HACKER Q&A
📣 kklisura

What's Your Personal Motto?


Do you have a personal motto and what it is?

> While our immediate problems tend to distract us in everyday life, having a mantra can help us stay in touch with our deepest goals. Mottos ultimately can do many things, such as increase your productivity, inspire you, or help you change a habit. [1]

[1] 9 Reasons You Need a Personal Motto, https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/changepower/201508/9-reasons-you-need-personal-motto


  👤 swat535 Accepted Answer ✓
I've always loved Søren Kierkegaard (especially Aesthetic)[0]:

Marry, and you will regret it; don’t marry, you will also regret it; marry or don’t marry, you will regret it either way.

Laugh at the world’s foolishness, you will regret it; weep over it, you will regret that too; laugh at the world’s foolishness or weep over it, you will regret both.

Believe a woman, you will regret it; believe her not, you will also regret it…

Hang yourself, you will regret it; do not hang yourself, and you will regret that too; hang yourself or don’t hang yourself, you’ll regret it either way;

whether you hang yourself or do not hang yourself, you will regret both. This, gentlemen, is the essence of all philosophy

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophy_of_S%C3%B8ren_Kierk...

[EDIT]

It looks I am being downvoted, so I am adding more details for those confused:

This is written from the point of view of the Aesthete, someone who lives entirely for pleasure. From the point of view of pleasure, each decision is a missed opportunity for a different kind of pleasure. You'll find some pleasure in marrying, but you'll miss out on some other pleasures by doing so. Due to this, every choice is meaningless and thus cause for regret.

Kierkegaard paints this as being very different from decisions made in the ethical realm. Once in the ethical, we choose based on certain principles, and those principles guide us to do what is right. In that scenario our choices become meaningful and we are no longer plagued with regret, for even if there was pleasure in the other option, we did what was good, and thus we are satisfied. The life of pleasure seeking is characterized by this kind of regret, for Kierkegaard, whereas he characterizes the ethical life as being made up of meaningful choice.


👤 leashless
"If a thing is worth doing, it's worth doing badly."

A crappy prototype is better than an idea. A three day vacation you take is better than a week only planned. It's a series of small steps.


👤 joop_dev
“Stress is an exception”

These days many of us are too stressed for hours, days or weeks on end. Whereas back in our forest days you’d be stressed once in a while when you’d suddenly see that tiger. Our bodies are made for short durations of stress, not prolonged periods.

So when I notice I am stressed or feel tense, I ask myself: “Is this an exceptional moment to be stressed?” If no, I try to take a step back and evaluate why where the stress is coming from, what would happen if I ignore the situation or put less effort into it? Then hopefully feel less stressed.


👤 gardenmwm
Mine is “This to shall pass”. Like the old king, I’ve found it keeps me humble in the good times, and hopeful in the bad.

👤 version_five
Walk down, fuck them all. I know it's a cliche (maybe "slow and steady wins the race" is more PC, but it's not as motivating), but it's a helpful reminder when getting too excited about something.

(I don't really have a "motto", this is a good mantra though)

Edit: also, "if you dislike change, you'll like irrelevance even less" - General Shinseki, US Army

And

"If you don't lie, you never have to remember anything" - attributed to Mark Twain


👤 afarviral
Got me through some hard times: "Let it come, let it be, let it go."

Also: "Accept your inner experience, choose a valued direction, take action" from ACT therapy.

Whenever stressed those two mantras can guide the mind to a more productive state.


👤 lolmanwhat
"Be stupid"

I realized that super-dumb and super-smart people often get to the same conclusions. So often times, when I find myself stuck, I remind myself to think stupid before making a decision.


👤 tomlockwood
I'm not really a fan of stoicism but I read this quote when I was a kid and it has stuck with me:

"The noblest kind of retribution is to not become like your enemy"

Marcus Aurelius


👤 VoodooJuJu
Does it have to be an original personal motto? Here's an unoriginal one that's entered my mind almost daily for a while now:

"If the world hates you, remember it hated me [Christ] first."


👤 dossy
I don't know who to attribute this to, but these certainly aren't my words, but they have been the words to help me re-center myself when I'm having "one of those moments" and my lizard brain is running the show:

"It all works out in the end, and in the end, we're all dead."


👤 Froedlich
"Don't fuck with me."

A bit salty in ordinary conversation. Several online translators agreed "Non futuis mecum" is an intelligible Latin equivalent. Though in conversation, probably less useful than Klingon or Navajo.


👤 marttt
If you're afraid, don't do it; if you do it, don't be afraid. -- my dad

I remember reasoning like this a lot in my early adulthood when I had to to use our (diy, somewhat inaccurate and scary) table saw.


👤 mikewarot
I can repair anything given sufficient time and budget.

I've fixed old undocumented industrial controls, atomic clocks, all sorts of things.

I'd be happy to help fix/reverse engineer any captured UFOs. ;-)


👤 electricant
"If you want something well done you'd better do it yourself"

No matter what there's always a tradeoff between having something in life the way you like it with lots of effort or rely on somebody else. But when you rely on other people they'll do stuff the way _they_ like.

It's both a motto that encourages me to try new things and invest time doing them but also to respect other people's work and point of views.


👤 anon2020dot00
"There are worse fates than death" and "There was a season for everything".

Sometimes one's fears leads one to a fate worse than death; sometimes better to just accept the risk of death and say that if death wants to come then let it come.

Also, the pace of time means that everything changes and sometimes this is hard to accept; but unavoidable. Everyone's life has seasons of joy and hardship.


👤 h2odragon
Shit Happens.

All philosophy boils down to those two words in the end.


👤 br377
90% of the time, nothing is the right thing to do

👤 blitz_skull
"Adversity devours the weak"

From "Survive" by Gideon: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xNxiXy1nAeU

I use this mantra to remind myself that I can always go more than I think I can, and when I think I've done all I can, I can do more.


👤 maykut
"If it works, don't fix it."

👤 Group_B
It’s not who you know, it’s who you blow

👤 kyoob
“I hope he gets where he’s going.”

Said when a maniac flies by me on the highway.

(the whispered “hell” after that sentence is understood.)


👤 miej
"Whatever works."

Not in a dismissive way like a statement of idle non-preference, but rather as a hyper-pragmatic statement along the lines of ''doesn't matter how weird/silly the solution, if it solves something important, then it is valuable"


👤 mongro1
"It's on the list"

👤 sharmi
Given a circumstances and a set of facts and your internal state of mind/values, you will always make the same decision. So no point in regretting a decision later when more knowledge comes to light

👤 troydavis
Everything is an experiment.

👤 bartchamdo
“This too shall pass”

-Abraham Lincoln


👤 tamaharbor
No matter what, you usually still have the hardware.

👤 afarviral
... oh my own personal motto... I have a few: "Ive got high friends in places".

"You only die once".

"The early worm gets eaten by the bird".


👤 hungryhippo1
The woods are lovely, dark and deep. But I have promises to keep, and miles to go before I sleep. ---Robert Frost

👤 casion
Think first, and don't break things.

👤 lmiller1990
Get comfortable been uncomfortable.

👤 taubek
If a problem has a solution - it will be solved. If it has no solution - why to worry then?

👤 amar-laksh
Life is to be lived once, forever.

👤 nunez
go where others won't; be kind when no-one's watching; be outside as much as possible; give away as much as is reasonable; no zero-days, ever

sucks as a motto but that's basically what i live by


👤 trillic
If it's gonna happen, it's gonna happen out there.

👤 u2077
No, but I have 2 saying I like:

Move fast and break things. Prove them wrong.


👤 jgbmlg
Avoiding stupidity is easier than trying to be brilliant.

👤 sshlocalhost98
Stand in the shoulder of giants - Sir Isaac Newton

👤 hash07e
HADOUKENN!!!

Keep me going forward!


👤 thorin
What one man can do, another man can do.

👤 fargle
"mottos sunt ad infirma animo"

👤 abdelhamidem
Sapere Aude -- Dare to think by yourself

👤 aeroplanetext
It ain’t easy bein’ cool.

(But someone’s gotta do it).


👤 iszomer
Whatever goes around, comes around.

👤 pianoraptor
No such thing as free time

No such thing as down time

No such thing as free time

All you have is life time.

- Henry Rollins

I run a cybersecurity firm and have lots of prioritizing of my time. I live by this motto.


👤 speg
“It’s not as bad as it seems.”

👤 rogerclark

👤 8note
You can do better than that

👤 burner556
Good times and good vibes

👤 gjf
Strength with empathy

👤 congulio
Do the right thing.

👤 kderbyma
one of them is 'Think strong, be strong'

👤 YourGrace
It is what it is.

👤 MerelyMortal
Be Prepared

(I borrowed this one.)


👤 amohajerani
Take is easy

👤 branon
Memento Mori

👤 livinglist
play hard, work harder.

👤 VGltZUNvbnN1
Armor fati.

In our age of digital Devices and social media, we are used to having instant access to information and news. This can be a good thing, but it can also lead to information overload and anxiety. The constant stream of alerts and notifications can make it difficult to focus, and we can become bombarded with so much information that it becomes difficult to process it all.

The Latin phrase "armor fati" means "to armor oneself against fate." In other words, it means to be prepared for the worst. This is a good mindset to have in our fast-paced, constantly-connected world. We should take the time to step back and assess the situation, rather than blindly following the latest news cycle.

Of course, this is not to say that we should live in fear or ignore the news altogether. But we should be mindful of how much information we consume, and make sure that we are taking the time to process it all. Otherwise, we may find ourselves overwhelmed and bogged down by the constant deluge of information.