Who wouldn’t love a shortcut in life? It’s sometimes hard enough as it is. If life was a Sims game, I wish whoever was playing my household wouldn’t be shy and use that ‘motherlode’ cheat code once in a while.
It’s no surprise other people would like to make their lives a bit easier, as well. When one netizen asked, “What is the cheat code in life?” over 3k people had ideas. And they weren’t all like the cheat codes in video games. Some of them were pretty wholesome, like saying ‘please’ and ‘thank you,’ which seems “to make tasks easier sometimes,” the Redditor wrote. So read on to find what life advice these netizens had, and share your real-life cheat codes with us, Pandas!
In an ideal world, we would all be at the same starting point in life. But the reality is that some people might have it easier than others. Georgetown Center on Education and the Workforce (CEW) did a report on how being born wealthy in the U.S. leads to a more successful life. It’s called “Born to Win, Schooled to Lose,” and it focuses on one premise: “To succeed in America, it’s better to be born rich than smart.”
At least that’s what Anthony P. Carnevale, director of the CEW and lead author of the report, told CNBC Make It. The report found that “poor kindergartners with good scores are less likely to graduate from high school, graduate from college, or earn a high wage than their affluent peers with bad grades.”
Drugs.
Unfortunately, like cheat codes, they ruin the experience and it’s hard to appreciate life for what it is again.
Another study from 2018 raises even more questions about the very foundations of the American Dream. These researchers found that intellectual kids can come from poor and rich families alike. The differences start to show later on in life because rich kids tend to have more opportunities.
The numbers from the research show that 24% of “high-potential people born to low-income fathers” graduated from college. And 63% of children with intellectual gifts born to high-income fathers attend and graduate college. “This raises concerns about wasted potential arising from limited household resources,” the researchers wrote in their conclusion.
Stop. F**k ’em. Every minute you spend with those emotional leeches is a minute you’re not spending looking for someone who is a genuine joy to hang out with.
Realizing that the ideal of constant happiness is unattainable. The drive to be constantly happy is causing such misery. No one can be happy all the time, and it is unnatural to think we can be. Contented is OK. Melancholic at times is normal. Happiness, and joy especially, is a rare gift. Accepting that makes a person more resilient because expectations are more aligned with reality.
2. Find a job that requires the least amount of input for the most output.
If you want the new car every three years, nice house, eat out every day, the amount of input in your job will need to increase. But if you live a small modest life and learn to be frugal, you will realize you don’t need an expensive college education or stressful job to be happy.
I’ve gotten countless free drinks/appetizers/chips/% off my bill – all for just making a polite comment to management.
I once read something really profound that relates to this: No one has ever been on their death bed and said that they regretted not spending more time at work.
1. Common Sense. Every week I see examples of the pure lack of common sense in life. Companies pay a lot for people who can steady the ship and sort priorities based on common sense.
2. Don’t argue over every little thing. We live in such a polarised society and for the most part the answer is usually somewhere in the middle. The amount of people that are willing to die on the hill of something minor is ridiculous so pick your battles.
Marcus Aurelius – meditations. He gave us the answers on how to live our lives 2000 years ago but we choose to ignore and continue to make the mistakes that our ancestors did.
Care. If you care about your work, your family, your friends, and put forth an honest effort to support them as well as you can, you almost always come out ahead.
Who wouldn't love a shortcut in life? It's sometimes hard enough as it is. If life was a Sims game, I wish whoever was playing my household wouldn't be shy and use that 'motherlode' cheat code once in a while.
It's no surprise other people would like to make their lives a bit easier, as well. When one netizen asked, "What is the cheat code in life?" over 3k people had ideas. And they weren't all like the cheat codes in video games. Some of them were pretty wholesome, like saying 'please' and 'thank you,' which seems "to make tasks easier sometimes," the Redditor wrote. So read on to find what life advice these netizens had, and share your real-life cheat codes with us, Pandas!
In an ideal world, we would all be at the same starting point in life. But the reality is that some people might have it easier than others. Georgetown Center on Education and the Workforce (CEW) did a report on how being born wealthy in the U.S. leads to a more successful life. It's called "Born to Win, Schooled to Lose," and it focuses on one premise: "To succeed in America, it's better to be born rich than smart."
At least that's what Anthony P. Carnevale, director of the CEW and lead author of the report, told CNBC Make It. The report found that "poor kindergartners with good scores are less likely to graduate from high school, graduate from college, or earn a high wage than their affluent peers with bad grades."
Unfortunately, like cheat codes, they ruin the experience and it’s hard to appreciate life for what it is again.
Another study from 2018 raises even more questions about the very foundations of the American Dream. These researchers found that intellectual kids can come from poor and rich families alike. The differences start to show later on in life because rich kids tend to have more opportunities.
The numbers from the research show that 24% of "high-potential people born to low-income fathers" graduated from college. And 63% of children with intellectual gifts born to high-income fathers attend and graduate college. "This raises concerns about wasted potential arising from limited household resources," the researchers wrote in their conclusion.
Stop. F**k 'em. Every minute you spend with those emotional leeches is a minute you're not spending looking for someone who is a genuine joy to hang out with.
Realizing that the ideal of constant happiness is unattainable. The drive to be constantly happy is causing such misery. No one can be happy all the time, and it is unnatural to think we can be. Contented is OK. Melancholic at times is normal. Happiness, and joy especially, is a rare gift. Accepting that makes a person more resilient because expectations are more aligned with reality.
2. Find a job that requires the least amount of input for the most output.
If you want the new car every three years, nice house, eat out every day, the amount of input in your job will need to increase. But if you live a small modest life and learn to be frugal, you will realize you don’t need an expensive college education or stressful job to be happy.
I've gotten countless free drinks/appetizers/chips/% off my bill - all for just making a polite comment to management.
I once read something really profound that relates to this: No one has ever been on their death bed and said that they regretted not spending more time at work.
1. Common Sense. Every week I see examples of the pure lack of common sense in life. Companies pay a lot for people who can steady the ship and sort priorities based on common sense.
2. Don't argue over every little thing. We live in such a polarised society and for the most part the answer is usually somewhere in the middle. The amount of people that are willing to die on the hill of something minor is ridiculous so pick your battles.
Marcus Aurelius - meditations. He gave us the answers on how to live our lives 2000 years ago but we choose to ignore and continue to make the mistakes that our ancestors did.
Care. If you care about your work, your family, your friends, and put forth an honest effort to support them as well as you can, you almost always come out ahead.
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