Life doesn’t always go to plan. Some days will frustrate you, disappoint you, or wear you down. You can’t change where you started—but you always have agency over your next step.
The Aṅguttara Nikāya—a major collection of early Buddhist discourses attributed to the Buddha—offers you a vivid image (AN 5.161): “Just as a snake sheds its skin, we must shed our past over and over again.” Shedding skin isn’t easy or comfortable—it makes you vulnerable. But it’s the only way you can make room for the bigger version of yourself that’s waiting to emerge.
Notice that a snake doesn’t drag its old skin behind it. It discards the skin to grow. You can do the same with your mistakes, regrets, and setbacks. They don’t have to define you.
Treat your past as useful only insofar as it teaches you not to repeat it. When you cling to yesterday, you deny the only reality you possess: today. Starting over isn’t about erasing your history—it’s about refusing to let history trap you.
You don’t need to reinvent yourself to renew yourself. Start as small as you need: reframe a problem, take one baby step forward, or forgive yourself. You build progress through steady, practical choices. Change isn’t a leap; it’s a pivot.
Like the snake, shed yesterday and step into today.
You didn’t fail because you’re weak.
Asking for a raise is a professional negotiation, not a personal plea.
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As a boss, you’ll often find yourself
When an employee comes to you asking for more money, how you handle the conversation will shape your reputation as a manager and determine whether you keep your best people. Resist the impulse to feel put on the spot. A direct, well-prepared employee who advocates for their own compensation is doing exactly what confident, high-performing people do. Treat it accordingly.
You’re mid-presentation. Your palms sweat, your heart drums, and you’re convinced the room can see every sign of it. They can’t. Your internal state is private. The version of you the audience sees is far steadier than the one you feel.
You launch passion projects with fervor, heart ablaze with possibility. Inevitably, that fire cools. Priorities shift, interests wander, life rearranges itself. The unfinished lingers, creating quiet unease.