Life Lessons 101

One of the hardest things about improving your life is remembering to practice what you've learned in a moment of temptation, frustration, or hardship. Anyone can follow a strategy as they read about it, but remembering to stick with it in the real world is tough.
Stories help with that. An engaging story sticks with you in a way that a research finding often can't. While JamesClear.com promotes science-backed ideas, we don't shun stories and lessons based on real life.
This page collects life lessons from my own life as well as from the lives of artists, creators, and innovators. Articles grapple with concepts like marriage, gratitude, and work-life balance.

https://sols.asu.edu/sites/default/files/webform/seminar/documents/legit-ez-battery-reconditioning-program.pdf

https://sols.asu.edu/sites/default/files/webform/seminar/documents/seyren-ez-battery-reconditioning-guide-pdf.pdf

https://caribbeanfever.com/profiles/status/show?id=2663233%3AStatus%3A12108078

http://www.myfolio.com/art/aqthmcm5bp

http://facebookhitlist.com/forum/topics/ezbatz

https://www.mydigoo.com/forums-topicdetail-154697.html

http://www.4mark.net/story/2314313/https-sols.asu.edu-sites-default-files-webform-seminar-documents-legit-ez-battery-reconditioning-program.pdf

http://www.4mark.net/story/2314315/https-sols.asu.edu-sites-default-files-webform-seminar-documents-seyren-ez-battery-reconditioning-guide-pdf.pdf

https://www.peeranswer.com/question/5f2e89ae5ad64d5031359b48

https://note.com/shawarma999/n/n8bb59e323092

http://network-marketing.ning.com/profiles/blogs/ez-battery-reconditioning

https://shawarma999.hatenablog.com/entry/2020/08/08/202929

http://www.onfeetnation.com/profiles/blogs/ezbatz

https://www.page2share.com/page/102685/ez-battery-reconditioning
https://www.posts123.com/post/69128/ez-battery-reconditioning-program-legit-2020

https://justpaste.it/86o28

https://paiza.io/projects/tIFoOCpCJZHeK_M6GdmgQA

https://paiza.io/projects/KMRTKB6xTzUszQ-y99scsA

The Shadow Side of Greatness

Pablo Picasso. He is one of the most famous artists of the 20th century and a household name even among people who, like myself, consider themselves to be complete novices in the art world.
I recently went to a Picasso exhibition. What impressed me the most was not any individual piece of art, but rather his remarkably prolific output. Researchers have catalogued 26,075 pieces of art created by Picasso and some people believe the total number is closer to 50,000.
When I discovered that Picasso lived to be 91 years old, I decided to do the math. Picasso lived for a total of 33,403 days. With 26,075 published works, that means Picasso averaged 1 new piece of artwork every day of his life from age 20 until his death at age 91. He created something new, every day, for 71 years.
This unfathomable output not only played a large role in Picasso’s international fame, but also enabled him to amass a huge net worth of approximately $500 million by the time of his death in 1973. His work became so famous and so numerous that, according to the Art Loss Register, Picasso is the most stolen artist in history with over 550 works currently missing.
What made Picasso great was not just how much art he produced, but also how he produced it. He co-founded the movement of Cubism and created the style of collage. He was the artist his contemporaries copied. Any discussion of the most well-known artists in history would have to include his name.

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