A Dilbert creator's guide to winning big
I love his playful and humorous storytelling style, which is an extension of the comic strips that truly made him famous: Dilbert.
Personally I find the chapters on affirmation particularly worth reading.
And if you are able to imagine and visualize how it could be, you are also able to create a daily life and momentum that can turn reality in that direction
For most people, it would sound like pure nonsense that daily, chanting repetitions of a mantra in itself could have any decisive positive effect on the way things develop in reality. Nevertheless—so Scott Adams—it seems that this is often (for whatever reason . . .) actually the case.
A good point that it's actually utterly irrelevant why affirmations work. The main thing must be that it apparently is more the rule than the exception that they do.
In fact, there's rarely a good reason to complicate things as we tend to do. Break it down to the very simple principles and patterns: Make sure to get some sensible nourishment, keep the body running with plenty of movement, and prioritize sufficient sleep.
If you do that, your baseline energy is up at a level where you can manage both private and work-related obligations, and at the same time have the surplus to acquire new knowledge, learn new skills, and play and experiment.
The ability to imagine a different, better future is perhaps more than anything else what distinguishes us humans from other creatures in the universe.
And if you are able to imagine and visualize how it could be, you are also able to create a daily life and momentum that can turn reality in that direction, no matter how many detours and dead ends you may encounter along the way.
Scott Adams' own summary in the last chapter says it all: "Focus on your diet first and get that right so you have enough energy to want to exercise. Exercise will further improve your energy, and that in turn will make you more productive, more creative, more positive, more socially desirable, and more able to handle life's little bumps."
Scott Adams: How to fail at almost everything and still win big
Paperback: 256 pages
Penguin Business (2013)