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我希望我19岁的时候可以明白这段话

2016-03-31 Eric Z 英语学习笔记

谢谢你昨天祝我生日快乐! 


刚刚看完郝明义写的《工作DNA》其中的一卷 -- 本来是买《越读者》,看到这个系列就一起下了单,读完了其中的一本,受益匪浅。没有大道理,只是娓娓道来的分享,坦诚温暖。




分享书中的一段话给你:


拿不到宝刀、宝剑的时候,就全力练你的桩,站你的马步。


这些基本功可以让你在任何环境里站稳你的脚步。而你越是没有其他武器可用,只有这些基本功可练的时候,这些功夫会练得越扎实。这样等你将来有一把趁手的武器时,你能爆发的力量将非同小可。


也提到了曾国藩的“圣贤之志”:


他以写字来谈这个道理:“手愈拙,字愈丑,意兴愈低,所谓困也。” 而他提出的解放是:“困时切莫间断。熬过此关,便可少进。再进再困,再熬再奋,自有享通精进之日。”


他下了总结说:“不特习字,凡事皆有极困极难之时,打的通的,便是好汉。”


学英文不也是如此吗?


推荐大学生或者刚毕业的朋友们读一下这本书,或许对你会有帮助。


今天和大家分享的是一篇博文(昨天已经推荐过),Advice for ambitious 19 year olds。作者是Sam Altma, 如果你知道一个叫Y Combinator的公司的话,你对他一定很熟悉了。



“I’m an ambitious 19 year old, what should I do?” 

I get asked this question fairly often, and I now have a lot of data on what works, so I thought I’d share my response.

Usually, people are deciding between going to college (and usually working on side projects while they do so), joining a company, or starting their own startup. 

The secret is that any of these can be right answer, and you should make your decision based on the specific circumstances of each option.  The critical point is that you want to do the thing that is most likely to get you on a path to do something great.


No matter what you choose, build stuff and be around smart people.  “Stuff” can be a lot of different things—open source projects outside of class, a startup, a new sales process at a company you work at—but, obviously, sitting around talking with your friends about how you guys really should build a website together does not count.

The best people always seem to be building stuff and hanging around smart people, so if you have to decide between several options, this may be a good filter.

Working on something good will pull you along a path where good things keep happening to you.  (In fact, this effect is so strong that there’s a danger of getting sucked into too many interesting things and getting distracted from what you really want to do.)

In making this decision, you want to take the right kind of risk.  Most people think about risk the wrong way—for example, staying in college seems like a non-risky path.  However, getting nothing done for four of your most productive years is actually pretty risky.  Starting a company that you’re in love with is the right kind of risk.  Becoming employee number 50 at a company that still has a good chance of failure is the wrong kind of risk.

If you stay in college, make sure you learn something worthwhile and work on interesting projects—college is probably the best place to meet people to work with.  If you’re really worried you’ll miss some critical social experience by dropping out of college, you should probably stay.

If you join a company, my general advice is to join a company on a breakout trajectory.  There are a usually a handful of these at a time, and they are usually identifiable to a smart young person.  They are a very good risk/reward tradeoff.  Such a company is almost certainly going to be successful, but the rest of the world isn’t quite as convinced of it as they should be.  Fortunately, these companies love ambitious young people.  In addition to the equity being a great deal (you might get 1/10th of the equity you’d get if you join a tiny new startup, but at 1/100th or 1/1000th of the risk), you will work with very good people, learn what success looks like, and get a W on your record (which turns out to be quite valuable).  Spending a few years at a company that fails has path consequences, and working at an already-massively-successful company means you will learn much less, and probably work with less impressive people.

Incidentally, don’t let salary be a factor.  I just watched someone turn down one of these breakout companies because Microsoft offered him $30k per year more in salary—that was a terrible decision.  He will not build interesting things and may not work with smart people.  In a few years, when it’s time for something new, the options in front of him will be much worse than they could have been.


If you start a company, only do so if you have an idea you’re in love with.  If you’re hanging out with your friends trying to come up with an idea, I don’t think you should start that company (although there are many who disagree with me).  Starting a failed startup is less bad than joining a failed company as an employee (and you’ll certainly learn much more in the former case).  If you fail at an idea that you really loved and could have been great, you’re unlikely to regret it, and people will not hold it against you. Failing at a me-too copycat startup is worse.  Remember that there will be lots of other opportunities to start companies, and that startups are a 6-10 year commitment—wait for the right one

One big pro for starting a company is that it’s usually the way to learn the most in the shortest amount of time.  One big con is that it’s easy to start a company for the wrong reasons—usually so that you can say you’re starting a company—and this makes it easy to cloud your judgment. 

No matter what you choose, keep your personal burn rate low and minimize your commitments.  I have seen a lot of people miss great opportunities because they couldn’t afford a reduction in salary or because they couldn’t move or didn’t have the time.

Think about risk the right way.  Drew Houston gave a great commencement speech where he said you only have to be right once.  That’s true.  The risk is not getting on the path where you get to be right that one critical time.  

一时不知道自己的梦想没有关系,最重要的是不能忘记自己需要梦想。



Elon Musk的毕业典礼演讲

从读创业指南想到的是


看到这里是真爱了,我又要送书了,一套《工作DNA》(三本),亚马逊上卖68.4。老规矩,在下方留言,我会把一些“走心”的评论选出来,4月1日中午12点时,点赞最多的那条留言的作者将会获得赠书。


注意:希望大家不要只是为了拉票而转发到朋友圈麻烦你的朋友们,我不是在搞营销、求关注,也不是在帮谁做广告。只是把我喜欢的东西也分享给你,能力有限,这种方式是我能想到最方便的一种。


当然,你觉得这篇文章还不错的话,欢迎你转发! 顺手帮我点下下面的广告就更好了:)

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