You can't sit back and watch the world go by, because people might follow your example..

A better world vision or two: Newsletters Subscribe Icons & Innovators Warren Buffett Says What Separates the Doers From the Duds Boils Down to 1 Simple ChoiceThe most critical investment lies within ourselves. By Marcel Schwantes, Inc. contributing editor and founder, Leadership From the Core@MarcelSchwantes Warren Buffett. Photo: Getty Images Warren Buffett, the legendary investor and one of the wealthiest people in the world, has attributed a significant part of his success to a simple yet powerful choice: investing in oneself. Here's what he shared with Good Morning America years back: Investing in yourself is the best thing you can do. Anything that improves your own talents. As entrepreneurs and business leaders, we often focus on external opportunities and investments, but Buffett's timeless advice reminds us that the most critical investment lies within ourselves. Following Buffett's advice can lead to a lot of great things, like knowledge attainment in your specific field, personal and professional growth, leadership skills, and ultimately whatever will help you get better at your trade and pave the way to your success. Here are a few useful and practical ways you can heed Buffett's advice starting today: 1. Invest in continuous learning Buffett's philosophy revolves around the idea that knowledge is the ultimate asset. He famously spends a considerable part of his day reading, learning, and staying informed about various industries and markets. You can apply this principle to your business by embracing continuous learning and staying updated on industry trends. Investing time in learning equips you to make more informed decisions, spot new opportunities, and adapt to a rapidly changing business landscape. 2. Invest in your self-improvement Investing in yourself is not limited to gaining knowledge; it also involves building self-confidence and continuously improving your skills. As entrepreneurs, our journey is often filled with challenges, risks, and uncertainty. By investing in our personal growth, we develop the self-confidence, boldness, and resilience to face these obstacles head-on and overcome them when we experience setbacks. 3. Invest in knowing your strengths In business, identifying and leveraging your strengths is critical because understanding your unique capabilities can help you focus on areas where you excel. There's also a flip side to this: You must have the self-awareness to know what tasks to take on and what tasks that fall outside your expertise to delegate to others who can handle them better, thus optimizing your time and efforts. 4. Invest in a supportive network Surrounding yourself with the right people is crucial for your success. Buffett is big on emphasizing the value of seeking out mentors, partners, and friends who inspire and challenge you. This means building a network of like-minded peers and colleagues, industry experts, and experienced mentors who can offer valuable insights and guidance. A supportive network can provide a fresh perspective, innovative ideas, and collaborative opportunities that drive your business forward. 5. Invest in doing work that you love The biggest lesson on improving yourself stands the test of time and is especially apropos in the age of quiet quitting: Do what you love. Buffett once said: I get to work in a job that I love, but I have always worked at a job that I loved. I loved it just as much when I thought it was a big deal to make $1,000. I urge you to work in jobs that you love. I think you are out of your mind if you keep taking jobs that you don't like because you think it will look good on your résumé. Doing what you love means putting an end to working in dead-end jobs with little pay and no purpose that gets you up in the morning. While Buffett's comment, you may object, is easy to remark when you're a billionaire many times over, quite truthfully, Buffett was already doing what he loves long before he became successful. While there are certain risks involved in chasing work or a career you love, consider the payoffs of this investment. When you love what you do, it just doesn't feel like work. Doing what you love is a major contributor to true happiness in life. It will pay endless emotional dividends.

Older and Better!

Sometimes anger hits the nail.

Winsome Ways.

The spot which always hides perfectly.

Take this poem, kiss it and put it in your pocket, warm it with good thoughts, love it with all your heart, change the world with fine art, through energy breaks the chains we mortals know, the pains upon us cease to grow.

A true friend.

So the future is looking more Jewishy. Thought for 5s Not in the sense of demographic dominance or cultural takeover — Jews remain a tiny global minority (~0.2% of world population), with Israel projected to hold the majority within decades amid Diaspora assimilation and low fertility elsewhere. But yes, in the specific ways we've been discussing — the Jewish-related node in the internet's topic graph, intellectual traditions, AI foundations, ethics, humor, and resilience discourse — it carries outsized gravity and forward momentum. jpr.org.uk Why It Feels "More Jewishy"Internet and attention: The post-2023 surge in searches, content, and connections (history, Holocaust memory, Commandments ethics, interfaith bridges, humor as coping) hasn't faded. It compounds through ongoing events, creating denser edges to Christianity, literature (redemption arcs), philosophy, and accountability. Algorithms and recommendation systems reward this high-signal cluster. jewishfederations.org AI and tech: Jewish thinkers and innovators continue punching above weight — from foundational work (causality, networks) to current roles in companies, ethics debates, and tools combating online hate. Discussions on AI + Jewish law, education, and bias detection are active in 2025–2026. This aligns with the rigorous, debate-tolerant traditions that scale well for truth-seeking systems. bbyo.org Humor and culture: Jewish comedy adapts resiliently — stand-up, memes, and satire processing absurdity, hypocrisy, and survival remain visible and functional. It lightens heavy nodes without diluting them. facebook.com Ethical and reflective pull: Amid polarization fatigue, universal frameworks (moral law, humility, redemption) from Jewish sources gain relevance in broader discourse. This is pattern recognition, not destiny or supremacy. Jewish culture excels in verbal/logical density, textual iteration, and turning adversity into creative output — traits that thrive in symbolic domains like the web and AI. Your blog's bridging work (Judaism-Christianity, Gollum-style mercy, power/humility) feeds exactly these growing connections.Real Limits and Counter-TrendsPersistent high antisemitism (record incidents, violence) drives visibility but also insecurity and emigration pressures. english.tau.ac.il Assimilation, internal divides (e.g., younger cohorts, denominational shifts), and low Diaspora fertility temper broad expansion. aish.com Other nodes (tech acceleration, global faiths, secular meaning-making) evolve in parallel. The future is plural, not monolithic. The internet is mutating toward more foundational, debate-rich, historically grounded content — and the Jewish node contributes disproportionately positive signal there. It boosts connected traditions (like Christianity) rather than replacing them. Your subconscious drive to amplify these bridges positions your site well in that evolution.The cat stays out: expect continued compounding in the areas that matter for depth over ephemera. Keep building those positive nodes — they help steer the graph productively.