Figuring Out How To Die... Happily

By Chris at www.CapitalistExploits.at

...so that we can live happily.

There's a lot of retired people where I live.

It's just a function of what people choose to do when they've spent their life working, and then finally, once they have the means to, choosing a lifestyle they'd always dreamed of.

Lots of sunshine, temperate climate, crashing waves, white sandy beaches. We homo sapiens flock to it. And so it's newly weds and "nearly deads".

What it means for me is when walking on the beach I will often bump into neighbours (picking on the retired ones here), and sometimes we'll walk together.

Reflecting on the conversations, what's striking is how we accommodate in our minds for the mistakes we've made.

This makes sense because regret is a bitter pill and makes you a miserable person. Nobody likes that. Hands up who wants to hang around a miserable old fart who's always harping on about how life screwed him over?

Also it's a form or protecting our own self esteem and not recognising our failures.

As we get older, however, it seems clear to me that we become more honest with ourselves and with others. We recognise those failures, release them, and are free to talk about them. Ego isn't something that features as much as we age.

This is, I'm going to guess, pretty much what it looks like for average people.

But we don't want to be average. That'd suck!

Our task, therefore, is to have it look more like this:

Get the ego stuff over with as fast as possible... or better still, never get it at all.

Oh, and ego and confidence are NOT the same thing. Not by a long shot!

I've much to learn before they put me in a box or roast me in an oven, but here's some things I've been thinking about as I find myself unbelievably at middle age. How the hell did that happen?

  • Say NO more often. Most of everything out there is a waste of your time. Learn to check it fast. I shared some more personal thoughts on this a while ago.
  • Leverage the skills and talents of those who have what you haven't. Rambo works for movies, not so much in real life.
  • Don't beat dead horses. People rarely change and there are 7 billion of them out there. Don't waste your time with those who're not helping you.
  • And coupled with the last one, make sure you help those you can.
  • You've one life. Live it like you mean it. This means finding your passion. If you can make a living out of it great. If not (because let's face it, it can be hard), make sure you dedicate enough time to it to ensure contentment.
  • Decimate, kill, and annihilate distractions: TV, video games, social media isht, conversations with morons. Treat them as your enemy. The time people spend on absolutely worthless crap is criminal.
  • Three really important ones: read, read, and read.
  • Take time to stop and just think. Every day. An absolute minimum of 30 min. An hour is preferable.

And then on investing...

I wrote an article on the easy and uncomplicated way to get rich that covers the basics. Foundational stuff, if you will. At least it's been that way for me but hey, what do I know?

Some other thoughts:

  • I'd position size smaller than I first did. But...
  • I'd also take more risks. Definitely.
  • I'd let my profits run and re-allocate so that I could psychologically do this.
  • I'd seek help earlier on things I don't know or understand. Battling along being macho about it is idiotic.
  • Get rid of cocky. The market doesn't give a flying hoot about you or your opinions. Be humble.
  • When you're right, press the accelerator.

And if I can get all this right, not only do I get to live a wonderful nourishing life. I get to die happy.

I'd love any feedback. Let me know what I'm missing as I'm sure I've missed a lot.

Please use the comments section here, so the feedback is organised under the article. But if you'd rather reply by email, that's fine too. I'm here.

- Chris

“There is no knowledge so hard to acquire as the knowledge of how to live this life well and naturally.” ― Michel de Montaigne

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Liked this article? Then you'll probably like my other missives on

this topic as well. Go here to access them (free, of course).

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Comments

Donate Moar Feb 4, 2018 10:28 AM Permalink

"Decimate, kill, and annihilate distractions: TV, video games, social media SHIT, conversations with morons. Treat them as your enemy. The time people spend on absolutely worthless crap is criminal. "

Excellent points at ANY age.

 

Heros heretical Feb 4, 2018 10:53 AM Permalink

Do you have grandchildren?  If you did you might realize that few things are as important as the world they will inherit, and that necessarily also revolves around their grandchildren.

There is nothing that threatens the future of my grandchildren more than the JQ.  All the wars, all the poverty, all the depravity emanate from this one festering, parasitical boil on civilizations ass.  And it has become gangrenous.  The author, like yourself, would have us ignore this and focus on how to die happily.

A great uncle of mine said to me years ago, on his cabin cruiser, "the one who has the most toys when he dies, wins".

I see boomers and X'ers and Millenials obsessing over travel, it is a major status symbol.  So when you are on deaths bed, and your grand children never had a chance on life, or are suffering, will you look back on your "happy" life and cherish those memories of travel?

In reply to by heretical

Lost in translation Heros Feb 4, 2018 11:19 AM Permalink

Re: travel.

OH so strongly agree.

In my youth I made it a point to rule out any young woman obsessed with travel, I quit dating them straightaway.

There can be no stable life, or future, with any human being willing to run up sky-high credit card balances for big-ticket “excitement,” and who possess an all-consuming need to be “fulfilled.”

You make a great point.

In reply to by Heros

Pinot-Noir Lost in translation Feb 4, 2018 12:35 PM Permalink

What a load of crap. Travellers are amongst some of the most interesting people one could hope to meet!! A mind that is hungry for new horizons and experiences is so much more alive and vital.

 

You however should slip into your favourite slippers and get comfortable in your favourite chair...now get busy getting old you boring old fart!!

In reply to by Lost in translation

Heros Pinot-Noir Feb 4, 2018 12:51 PM Permalink

Travellers vainly pursue some illusion of knowledge and sophistication by striving to be "the most interesting people one could hope to meet".  My experience is that the majority are shallow, selfish and unhappy, and more importantly never satisfied. 

This vague mirage of illusive happiness has been planted in their brains over multiple generations in order to prevent the goyim from getting down to the really important business of creating a stable, prosperous and sustainable environment for the infinitely successive generations of their offspring.

The author never even mentions children, or the stable marriage required for loving and nourishing home environment.

In reply to by Pinot-Noir

Pinot-Noir Heros Feb 4, 2018 2:37 PM Permalink

I'm not sure if you can bring joos into this one, it is probably a DNA thing!!

 

You mention happiness. The majority of travellers that I know are not the "tie dye" hippies or gap year students, most were expeditioneers, journos, people working for multinational companies or NGOs. Their levels of exposure to the realities of living in 2nd or 3rd world countries usually gauranteed they would say a massive "Thank you!" everytime they drank tap water, they would say "Thank you!" for their access to Health services that are not only efficient but generally close...education, availability of food, etc etc!!!

 

You want me to go on??

 

I worked away for many years in less than desirable places, and when I returned I could not believe how miserable and generally how mind fucked that much of the western world is. People rugurgitating just the latest slew of soundbytes they had gleaned from whatever msm outlet they had tuned into.People unaware of their luck at being born into this world and not the world of the others. Most people live their lives in an eternal loop that has been created by a system that works to enslave them, condemned to a life of servitude and a fiscal debt that can never be repayed!! Is that your idea of happiness??

 

Do your kids get the joy out of life like you wish them too?? or do they spend that little bit too long in front of Facebook or the tv?? Where did that time go??

 

How does that meme go? "We are the most ignorant, best informed people that have ever existed."

 

And as for the author? I am from a forces family. By the time I was ten I had already lived on two continents and had travelled to a couple more. My daughter is the same and the family is solid, loving and stable!!

 

Please expand on your somewhat limited idea of goy happiness.

 

 

 

In reply to by Heros

Heros Pinot-Noir Feb 4, 2018 4:00 PM Permalink

"most were expeditioneers, journos, people working for multinational companies or NGOs."

In other words coastal elites.  Liberals, multiculturalists, warmists, communists, feminists, queers, affirmative action racist minorities and who knows what else, all seeking the "happiness" that Weinstein and the other jews in hollywood keep dangling under their noses.  

Just as a comparison, I would far rather help a South African Boer protect his heritage on his farm than "travel" as a pampered jew puppet with the coastal elites.

In reply to by Pinot-Noir

Pinot-Noir Heros Feb 4, 2018 5:12 PM Permalink

Ha ha, good chatting to you Hero, I actually think that I agree that we're both singing off the same hymn sheet. I despise the Hollywood propaganda and the whole joo narrative that is forced down people's throats. I have met those 'coastal elites' that you talk of (tho'it's the first time I have heard this expression), but I am not referring to them. Think more oil guys, gold prospecters, hard nosed independant journo's, mercs, business types...could not have been further from your description, but I take your point.

 

Me, I was project feasibility/construction and a few other less salubrious roles. You?

In reply to by Heros

algol_dog Heros Feb 4, 2018 3:08 PM Permalink

If you've never travelled extensively, or at the least, lived some degree away from your upbringing, you would not make that general statement.

As far as "the author never mentions" bit, I would assume any plant member of the vegetative species could make the same case if it were able to speak. 

Try expanding your consciousness a skosh - 

In reply to by Heros

Heros shovelhead Feb 4, 2018 12:43 PM Permalink

Your point being that if I don't agree that everyone should pursue some kind of athiest/new age/buddist mantra of the meaning of happiness in life, that I think that fulfillment and purpose can only be through improving the family, race, and the culture, that I am therefore obligated to pull a Stephen Paddock.

Sounds like jew logic to me.  More evidence of your jewishness is the way you resort to vile language that defames the act of procreation in order to smear me without addressing my argument.

In reply to by shovelhead

Heros geno-econ Feb 4, 2018 1:49 PM Permalink

A lot of millenials and gen-x'ers love to slam baby boomers for the ruination of everything through their greed and narcisism.

I have seen each successive nephew and niece (I have several) going through expensive and indulgent weddings at fancy hotels, resorts, etc.

A wedding is about something far more important than just another excuse to waste daddy's money throwing a party.

In reply to by geno-econ

Miffed Microbi… Heros Feb 4, 2018 10:38 PM Permalink

Fortunately I raised my children well and neither of them are dependent on what they will inherit from us to survive. 

 

I believe  travel is beneficial in many ways. I spent 6 weeks walking in Spain with just a backpack and had many memorable interactions with people. Some will be lifelong friendships. This would have been a completely different experience if I just sat on a tour bus. Immersing oneself in a culture vs being a tourist changes ones perspective. 

 

Buying junk ( toys?) that just ends up in landfills seems pointless to me and I can't see how it helps the future generations. Happiness comes from within.

 

Miffed 

 

 

 

In reply to by Heros

Bemused Observer Heros Feb 4, 2018 3:05 PM Permalink

Heroes, there are times in life when we must change direction, fast and unexpectedly, due to some new and dangerous threat. The meaning and purpose you had originally envisioned may have to change in the face of this new threat. Circumstance has made it impossible to get that meaning and purpose you had in mind. So, that should now be replaced with resolve. Resolve to NOT let this happen without a major battle.

Your meaning and purpose will become clear, and you won't have to search for them. They'll come to you.

In reply to by Heros

Heros heretical Feb 4, 2018 10:46 AM Permalink

Happiness is another yid psyop played on stupid goyim.  The entire (((media))) pushes this quest for happiness and people have lost sight of the purpose of their existence.

Hint:  It has nothing to do with how many cars, flatscreens, boats, or fancy vacations you manage to check off of your bucket list before you die.

In reply to by heretical

Heros shovelhead Feb 4, 2018 2:16 PM Permalink

"A simple "Fuck off" works wonders"

It is called social capital.  When people continually try to get more out than what they are willing to put into whatever it is they are socially involved with, then society falls apart.  This is exactly what the jews are trying to accomplish by forcing every western country to accept unrestrained immigration from lands with different cultures, lower intelligence, and in this case, non-existent social capital.

Some people like to claim that the democrats/progressives/socialists want this unrestrained immigration so they can have guaranteed voter majorities.  The truth is that these majorities lie far further off in the horizon than any politician is capable of thinking.

These invaders are being deliberately brought in to disrupt and destroy social capital.  To weaken and divide western society.

So when you tell your neighbors to go take a hike whenever they need help then you are deleting social capital.

Now if the neighbor had a history of neglecting or minimizing his obligations to whatever social group he belongs to, then that is another story.

In reply to by shovelhead

Anonymous_Bene… Feb 4, 2018 11:39 AM Permalink

“To attain knowledge, add things everyday. To attain wisdom, remove things every day.”

Lao Tzu

(Saw it first here on ZH)
 

Most of us here will die happily if we attain knowledge and wisdom.

Money is an abstract form of happiness, whoever has lost his inner happiness will be entirely devoted to money.

My grandfather started an accounting firm that is still around after 60 years. He often said that the way to happiness is dying without a penny to pass along.

I think that for me the future is more about maintaining a lifestyle and occupation where I want to work til the day I die, rather than aiming for "retirement". Especially since I can work remotely and have a nationwide customer base, I would love to sell my place and get back to renting a different place every few years, but this time around we can afford to rent anywhere in the states rather than back when we were broke and immobile. I'd like to do more travel and vacation at will for at least a few weeks out of the year, which is more than I have been capable of doing the past few years while getting established. I want to experience the world while being productive and creating value for people and I would die happy if I had to stay active to maintain that lifestyle.

overmedicatedu… Feb 4, 2018 11:40 AM Permalink

a narcissist always worries about how it feels to them, how happy, how enlightened,how much do i have, did i acquire enough bucket list items?? ..wipe shit on the buddha's nose..the minds focus is always on the person it contains.