3 Things To Focus on During Your Journey to Success

Remember during your preteen years when you wrote an essay on what you wanted to be when you grew up. Then during your teen years you refined that ideal pathway on how you would achieve your goals? Assuming that you are an adult now, where are you on this ideal pathway? By now we have realised that the ideal pathway does not happen, but is rather more akin to a meandering river during seasons of rains and droughts.

Nowhere in that paragraph did I mention that the dream was impossible, but rather the journey may be much longer and take you to different places than you expected. I’m not where I planned I would be, that goal is still ahead of me; but looking back, the journey to this point has been nothing short of fantastic.

I want to share with you how I have survived the journey this far using three key motivators that have picked me up during the seasons of drought.

Don’t Stop Believing (Belief)
While it would be incredibly hipster of me to attribute everything to this karaoke favourite, its title carries the real message. From the minute you stop believing in yourself that you can achieve a goal, the battle is over. Belief makes you push just that little bit harder out of your comfort zone to move to being okay, to good and then to the greatness one needs to achieve your dreams.

With A Little Help From My Friends (Support)
Your network that is more important than any social network. There will be times that your belief falters. Enter your support network to get you back on your feet. Anyone in that position can attest that a conversation with a mentor, someone who has been through the experience before or simply a close friend or family member can help you remember why you started or offer a suggestion out of a tight spot.

You Know Nothing, Good Sir (Knowledge)
Education tricks some people into thinking they know everything and the period for learning is at its end. This my second run at the academic experience. What one learns in books and lectures is only a small piece of the pie. The value comes from the experience of networking, interactions and being outside of your comfort zone. Be crafty, use your academic knowledge and turn it into actual experience. Need some time to practise working in an agile environment? Use Scrum methodology to structure the timeline for my dissertation (my current self-improvement project). Treat every daily experience as a learning opportunity. Everything is connected in some way that you can use to improve your knowledge and outlook.

Everyone’s story for how to progress through life and achieve his or her goals is different. Experiences other than those I have mentioned may motivate and inspire you. Whatever method works for you, remember to move ever forward, never backward.

Do You Even Sleep Bro? 3 Steps To Sleep Better

As a hard-working employee or entrepreneur how many times do you wonder if sleep is a luxury you just can’t afford?

Actually, sleep isn’t a luxury but a necessity. Lack of sleep can affect your health by increasing your risk of heart diseases and heart attack, high blood pressure and diabetes. Sleep deprivation also negatively affects your alertness, concentration and problem solving.

These are problems that none of us want, here are a few steps I’ve started taking to sleep better:

1) Turn Phone Notifications Off

Even after the workday is done, many of us are still connected to work via electronic devices and doing small work-related tasks into the night. After moving to the UK, this was more apparent as messages from the US and Caribbean time zones could be received mere hours before bedtime. To reclaim your time, either turn your device notifications off or set the device to only allow notifications during your awake hours. I like to set mine to a 12-hour period with enough time before sleep and after sleep in the morning to have a buffer.

2) Stop Working So Late

Unless you find your most productive hours are during the night, not pushing yourself to work late into the night could aid in a more restful sleep. Instead of trying to force tasks that would take you less time while alert, use your last couple hours of awareness to relax your mind. Having an alert mind right before sleep will only prolong the length of time it takes to drift into sleep.

3) Avoid Devices or Blue Light

The light emitted by the sun, lights or devices can affect our sleeping patterns. Many of our electronic devices produce ‘blue light’, which encourages us to be more alert. Retreating from your device before sleep would remove this effect and allow your body to relax enough for a better sleep. However, for those of you who are like me and still use devices late, I’d suggest software like f.lux, which changes your device screen colour to match the natural light of that time of day, enabling your body to naturally adjust into the sleep phase.

Is lack of sleep something that you’re concerned about?

Would you like to track your sleeping patterns with your mobile phone?

Source(s): WebMD, Entrepreneur,

Sitting Down Too Much? I Know I Have.

If you’ve been on the Internet or near any media for the past year, it has increasingly been reported that sitting is bad for your health. Reports from the NHS, The Guardian to CNN describe why sitting for long periods is unhealthy and puts one at an increased risk of heart attacks and strokes.

A sedentary lifestyle puts one at risk for all sorts of health problems, but nothing starts to hit hime until you’ve experienced it. Before moving to the UK, I worked from home where I was able to take frequent breaks from sitting at the PC or move from location to location within the house to lessen the effects of working life sedentary.

Eventually my team mates at MediRevu and I decided to move to a standing desk format as a small but potentially life-saving action against sitting for long periods.

This practice however changed at university. My course has some teaching weeks that require being seated for 6+ hours with 2-3 breaks during the period for a 5-day week. I didn’t think much of it until it was a repeated process for 2 months, and my body started feeling like I came off 3 back-to-back Christmas time binges.

Here we are now at Easter break. The standing workplace is back in operation and the process to be more active begins anew without the limitations of mandatory sitting in classes. A sedentary lifestyle really does affect our health. More workplaces and even universities should realise the need for employees and students to have active lifestyles in order to increase health and productivity.

So remember, get up a few more times during the day and take a walk around the office… preferably to a water cooler and not a snack machine.

And we’re back! The journey continues…

After a long hiatus, I return to the world of blogging!

It’s been a wild ride. From the day one of my close friends nudged me to dream bigger, to competition finals and winnings, co-founding yet another startup to being accepted to study in the UK… here we now are.

I’m half way through my university course and I figured it’s time to push the envelope once again and start applying what I’ve learned so far and continue to learn.

Here’s to the career of Samora Reid, future MSc in Information Systems (Health Information Management) graduate. So let’s get started!