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Redefining “Sacrifice” for your Personal Success

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Personal success is defined by an individual in his/her own manner.  Some want overwhelming financial prosperity while others look to quiet family comforts.  Some want to travel the world while others want a large home, garden, and car.  Some want international business success while others simply want flexibility to work or not work.  Some want spiritual achievement while others define spirituality very differently.  To nearly all, it is preached that one must sacrifice in order to achieve what one wants most in life.  Is this true?  I would say yes but what you must understand the nature of sacrifice and then decide, is it really a sacrifice at all?  This line of thinking is a key component of a philosophical framework called “Objectivism”, developed by Ayn Rand.  With such titles as “The Virtue of Selfishness”, you can imagine the controversy.  Most religious people, me being a Christian, would claim this to be false and pose arguments to the contrary, the selfishness is wrong and sacrifice is the key.  When you strip away the semantics of modern language and build the proper context to Christian sacrifice, the philosophies begin to align.  I’m sure any hardcore objectivist would beg to differ, which is fine, this is simply how my understanding has developed.

In “The FountainHead”, Ayn Rand makes a statement that I find valuable in this discussion. (Emphasis added)

Is sacrifice a virtue? Can a man sacrifice his integrity? His honor? His freedom? His ideal? His convictions? The honesty of his feelings? The independence of his thought? But these are a man’s supreme possessions.  Anything he gives up for them is not a sacrifice but an easy bargain.  They, however, are above sacrificing to any cause or consideration whatsoever.

I have pondered this for some time and have come to the conclusion that even most Christians would agree with that statement.  Sacrificing one’s integrity, convictions, etc. would be against the intent and idea of sacrifice.   I love the statement that anything one gives up for these values is not a sacrifice but an easy bargain.  Compare it to this obvious scenario:  If I sacrifice $10 by giving it to you, knowing you will give me $20 in return, is it a sacrifice?   One gives and “sacrifices” for one’s ideals in order to enhance them, to keep them, to live by them and the return is much greater than the sacrifice (assuming you value your ideals, or let’s just say your ideals are what you value most in life, whatever they are).

The key difference in definition, for many, may simply be timing.  Sacrifice to some is the idea of giving up what you want today for what you want of greater value sometime in the future.  This may be a form of short-term sacrifice but once the item of greater value comes, you will have sacrificed nothing as you now stand with more than you started with.  The great teaching challenge of many religious credos is getting individuals to give up instant gratification for future glory and reward of much greater value.  It is to “sacrifice” in the immediate future.  The ideas of objectivism simply remove the issue of timing and state: Look at what you want most and do that, no matter how long it takes.    Looking at both of these statements creates a foundation for successful achievement.  What do you want most in life?  Professionally? Personally?  Now working on achieving it, no matter how long it takes, no matter what you must give up today in order to obtain it tomorrow (that is all but the ‘un-sacrifice-ables’ in your life, however they are defined).

Many Christians and religious individuals may take the idea of self-sacrifice to the extreme that Rand shares as a danger, that of sacrificing your integrity, convictions, honor and more for the “good of society”, for the good of the collective, the community.  This goes beyond the scope even of properly understood Christianity.  Even Jesus Christ himself would not sacrifice his integrity and conviction for the good of mankind.  What “good” would that have done anyhow? It would have gone counter to his purpose and goal.  That’s the peculiarity of many religions, Christianity included, and the understanding of sacrifice.  It doesn’t make logical sense even within their own doctrines to sacrifice to that degree or definition.  It also reveals the shortcomings of collectivism but that will be left for another discussion.

With this understanding of sacrifice and taking necessary action for success, I must say it is much easier to think about when you use Rand’s words:

Achieving personal success is simply a matter of making “easy bargains”…

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Redefining Learning: Innovative Education vs. Traditional Tyranny

I have seen a lot on education recently.  Whether that is due to it being an important and prominent issue or simply an action of reticular activation due to interest, I don’t know.  The great thing is entrepreneurs and passionate individuals are finally taking action against an archaic, aristocratic educational philosophy.  With the rapid shifts and flow of information, traditional education is 10 steps back, maybe 100 steps back.  Education tends to have (or has had) little competition as well, considering the substantial regulations regarding accreditation and other barriers to entry.  The interesting caveat is that people don’t seem to care about “accreditation” as much anymore and new educational programs are sprouting up all over the web and all of the world, many having little to do with the traditional acquisition of ‘degrees’.  I don’t mean to dismantle traditional education entirely, it has done wonders for many, only to say that creative destruction may begin to play it’s course, or at least offer some viable competition and an array of options and choices for ’students’ (however you define a student).

One recent post describes an open-source textbook company that is leaking into traditional textbook profits. See some on the company here from VentureBeat.  The concept of open-source textbooks is a powerful one.  Cost of production is near zero, updates are nearly instant so information is current (not 2 years old by the time it is in student hands) and those with access to solid educational resources is near limitless.  Combine this concept with those of other groups such as Singularity University (Not cheap but innovative) or Seth Godin’s ‘free’ MBA program and you can see some interesting evolutions in education.  Check out The Personal MBA by Josh Kaufman as well. Here are some excerpts from Josh’s program manifesto:

MBA programs don’t have a monopoly on advanced business knowledge: you can teach yourself everything you need to know to succeed in life and at work.

and…

The PMBA is more flexible than a traditional MBA program, doesn’t involve going into massive debt, and won’t interrupt your income stream for two years. Just pick up one of these business books, learn as much as you can, discuss what you learn with others, then go out into the real world and make great things happen.

Fast Company also released a recent article regarding education as well here. They called it “Who Needs Harvard?” which hints at the obvious direction of the article.  It is very interesting.

This is just the beginning and I’m excited to see what happens in the future and plan on more about it, if not some level of participation!

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Persuasion vs. Force

I recently read a pamphlet by Mark Skousen entitled “Persuasion vs. Force” which largely and succinctly defines my view of political freedoms and economic liberty.  The purpose of the work is not to begin debating the nuances of society and management thereof but to put for a new precedent, a respect for all who are born on this earth and a philosophy to allow the debate through persuasion, not force.

As I have expressed in previous posts, I feel that socialism and interventionist agendas are disrespectful and attempts to play “God” as if certain groups and individuals have been given a special authority to control and force society, that they somehow know what is best for me when they don’t even know my name, situation, circumstance, nothing!  Skousen makes a powerful case for a society of mutual respect, education and persuasion.  Will bad still happen? of course! It happens anyway, no matter how much you legislate, it’s just considered “illegal” by the state.  Will there be no law? of course there will be law! Only these laws will merely protect us from each other and not from ourselves. As Mr Skousen put it:

We should permit the maximum degree of freedom in allowing people to choose what they think, act and do to themselves without harming others.

As a great leader once put it: “We teach them correct principles, and they govern themselves”

Just read the paper and let me know what you think…

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