We recently came across this article by Mark Manson, and thought is was worth a share. Mark posed this question to his over 30’s audience, ‘what is some key advise you would give to your younger 30’s self ?’. Interestingly the number one resounding piece advise was to take care of finances… with the key being to start saving for retirement now, not later. Intriguing since this, in particular, so often takes the back burner when enjoying the moment of life. Next on the list were things like take care of health, don’t spend time with people who aren’t good for you and be good to the people you care about. All great advice and worth a read. So here you are, 10 life lessons to excel in your 30’s, and if your over the 30’s its never too late to make the most of life. An interesting read, enjoy!
1. Start Saving for Retirement Now, Not Later
âI spent my 20’s recklessly, but your 30’s should be when you make a big financial push. Retirement planning is not something to put off. Understanding boring things like insurance, 401k’s & mortgages is important since its all on your shoulders now. Educate yourself.â (Kash, 41)
The most common piece of advice â so common that almost every single email said at least something about it â was to start getting your financial house in order and to start saving for retirement⌠today.
There were a few categories this advice fell into:
- Make it your top priority to pay down all of your debt as soon as possible.
- Keep an âemergency fundâ â there were tons of horror stories about people getting financially ruined by health issues, lawsuits, divorces, bad business deals, etc.
- Stash away a portion of every pay-check, preferably into a 401k, an IRA or at the least, a savings account.
- Donât spend frivolously. Donât buy a home unless you can afford to get a good mortgage with good rates.
- Donât invest in anything you donât understand. Donât trust stockbrokers.
One reader said, âIf you are in debt more than 10% of your gross annual salary this is a huge red flag. Quit spending, pay off your debt and start saving.â Another wrote, âI would have saved more money in an emergency fund because unexpected expenses really killed my budget. I would have been more diligent about a retirement fund, because now mine looks pretty small.â
Gee whiz! Saving is so easy and so fun!
And then there were the readers who were just completely screwed by their inability to save in their 30’s. One reader named Jodi wishes she had started saving 10% of every pay-check when she was 30. Her career took a turn for the worst and now sheâs stuck at 57, still living pay-check to pay-check. Another woman, age 62, didn’t save because her husband out-earned her. They later got divorced and she soon ran into health problems, draining all of the money she received in the divorce settlement. She, too, now lives pay-check to pay-check, slowly waiting for the day social security kicks in. Another man related a story of having to be supported by his son because he didnât save and unexpectedly lost his job in the 2008 crash.
The point was clear: save early and save as much as possible. One woman emailed me saying that she had worked low-wage jobs with two kids in her 30s and still managed to sock away some money in a retirement fund each year. Because she started early and invested wisely, she is now in her 50s and financially stable for the first time in her life. Her point: itâs always possible. You just have to do it.
2. Start Taking Care of Your Health Now, Not Later
âYour mindâs acceptance of age is 10 to 15 years behind your bodyâs ageing. Your health will go faster than you think but it will be very hard to notice, not the least because you donât want it to happen.â (Tom, 55)
We all know to take care of our health. We all know to eat better and sleep better and exercise more and blah, blah, blah. But just as with the retirement savings, the response from the older readers was loud and unanimous: get healthy and stay healthy now.
So many people said it that Iâm not even going to bother quoting anybody else. Their points were pretty much all the same: the way you treat your body has a cumulative effect; itâs not that your body suddenly breaks down one year, itâs been breaking down all along without you noticing. This is the decade to slow down that breakage.
The key to salad is to laugh while eating it.
And this wasnât just your typical motherly advice to eat your veggies. These were emails from cancer survivors, heart attack survivors, stroke survivors, people with diabetes and blood pressure problems, joint issues and chronic pain. They all said the same thing: âIf I could go back, I would start eating better and exercising and I would not stop. I made excuses then. But I had no idea.â
3. Donât Spend Time with People Who Donât Treat You Well
âLearn how to say ânoâ to people, activities and obligations that donât bring value to your life.â (Hayley, 37)
Gently let go of those who are not making your life better.
After calls to take care of your health and your finances, the most common piece of advice from people looking back at their 30-year-old selves was an interesting one: they would go back and enforce stronger boundaries in their lives and dedicate their time to better people. âSetting healthy boundaries is one of the most loving things you can do for yourself or another person.â (Kristen, 43)
What does that mean specifically?
âDonât tolerate people who donât treat you well. Period. Donât tolerate them for financial reasons. Donât tolerate them for emotional reasons. Donât tolerate them for the childrenâs sake or for convenience sake.â (Jane, 52)
âDonât settle for mediocre friends, jobs, love, relationships and life.â (Sean, 43)
âStay away from miserable people⌠they will consume you, drain you.â (Gabriella, 43)
âSurround yourself and only date people that make you a better version of yourself, that bring out your best parts, love and accept you.â (Xochie)
People typically struggle with boundaries because they find it difficult to hurt someone elseâs feelings, or they get caught up in the desire to change the other person or make them treat them the way they want to be treated. This never works. And in fact, it often makes it worse. As one reader wisely said, âSelfishness and self-interest are two different things. Sometimes you have to be cruel to be kind.â
When weâre in our 20’s, the world is so open to opportunity and weâre so short on experience that we cling to the people we meet, even if they’ve done nothing to earn our clingage. But by our 30’s we’ve learned that good relationships are hard to come by, that thereâs no shortage of people to meet and friends to be made, and that thereâs no reason to waste our time with people who donât help us on our lifeâs path.
4. Be Good to the People You Care About
âShow up with and for your friends. You matter, and your presence matters.â (Jessica, 40)
Conversely, while enforcing stricter boundaries on who we let into our lives, many readers advised to make the time for those friends and family that we do decide to keep close.
âI think sometimes I may have taken some relationships for granted, and when that person is gone, theyâre gone. Unfortunately, the older you get, well, things start to happen, and it will affect those closest to you.â (Ed, 45)
âAppreciate those close to you. You can get money back and jobs back, but you can never get time back.â (Anne, 41)
âTragedy happens in everyoneâs life, everyoneâs circle of family and friends. Be the person that others can count on when it does. I think that between 30 and 40 is the decade when a lot of shit finally starts to happen that you might have thought never would happen to you or those you love. Parents die, spouses die, babies are still-born, friends get divorced, spouses cheat⌠the list goes on and on. Helping someone through these times by simply being there, listening and not judging is an honour and will deepen your relationships in ways you probably canât yet imagine.â (Rebecca, 40)
5. You canât have everything; Focus On Doing a Few Things Really Well
âEverything in life is a trade-off. You give up one thing to get another and you canât have it all. Accept that.â (Eldri, 60)
In our 20’s we have a lot of dreams. We believe that we have all of the time in the world. I myself remember having illusions that my website would be my first career of many. Little did I know that it took the better part of a decade to even get competent at this. And now that Iâm competent and have a major advantage and love what I do, why would I ever trade that in for another career?
âIn a word: focus. You can simply get more done in life if you focus on one thing and do it really well. Focus more.â (Ericson, 49)
Another reader: âI would tell myself to focus on one or two goals/aspirations/dreams and really work towards them. Donât get distracted.â And another: âYou have to accept that you cannot do everything. It takes a lot of sacrifice to achieve anything special in life.â
A few readers noted that most people arbitrarily choose their careers in their late teens or early 20’s, and as with many of our choices at those ages, they are often wrong choices. It takes years to figure out what weâre good at and what we enjoy doing. But itâs better to focus on our primary strengths and maximize them over the course of lifetime than to half-ass something else.
âIâd tell my 30 year old self to set aside what other people think and identify my natural strengths and what Iâm passionate about, and then build a life around those.â (Sara, 58)
For some people, this will mean taking big risks, even in their 30’s and beyond. It may mean ditching a career they spent a decade building and giving up money they worked hard for and became accustomed to. Which brings us toâŚ
6. Donât Be Afraid of Taking Risks, You Can Still Change
âWhile by age 30 most feel they should have their career dialled in, it is never too late to reset. The individuals that I have seen with the biggest regrets during this decade are those that stay in something that they know is not right. It is such an easy decade to have the days turn to weeks to years, only to wake up at 40 with a mid-life crisis for not taking action on a problem they were aware of 10 years prior but failed to act.â (Richard, 41)
âBiggest regrets I have are almost exclusively things I did *not* do.â (Sam, 47)
Many readers commented on how society tells us that by 30 we should have things âfigured outâ â our career situation, our dating/marriage situation, our financial situation and so on. But this isnât true. And, in fact, dozens and dozens of readers implored to not let these social expectations of âbeing an adultâ deter you from taking some major risks and starting over. As someone on my Facebook page responded: âAll adults are winging it.â
âI am about to turn 41 and would tell my 30 year old self that you do not have conform you life to an ideal that you do not believe in. Live your life, donât let it live you. Donât be afraid of tearing it all down if you have to, you have the power to build it all back up again.â (Lisa, 41)
Multiple readers related making major career changes in their 30s and being better off for doing so. One left a lucrative job as a military engineer to become a teacher. Twenty years later, he called it one of the best decisions of his life. When I asked my mum this question, her answer was, âI wish I had been willing to think outside the box a bit more. Your dad and I kind of figured we had to do thing A, thing B, thing C, but looking back I realize we didn’t have to at all; we were very narrow in our thinking and our lifestyles and I kind of regret that.â
âLess fear. Less fear. Less fear. I am about to turn 50 next year, and I am just getting that lesson. Fear was such a detrimental driving force in my life at 30. It impacted my marriage, my career, my self-image in a fiercely negative manner. I was guilty of: Assuming conversations that others might be having about me. Thinking that I might fail. Wondering what the outcome might be. If I could do it again, I would have risked more.â (Aida, 49)
7. You Must Continue to Grow and Develop Yourself
âYou have two assets that you can never get back once you’ve lost them: your body and your mind. Most people stop growing and working on themselves in their 20’s. Most people in their 30’s are too busy to worry about self-improvement. But if youâre one of the few who continues to educate themselves, evolve their thinking and take care of their mental and physical health, you will be light-years ahead of the pack by 40.â (Stan, 48)
It follows that if one can still change in their 30’s â and should continue to change in their 30’s â then one must continue to work to improve and grow. Many readers related the choice of going back to school and getting their degrees in their 30’s as one of the most useful things they had ever done. Others talked of taking extra seminars and courses to get a leg up. Others started their first businesses or moved to new countries. Others checked themselves into therapy or began a meditation practice.
A friend of mine stated that at 29, he decided that his mind was his most valuable asset, and he decided to invest in it. He spent thousands on his own education, on seminars, on various therapies. And at 54, he insists that it was one of the best decisions he ever made.
âThe number one goal should be to try to become a better person, partner, parent, friend, colleague etc. â in other words to grow as an individual.â (Aimilia, 39)
8. Nobody (Still) Knows What Theyâre Doing, Get Used to It
âUnless you are already dead â mentally, emotionally, and socially â you cannot anticipate your life 5 years into the future. It will not develop as you expect. So just stop it. Stop assuming you can plan far ahead, stop obsessing about what is happening right now because it will change anyway, and get over the control issue about your lifeâs direction. Fortunately, because this is true, you can take even more chances and not lose anything; you cannot lose what you never had. Besides, most feelings of loss are in your mind anyway â few matter in the long term.â (Thomas, 56)
In my article about what I learned in my 20’s, one of my lessons was âNobody Knows What Theyâre Doing,â and that this was good news. Well, according to the 40+ crowd, this continues to be true in oneâs 30’s and, well, forever it seems; and it continues to be good news forever as well.
âMost of what you think is important now will seem unimportant in 10 or 20 years and thatâs OK. Thatâs called growth. Just try to remember to not take yourself so seriously all the time and be open to it.â (Simon, 57)
âDespite feeling somewhat invincible for the last decade, you really donât know whatâs going to happen and neither does anyone else, no matter how confidently they talk. While this is disturbing to those who cling to permanence or security, itâs truly liberating once you grasp the truth that things are always changing. To finish, there might be times that are really sad. Donât dull the pain or avoid it. Sorrow is part of everyoneâs lifetime and the consequence of an open and passionate heart. Honour that. Above all, be kind to yourself and others, itâs such a brilliant and beautiful ride and keeps on getting better.â (Prue, 38)
âI’m 44. I would remind my 30 year old self that at 40, my 30’s would be equally filled with dumb stuff, different stuff, but still dumb stuff⌠So, 30 year old self, donât go getting on your high horse. You STILL donât know it all. And thatâs a good thing.â (Shirley, 44)
9. Invest in Your Family; Itâs Worth It
âSpend more time with your folks. Itâs a different relationship when youâre an adult and itâs up to you how you redefine your interactions. They are always going to see you as their kid until the moment you can make them see you as your own man. Everyone gets old. Everyone dies. Take advantage of the time you have left to set things right and enjoy your family.â (Kash, 41)
I was overwhelmed with amount of responses about family and the power of those responses. Family is the big new relevant topic for this decade for me, because you get it on both ends. Your parents are old and you need to start considering how your relationship with them is going to function as a self-sufficient adult. And then you also need to contemplate creating a family of your own.
Pretty much everybody agreed to get over whatever problems you have with your parents and find a way to make it work with them. One reader wrote, âYouâre too old to blame your parents for any of your own short-comings now. At 20 you could get away with it, youâd just left the house. At 30, youâre a grown-up. Seriously. Move on.â
But then thereâs the question that plagues every single 30-year-old: to baby or not to baby?
âYou donât have the time. You donât have the money. You need to perfect your career first. Theyâll end your life as you know it. Oh shut upâŚ
Kids are great. They make you better in every way. They push you to your limits. They make you happy. You should not defer having kids. If you are 30, now is the time to get real about this. You will never regret it.â (Kevin, 38)
âItâs never the âright timeâ for children because you have no idea what youâre getting into until you have one. If you have a good marriage and environment to raise them, err on having them earlier rather than later, youâll get to enjoy more of them.â (Cindy, 45)
âAll my preconceived notions about what a married life is like were wrong. Unless you’ve already been married, everyoneâs are. Especially once you have kids. Try to stay open to the experience and fluid as a person; your marriage is worth it, and your happiness seems as much tied to your ability to change and adapt as anything else. I wasn’t planning on having kids. From a purely selfish perspective, this was the dumbest thing of all. Children are the most fulfilling, challenging, and exhausting endeavour anyone can ever undertake. Ever.â (Rich, 44)
What do you want kid?
The consensus about marriage seemed to be that it was worth it, assuming you had a healthy relationship with the right person. If not, you should run the other way (See #3).
But interestingly, I got a number of emails like the following:
âWhat I know now vs 10-13 years ago is simply this⌠bars, woman, beaches, drink after drink, clubs, bottle service, trips to different cities because I had no responsibility other than work, etc⌠I would trade every memory of that life for a good woman that was actually in love with me⌠and maybe a family. I would add, donât forgot to actually grow up and start a family and take on responsibilities other than success at work. I am still having a little bit of fun⌠but sometimes when I go out, I feel like the guy that kept coming back to high school after he graduated (think Matthew McConaugheyâs character in Dazed and Confused). I see people in love and on dates everywhere. âEveryoneâ my age is in their first or second marriage by now! Being perpetually single sounds amazing to all of my married friends but it is not the way one should choose to live their life.â (Anonymous, 43)
âI would have told myself to stop constantly searching for the next best thing and I would have appreciated the relationships that I had with some of the good, genuine guys that truly cared for me. Now Iâm always alone and it feels too late.â (Fara, 38)
On the flip side, there were a small handful of emails that took the other side of the coin:
âDonât feel pressured to get married or have kids if you donât want to. What makes one person happy doesn’t make everyone happy. I’ve chosen to stay single and childless and I still live a happy and fulfilled life. Do what feels right for you.â (Anonymous, 40)
Conclusion: It seems that while family is not absolutely necessary to have a happy and fulfilling life, the majority of people have found that family is always worth the investment, assuming the relationships are healthy and not toxic and/or abusive.
10. Be kind to yourself, respect yourself
âBe a little selfish and do something for yourself every day, something different once a month and something spectacular every year.â (Nancy, 60)
This one was rarely the central focus of any email, but it was present in some capacity in almost all of them: treat yourself better. Almost everybody said this in one form or another. âThere is no one who cares about or thinks about your life a fraction of what you do,â one reader began, and, âlife is hard, so learn to love yourself now, itâs harder to learn later,â another reader finished.
Or as Renee, 40, succinctly put it: âBe kind to yourself.â
Many readers included the old clichĂŠ: âDonât sweat the small stuff; and itâs almost all small stuff.â Eldri, 60, wisely said, âWhen confronted with a perceived problem, ask yourself, âIs this going to matter in five years, ten years?â If not, dwell on it for a few minutes, then let it go.â It seems many readers have focused on the subtle life lesson of simply accepting life as is, warts and all.
Which brings me to the last quote from Martin, age 58:
âWhen I turned forty my father told me that Iâd enjoy my forties because in your twenties you think you know whatâs going on, in your thirties you realize you probably donât, and in your forties you can relax and just accept things. I’m 58 and he was right.â
Source: Â Mark Manson, full original article here