his life.
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However, no matter how different their lives became, those two friends still kept in touch.
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In fact, they talked to each other every day.
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That's because those two friends were actually the same person.
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The first friend was that person's best and ideal version, while the second one was his
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worst version.
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You and me both have those two friends inside of us.
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All of us do.
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What I wanted to tell you with this story however, is that we can become either one
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of them.
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We have the potential to become the successful friend, just like we have the option to end
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up being the miserable one.
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Which one we end up becoming though, is determined by the choices we make each and every day.
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The first friend didn't become successful overnight.
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Instead, he achieved his success slowly, through a series of good daily decisions.
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The second friend also didn't end up where he did, in a single day.
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He also did it slowly, by making bad daily choices.
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It's just that those choices, then added up over the years.
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Let me show you exactly how both friends ended up where they did.
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Every day, both of them had to choose between a few options.
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When they got hungry, they had a choice between eating a chocolate bar or preparing a healthy meal.
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When they got home from work, they had a choice between playing video games or reading a business book.
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When they got bored, they had a choice between mindlessly watching TV or spending some quality
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time with friends.
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I think you can guess which choice each of them made.
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Of course, that one decision didn't make a ton of difference.
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At least, not at first.
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But because their choices were repeated over and over again, after a few years the consequences
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began to show.
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The unsuccessful friend might have only eaten one chocolate bar per day, which was roughly
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200 extra calories.
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But when he repeated that every day, over the span of 1 year he gained an extra 20 pounds
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of weight.
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Quite a lot for one tiny chocolate bar.
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The successful friend had read 10 pages of a business book per day, which took roughly
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30 minutes of his time.
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But because he managed to do that every day, he read 15 business books in a span of 1 year.
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Not bad for a 30 minute investment.
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This is why I want you to think about the choices you make on a daily basis.
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It's important that you don't neglect the impact they may have.
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Because when we repeat a certain behavior again and again, it has dramatic consequences
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over time.
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Now let's say that over the span of one day, you make roughly 10 of these small decisions.
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And each decision takes you 1 step in one of the two directions.
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Either towards your ideal self, or towards your worst self.
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When you choose to eat a salad instead of french fries, you make a step towards your
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ideal version.
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Likewise, if you eat fries instead of the salad, you make a step towards your worst version.
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Ok, so you make 10 decisions per day, which means you make 10 steps towards either direction.
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But if you're like most people, you're not heading down either path.
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Instead you're standing somewhere in the middle.
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Each day you take a few steps towards one direction, but then you also take the same
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amount in the opposite one.
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5 good decisions and 5 bad decisions.
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Basically cancelling each other out.
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Now imagine if you could replace just one negative daily behavior with a positive one.
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What if instead of 5 steps forward and 5 steps back, you make 6 steps forward and only 4
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steps back?
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Suddenly you're on a completely different trajectory.
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Instead of standing in the same place, you're making 2 steps towards the best version of yourself.
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Of course, it's even better if you can make 10 good decisions every day.
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However that's highly unrealistic since nobody is actually able to constantly do that.
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But you don't have to do it all the time.
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It's enough that you pick the good decision more often than the bad one.
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The only thing that matters is that you're heading down the correct path.
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So next time you jump on the couch, in front of the TV with your phone in hand, ask yourself
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if this is the best choice you're making.
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Or is there something else, something better that you could choose to do instead?
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I like to think about this all the time.
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To be more precise, the question that's often on my mind is:
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"What would the best version of me do?"
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This question is really useful, as it allows me to pause, evaluate my behavior and re-adjust
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my actions if needed.
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I understand that if I want to become the best version of myself, I need to be doing
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today, what my ideal version would.
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Not tomorrow, or next week, but today.
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A lot of people love to delay their actions.
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They believe that in the future they will somehow be more motivated, more energetic
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and hard working.
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But it's that exact belief that keeps them from their true potential.
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What most don't realize is that when the future rolls around, they're not going to magically
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be a different person.
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They're most likely going to be the same person they are right now, if they don't take the
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necessary actions to become better.
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And most recognize this only when they've spent years on the wrong path.
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They kept thinking that they would change in the future, but in the end, they never did.
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So now they need to make even more good daily decisions just to get back on track.
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This is why it's important that we do what our best version would do today.
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Not tomorrow or next week.
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It's the decisions we make on a daily basis, that dictate who we become in the future.
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So ask yourself what would the ideal version of yourself be doing today.
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It's a really good question to ask yourself.
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I know you understand the importance of daily choices now.
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They have the power to dramatically impact your future, for better or for worse.
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You might not see the impact of your decisions today, probably not even tomorrow.
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But when your choices are compounded over time, they begin to show.
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When we make good choices over and over, we become the successful friend.
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When we repeat bad choices again and again, we become the unsuccessful one.
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So which version will you choose to be today?
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Your worst version or your best version?
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Thanks for watching.
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Hopefully you're going to be your best version today.
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After all, this is how you actually become better than yesterday.