The 5 Types of Wealth by Sahil Bloom

According to Bloom there are five types of wealth that ideally work in harmony that enable you to live your best life. “You’ve been lied to. Throughout your life, you’ve been slowly indoctrinated to believe that money is the only type of wealth,” Bloom said in an interview with People. “In reality, your wealthy life may involve money, but in the end, it will be defined by everything else.”

  • Time Wealth: How many moments do you have with your remaining loved ones? This section teaches how to prioritize energy-saving tasks to unlock more time in the day.
  • Social Wealth: Who will be sitting in the front row at your funeral? Learn how to create deeper bonds and build a powerful network.
  • Mental Wealth: What would your 10-year-old self say to you today? This teaches how to engage your purpose, and spark constant growth.
  • Physical Wealth: Will you be dancing at your 80th birthday party? Get advice on how to maximize health and vitality through three simple principles of movement, nutrition and recovery.
  • Financial Wealth: What is your definition of enough? Learn how to achieve financial independence and define your version of “enough.”

The book is filled with helpful questionnaires, charts and examples to help the reader consume the ample information.  But as in all things, taking action is what makes the difference so I suggest bite-sized goals to bring the tools to life. The book gives the reader a game plan for forming deeper bonds to grow networks, engaging purpose, maximizing health, and achieving financial independence. Some of the ideas in the book you already know, other concepts will be new and worth thinking about and possibly incorporating into your life.

Which wealth do you want to grow?

The Anxious Generation by Jonathan Haidt

I recently finished reading Haidt’s, “The Anxious Generation”. I was curious about this book as I have struggled to help my teenager with their depression. I am fascinated how their older sister (six years apart) had such a different experience in her teenage years than my younger child. Haidt makes some compelling arguments supported with a ton of data and research. The book’s website also offers additional data and research.

Haidt gives some reasons for depression including:

  • Genes-predisposed to depression
  • Thought patterns (can be learned and unlearned)
  • Social and environmental conditions

But he contends that the biggest difference is how society is focused on a “phone-based childhood vs play- based childhood”. Essentially playing outside and with friends has been replaced with the virtual world. I have definitely seen this difference between my two kids. Another dramatic difference is how parents are overprotective in real life and under protected online.

Haidt explains that the prevailing wisdom of parents today is that kids need to be supervised constantly and parents should not let their kids roam independently like we did when we were children. There is no longer the mantra of “come home when it gets dark.” And laws are even in place to report parents that are seemingly being irresponsible by allowing their kids some freedom. Essentially we have created so many guardrails kids do not experience any hardship or failure which in turn prevents them from developing resilience and grit.

Our phone-based culture has created four harms:

  • #1: Social deprivation -kids are connected to everyone in the world and disconnected from the people around them.
  • #2: Sleep deprivation-there has been tons of research on how our devices disrupt our sleeping patterns.
  • #3: Attention fragmentation-notifications and disruptions happen constantly which leaves us with about five minutes to focus on any task or though before we are interrupted once again.
  • #4: Addiction- “The smartphone is the modern-day hypodermic needle delivering digital dopamine 24/7 for the wired generation”.

This book, its message and all the thorough research really resonated with me. I do agree with Haidt that if we as a society do not address the negative effects of social media and the virtual world, we will create a very different, fragmented world that what we have enjoyed thus far. Certainly putting down the phones, getting out in nature and making more time for real play for our kids can make a difference if we all lean in and make it happen.

The Paris Wife

Just started reading The Paris Wife last night.  I can usually tell immediately if I am going to like a book and this book appears to be a winner!  It reminds me of Loving Frank, which was an excellent book.  McLain’s writing is beautiful…simple yet expressive.  I feel like I am sitting at the table with Ernest and Hadley, his first wife.  I don’t know much about Hemingway so I look forward to being entertained and learning a little, too!

Recent Great Books

I love to read!  I read about 100-150 pages a night after I put the girls to bed.  I have always been a voracious reader.  Since I did not grow up with a television,  I never gained the habit of mindlessly sitting in front of the tv every night.   I review books (fiction and nonfiction) for Elle Magazine and a variety of genres for Portland Book Review.  People always ask me “What good books have you read lately?”  So I am posting a few of my recent favorites.

Hotel at the Corner of Bitter and Sweet by Jamie Ford

The Odds by Stewart O’Nan

The Story of Beautiful Girl byRachel Simon

Long Drive Home by Will Allison

22 Britannia Lane  by Amanda Hodgkinson

Faith by Jennifer Haigh

The Condition by Jennifer Haigh

Pictures of You by  Caroline Leavitt

Next to Love  by Ellen Feldman

The Girl Who Fell from the Sky  by Heidi Durrow

The Secret Language of Flowers  by Vanessa Diffenbaugh

The Island by Victoria Hislop

The Violets of March by Sarah Jio

The Buddha in the Attic by Julie Otsuka

The Beautiful Life by Helen Schulman

Send me some of your recent favorites.  As soon as I finish reading and reviewing IQ84 (925 pages!), I will have time to read since I am not writing any reviews December 16-January 16.

Welcome

Welcome to my new blog.  The purpose of my blog is to share ideas, musings and other random thoughts.  It will be eclectic, for sure.  I will certainly focus on the training and human resource happenings but will couple it with commentary about the books that I read and review, cooking, fitness, volunteerism and anything else that I want to share.

I look forward to hearing from you!