Concrete Goals Over Sweeping Resolutions

What a year. A lot has happened in the last 12 months, both in my life and around the world. Before I start thinking about the year ahead, I reflected about all the major events…

In my life:

  • For 2 months, I worked for an Internet start-up company, Moving Off Campus. As I collected and organized data, I listened to three full audio books – the final Harry Potter book was amazing.
  • I graduated Washington University with a Bachelor’s degree in International Studies and minors in French and Business.
  • I spent 3.5 weeks traveling with my brother and two friends to Israel, Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania and Serbia. In Serbia, the Crown Prince and Princess hosted us at the Royal Palace.
  • I relocated to Cambridge, MA and started a job with AIRINC, an information services company that designs, provides data for, and supports expatriate compensation packages for global companies. As a surveyor, I travel 4 times a year to collect pricing data and, so far, have had the opportunity to travel to Jamaica, St. Vincent, Grenada, Russia, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkmenistan.

Around the world:

  • Kosovo declared independence from Serbia, and while the United States, Britain, Germany, France, and several other nations recognize it as a sovereign and independent state, many still do not.
  • Fidel Castro stepped down as Cuba’s leader.
  • In America, the S&P500, an oft-used metric for the stock market, plummeted roughly 40%. Despite the financial turbulence, Barack Obama, once a virtually unknown politician, was elected the country’s 44th president. Tina Fey also did a remarkable impersonation of Sarah Palin.
  • In the Middle East, fighting between Israel and Hamas has continued.
  • Scientists fround frozen water on Mars.
  • Russia elected a new president, Dmitri A. Medvedev, but Vladimir Putin still maintains power as Prime Minister. In August, Russia and Georgia engaged in a serious conflict over South Ossetia, catching the world’s attention.
  • Terrorism surfaced in Mumbai.
  • In Geneva, Switzerland, the Large Hadron Collider was completed. Nine days later, operations were halted due to magnetic issues. No more experiments until summer of 2009.
  • Michael Phelps won 8 Gold Medals at the Beijing Olympics, beating Mark Spitz’s previous record of 7.

And there’s so much more. These were the world events that caught my attention – which ones caught yours?

On January 1st, 2008, one year ago today, I wrote about how making concrete goals is much more beneficial than making broad, sweeping resolutions. Here’s an excerpt:

Instead of “getting in better shape,” why not try to run a mile under 7 minutes or do 20 pull-ups without stopping? Instead of “eating better,” cook a balanced meal at home twice a week. If you want to do something advantageous for your life, there’s probably a way to quantify it. Goals that are well-defined are much easier to tackle psychologically!

This year, following the unconvential advice of Chris Guillebeau, I conducted a basic version of his  Annual Review. On the airplane from Nashville to Boston earlier this week, I thought about all that I had accomplished last year, and what kinds of goals I wanted to make for 2009. Here’s what I came up with:

My mantra in 2009 will be the “Year of Discipline.”
I look forward to a fruitful first year in the real world. I created a healthy list of goals to help trigger that productivity, but only with noticeable level of discipline will I be able to achieve them all. Each quarter (every 3 months), I will review my progress and report my results through this blog.

The goals, in no particular order:

  • Run 5 miles in 35 minutes.
  • Reach conversational level in Spanish.
  • Read and take notes on 3 books from the Personal MBA‘s recommended reading list of 77 books. At this point in my life, I can’t see myself taking out more loans for business school. The Personal MBA will serve as my business school replacement, and over the next few years I hope to create a categorized portfolio of notes from each of the 77 books.
  • Compose a photo-journal coffee table book of my abroad experience in Nepal.
  • Expand my blogging audience to at least 100 RSS subscribers.
  • Clean up my 40 page research paper on vertical farming and send it to Dickson Despommier at Columbia University. I have a business idea to build a vertical farm in Nashville, and I think this is a solid first step.
  • Complete the Hundred Pushups challenge

What goals have you made for 2009? Any suggestions?

Rationally Addicted to Travel

From the Freakonomics blog:

Travel Addicts
By Daniel HamermeshMy wife announced yesterday that she is “traveled out.” I’m not surprised — I am too: Since mid-August we’ve taken trips (mostly long weekends) to Istanbul, Munich, French Switzerland, northeast Italy, Amsterdam, Dublin, London, Barcelona, and, starting tomorrow, Paris plus London again.Her comment illustrates her diminishing marginal utility of travel. Today we’re planning next summer’s vacation, a week starting after a conference I have in Lisbon. I suggested to my wife: “Wouldn’t you rather go to a beach and relax after all the travel we’ve just done?” She said no; she realizes by that time she’ll want to travel around more than she does right now.

She knows how rationally addicted she is to travel. Fortunately it’s an addiction we share — and I bet this is a pretty common kind of joint rational addiction of long-term married couples.

I am also “rationally addicted” to travel. After 33 days in Europe and Asia, I was more than ready to come home, fully aware that after a few weeks of the good ‘ole USA, I would be ready to hit the road again. The grass is always greener?

What about you? Are you rationally addicted to anything?

To Ashgabat!

About an hour and a half left in Tbilisi…I transit through Baku on a 3 hour layover and get into Ashgabat after midnight. Hopefully won’t have any issues at the airport. If I don’t have Internet at the guest house I’m staying in, I’ll be sure to post a quick update from an Internet cafe this week. Home next Saturday!

Obama and Baku

Paperwork to be done, but a brief note on the election.

While I spoke with many passionate followers of American politics in Russia, the few people I’ve interacted with so far in Baku seem to be unaware of Obama’s victory. I chatted with my airport taxi pickup for 30 minutes, and only after we reached my hotel did I realize that our conversation didn’t cover politics. Virtually every English speaker that I have met in my travels so far has mentioned the presidential race, and given that the driver’s brother lives in Florida, I was a bit surprised. Another woman, fluent in English, working for one of the largest oil companies in the world, didn’t know who had won when I asked her this morning. Interesting. I will continue to probe the locals to get an Azerbaijani perspective on America’s latest decision.