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Another interesting thing about Cambrian explosions is that you don't necessarily realize they're happening when they happen, but with the benefit of time, you see that something clearly changed a behavior or mindset or way of thinking to create the result. It is especially gratifying if the result is something you'd been working towards to begin with! Quite often, then, the progression goes something like this:
Try -- Fail -- Try -- Fail -- Try -- Succeed Part Way -- Fail -- Try -- Aahhh!
However, I can speak of two other events. First, there was a period in my 20s where I was stuck in an uninteresting and dead-end job, and couldn't buy an interview, let alone a new job. I eventually fell into a startup computer magazine, of all things. While my hours were so long that I had no life until the company eventually failed, I established a reputation and network of contacts that continues serving me to this day. In fact, I was just hired at a substantial pay raise by someone that I last worked with ten years ago, who sought me out on LinkedIn.
The second was the realization that there are substantial differences in salary for the same work at different companies; in particular, large companies tend to pay much more than small ones. After working at small organizations for the first 15 years of my career, I lucked into a larger company, where my salary increased by $35K in four years. Knowing the wide range in salaries is information you need to keep you at the upper end of your earning ability.
I often tell my friends that it is like a dam set on a slope holding back all these grains of sand. With each new skill or ability comes a new grain of sand. Eventually all the sand crushes through the dam cause it weighs so heavy, and it burts forth in one cataclysmic rush of revelation.
To me, that's how I seem to improve. I absorb all this information and nothing really happens, and then, BAM. It all hits. It all makes sense. The world is clear and I move on how I can delve deeper into literature or whatever task is at hand.
Speaking of this Cambrian explosion... I should look it up. Sounds interesting.
-Greg the Writer
This year I "discovered" that:
* convenience food isn't convenient
* 'just' buying something usually takes more time than fixing or making something myself
* there are plenty of free ways to entertain myself without going shopping
* simple living is remarkably simple
* being frugal can be really fun, especially when I feel clever
* keeping track of account balances each week is also surprisingly fun
* I can help save the planet while spending less
* fresh food tastes way better than stuff with lots of preservatives
* and going to the gym isn't nearly as fun as gardening and going for walks with my husband and other friends.
Meanwhile, my husband discovered that it takes less time to stay organized than it does to find what he needs when he isn't organized -- or go out and buy something because he can't find it.
My explosion was't about personal finance, it was what I really want to do with my life...write. Of course, my explosion would be a little bigger and faster if I didn't have to maintain a regular job while I work towards my bigger goal.
It's the simplicity of buying assets for income that's so appealing versus the save all you can all your life so that you can retire, which doesn't sound seksy at all!