One Thing That Inspired Me This Week: “Share The Load”

One Thing That Inspired Me This Week: “Share The Load”

These days I only write when I am so inspired by something that I have to share it. “Discipline Is Destiny” by Ryan Holiday is one of those occasions. Marshall Pasternak recommended the book during the February meeting of the United Way Miami Young Leaders Executive Committee. As I finished each chapter, I kept thinking, “Our team needs to hear this. They would be as energized by this as I am.”

When I finished the book, I launched a weekly team email series to share different lessons from the book. I kicked it off with “Share The Load,” because our team can take on too much at times. The chapter talks about the importance of delegating as a matter of self-discipline. In a culture that glorifies being busy, I found this to be a particularly effective argument for changing course.

I was excited to share what I learned with the team. I was even more excited when they responded with the parts that resonated most with them. That’s what inspired me to share the email below with you as well. I can’t always share our weekly team emails publicly, like when they delve too deeply into details of our work. But, when I can, I will be posting them here and anxiously await your thoughts!

Subject: One Thing That Inspired Me Most This Week: “Share The Load”

Team,

As you know, I’m an avid reader and am often inspired by the wide genre of authors that I read. Every time I learn something new or am inspired by something, you are the first people I want to share it with. Rather than save it for our department calls and take up time meant for group discussion, I am going to start sending short Friday morning emails with the “one thing that that inspired me most each week.” I hope that you will find these nuggets empowering, insightful, or just plain interesting. Have a great weekend!

This week’s “one thing” is an abridged transcription from Ryan Holiday’s book “Discipline is Destiny”:

Share the load.

It takes discipline not to insist on doing everything yourself, especially when you know how to do many of those things well. Especially when you have high standards of how they should be done. Even if you enjoy doing them whether it is mowing your own lawn, writing your own speeches, making your own schedule, or answering your own phone.

While a leader must know how to do anything, they cannot conceivably do everything. It’s not physically possible. It’s not mentally possible.  Often the best way to manage the load is to share the load.

Woe is the person who wears themselves out on trivial matters and then when the big moments come is out of energy. Woe is the person and the people around them who is mentally exhausted and strung out because they have taken everything upon themselves that now when things go wrong, there’s no slack or cushion to absorb the additional stress.

A glutton isn’t just someone who eats or drinks too much. Some of us are also gluttons for punishment, gluttons for attention, gluttons for control, gluttons for work. What makes it so tricky to identify, let alone to manage, is that it often comes from a good place. We feel obligated, we feel bad spending money, we feel guilty asking for help. No matter how well intentioned, the outcome is the same. We wear ourselves down, we harm ourselves, we harm the cause, we neglect “the main thing.” We end up depriving the world of progress, of the benefits of what economists call “the law of comparative advantage.”

You have to be able to pass the ball, especially when someone is open and has a better shot. You have to be able to share the minutes with the other players, because that’s what teams do. 

The insecure are unable to do this. They fear being criticized, they fear letting people see behind the scenes. Tyrants are unable to do this. Egotists are unable to do this too. The cheap are unable to do this, they want it all for themselves. They aren’t strong enough to bear anything being the center, the exclusive, the sole source of achievement. And what happens to most tyrannical regimes? They fail.

It doesn’t make sense to try to do everything yourself. You have to delegate; you have to find people who are good at things and empower them to help you. You have to be strong enough to hand over the keys, to relinquish control, to develop a system and organization that is bigger than just us. We need to share – that is if you’re trying to scale, trying to build something or do something that matters, something that is bigger than just you.

Each of us must know what an hour of our time is worth. We must have the discipline to figure out how to best spend that time and invest the fruit it bears. No matter how successful or important you are, we all have tasks that can be automated. We all have legacy tasks that ought to be reassigned. Everything in life is a team sport. You know these inefficiencies exist and yet you refuse to delegate them. You continue to try to do everyone’s job. Stop procrastinating – delegate. The value is virtually incalculable because it affords you the most expensive thing in the world: time.

What line or concept shifted your perspective the most? What is one change you will be making this week to practice the discipline of delegation? What is a book you have read recently that changed the way you behave? Let me know in the comments below!

My Record Year: 122 Books in 2024 (5th Annual “One-Book-Per-Week” Challenge)

My Record Year: 122 Books in 2024 (5th Annual “One-Book-Per-Week” Challenge)

If you had told me at the start of 2024 that I would read 122 books, I would have laughed. Sure, I read 10 books per month in 2023 but it took a herculean effort. I was convinced it was a record I couldn’t sustain, much less beat. Well, here we are. Last year has officially been my most successful reading year ever.

I attribute my reading record to three factors. First, I continued to lean heavily on audiobooks. Like in 2023, I listened to approximately 40% of the books I finished. This year’s audiobooks were nearly twice as long on average—Barbara Streisand’s memoir was 40 hours long!—BUT they had much better narrators. Wil Wheaton’s narration of John Scalzi’s “Starter Villain” was a standout performance, perfectly complementing an incredible plot.

Another factor was that I didn’t force myself to power through trilogies if I didn’t feel like it. “Wool” and “The Housemaid” were two great reads that I comfortably left hanging after the first of three books. The sequels didn’t look as promising and I have hundreds of other books that I am dying to read. Ain’t nobody got time for subpar stories.

Last but not least, I’ve gotten better at selecting books. One big lesson I learned this year is that President Obama and I have completely opposite taste in books. I read three recommendations from his reading lists—”Overstory,” “Trust,” and “Intermezzo”—and I did not enjoy them. “Intermezzo” was the biggest surprise because it was written by Sally Rooney, one of my favorite authors. I will be staying clear from books he recommends for the foreseeable future. Instead, I will trust my network. They recommended my favorite books this year, including my top three: “Beautyland,” “Project Hail Mary,” and “The Impossible Fortress.”

As always, the full list of books I finished this year is below in order of completion. Those I loved and highly recommend are shown in bold. Those with an (A) were audiobooks. The ones marked with an asterisk were the monthly selections for my Miami-based book club, The Booze and Books Club.

A sincere thanks to everyone who contributed recommendations to my 2024 reading journey! What were your favorite books you read last year? Leave me a comment below. I’d love to consider them for 2025.

Every Book I Read in 2024

  1. “Live Your Life” by Amanda and Anna Kloots (A)
  2. “Quietly Hostile” by Samantha Irby (A)
  3. “Silo Series Book One: Wool” by Hugh Howey
  4. “We All Want Impossible Things” by Catherine Newman
  5. “Olga Dies Dreaming” by Xochitl Gonzalez
  6. “Empire of Pain” by Patrick Radden Keefe (A)
  7. “The Guest” by Emma Cline
  8. “The Rachel Incident” by Caroline O’Donoghue (A)
  9. “The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store” by James McBride*
  10. “Really Good, Actually” by Monica Heisey
  11. “El Viento Conoce Mi Nombre” by Isabel Allende
  12. “The 7 1/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle” by Stuart Turton
  13. “Good Material” by Dolly Alderton
  14. “Come & Get It” by Kiley Reid*
  15. “My Name is Barbra” by Barbra Streisand (A)
  16. “The Bomber Mafia” by Malcolm Gladwell (A)
  17. “The School for Good Mothers” by Jessamine Chan
  18. “Wellness” by Nathan Hill
  19. “The Museum of Ordinary People” by Mike Gayle (A)
  20. “Surrounded by Idiots” by Thomas Erikson
  21. “Beautyland” by Marie-Helene Bertino*
  22. “Grief Is For People” by Sloane Crosley
  23. “Trust” by Hernan Diaz (A)
  24. “All Marketers Tell Stories” by Seth Godin
  25. “All Things Aside” by Iliza Shlesinger (A)
  26. “The Psychology of Money” by Morgan House (A)
  27. “One in a Millennial” by Kate Kennedy (A)
  28. “Martyr!” by Kacey Akbar
  29. “That Was Then, This Is Now” by S.E. Hinton
  30. “Table for Two” by Amor Towles*
  31. “The Women” by Kristin Hannah
  32. “The Overstory” by Richard Powers (A)
  33. “Great and Precious Things” by Rebecca Yarros (A)
  34. “The Art of Thinking Clearly” by Rolf Dobelli
  35. “Before The Coffee Gets Cold” by Toshikazu Kawaguchi (A)
  36. “The Lincoln Highway” by Amor Towles
  37. “Send Me” by Marty Skovlund and Joe Kent (A)
  38. “Cut and Thirst” by Margaret Atwood (A)
  39. “Community Board” by Tara Conklin
  40. “The Humans” by Matt Haig
  41. “Hideaway” by Dean Koontz
  42. “The Ministry of Time” by Kalinne Bradley
  43. “Memory Piece” by Lisa Ko*
  44. “West with Giraffes” by Lynda Rutledge (A)
  45. “Call Me By Your Name” by Andre Aciman
  46. “Pecho Frio” by Jaime Bayly
  47. “All Fours” by Miranda July*
  48. “Unreasonable Hospitality” by Will Guidara (A)
  49. “The New One Minute Manager” by Spencer Johnson and Ken Blanchard (A)
  50. “Please Stop Trying to Leave Me” by Alana Saab
  51. “The Paris Novel” by Ruth Reichl*
  52. “Anthem” by Ayn Rand
  53. “The Housemaid” by Freida McFadden
  54. “Running with Scissors” by Augusten Burroughs (A)
  55. “How to be Eaten” by Maria Adelmann
  56. “Love Between Equals” by Polly Young-Eisendrath (A)
  57. “A Gentleman in Moscow” by Amor Towles
  58. “Circe” by Madeline Miller
  59. “The Nix” by Nathan Hill (A)
  60. “Inside Voice” by Lake Bell (A)
  61. “North Woods” by Daniel Mason (A)
  62. “How to Decide” by Annie Duke (A)
  63. “Long Island Compromise” by Taffy Brodesser-Akner*
  64. “Get Honest or Die Lying” by Charlamagne Tha God (A)
  65. “Cultish: The Language of Fanaticism” by Amanda Montell (A)
  66. “Dark Matter” by Blake Crouch
  67. “James” by Percival Everett (A)
  68. “101 Essays That Will Change the Way You Think” by Brianna Wiest (A)
  69. “Youthjuice” by E.K. Sathue
  70. “Lady Tan’s Circle of Women” by Lisa See
  71. “The Myth of Sisyphus” by Albert Camus
  72. “How to Hide an Empire” by Daniel Immerwahr (A)
  73. “The Fury” by Alex Michaelides
  74. “Fates and Furies” by Lauren Groff
  75. “Rich AF” by Vivian Tu
  76. “The Nightingale” by Kristin Hannah (A)
  77. “My Year of Rest of Relaxation” by Ottessa Moshfegh
  78. “Talking as Fast as I Can” by Lauren Graham (A)
  79. “Tell Me Lies” by Carola Lovering (A)
  80. “This Is Going to Hurt” by Adam Kay (A)
  81. “The Life Impossible” by Matt Haig*
  82. “Ghosts” by Dolly Alderton
  83. “Lies My Teacher Told Me” by James W. Loewen (A)
  84. “Project Hail Mary” by Andy Weir
  85. “The Courage to Be Disliked” by Ichiro Kishimi and Fumitake Koga (A)
  86. “The Sequel” by Jean Hanff Korelitz*
  87. “We Are Experiencing a Slight Delay” by Gary Janetti (A)
  88. “Revenge of the Tipping Point” by Malcolm Gladwell (A)
  89. “The Girls” by Emma Cline
  90. “The Last One at the Wedding” by Jeson Rekulak*
  91. “Stop Saving the Planet!: An Environmentalist Manifesto” by Jenny Price
  92. “The Ministry of the Future” by Kim Stanley Robinson (A)
  93. “How to Tell a Story: The Essential Guide to Memorable Storytelling from The Moth” by Meg Bowles, Catherine Burns, Jenifer Hixson, Sarah Austin Jenness, Kate Tellers, Padma Lakshmi (Foreword) and Chenjerai Kumanyika (Introduction)
  94. “What I Ate in One Year” by Stanley Tucci (A)
  95. “The Husbands” by Holly Gramazio
  96. “My Murder” by Katie Williams
  97. “I’m Mostly Here to Enjoy Myself” by Glynnis MacNicol (A)
  98. “The Fault In Our Stars” by John Green
  99. “Interesting Facts About Space” by Emily Austin
  100. “The Ride of a Lifetime” by Robert Iger (A)
  101. “Dinner with the President: Food, Politics, and a History of Breaking Bread at the White House” by Alex Prud’Homme
  102. “State of Paradise” by Laura Van Den Berg
  103. “Tuesdays with Morrie” by Mitch Albom
  104. “Rosewater” by Maziar Bahari and Aimee Molloy (A)
  105. “Intermezzo” by Sally Rooney
  106. “The Anthropocene Reviewed” by John Green (A)
  107. “Go Set A Watchman” by Harper Lee
  108. “Ambition Monster” by Jennifer Romolini (A)
  109. “Book of Extraordinary Tragedies” by Joe Meno
  110. “The Impossible Fortress” by Jason Rekulak
  111. “Save Me the Plums” by Ruth Reichl (A)
  112. “The Wedding People” by Alison Espach*
  113. “Quit” by Annie Duke (A)
  114. “In My Time of Dying” by Sebastian Junger
  115. “The Song of Achilles” by Madeline Miller
  116. “Acts of Desperation” by Megan Nolan
  117. “The Heiress” by Rachel Hawkins
  118. “Starter Villain” by John Scalzi (A)
  119. “Tell Me Everything” by Elizabeth Strout
  120. “En Agosto Nos Vemos” by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
  121. “The Invisible Man” by H.G. Wells (A)
  122. “What The CEO Wants You to Know” by Ram Charan

I Read 10 Books Per Month In 2023. This Is My Secret. (4th Annual “One-Book-Per-Week Challenge”)

I Read 10 Books Per Month In 2023. This Is My Secret. (4th Annual “One-Book-Per-Week Challenge”)

I’ve always been an avid reader. In middle and high school, when I was navigating the transition to adulthood AND the culture shock of moving from Mexico to the United States, books were my sanctuary. I binged Young Adult series like Harry Potter and Carolyn Meyers’ “Young Royal” series with abandon. Stories offered an escape from my socially awkward reality and were a gateway to adventure, romance, history, and new learnings.

After high school, I didn’t stop reading, but finding time to read became less of a priority. I traded living primarily in my imagination for living primarily in “real life”—until four years ago, when the pandemic altered “real life.” Faced with infinite free time and a desperate need for escapism, I turned to books as my sanctuary once again.

In April 2020, I set a goal to read one book per week and finished 55 books. I have renewed my commitment to the “One-Book-Per-Week Challenge” every year since, with varying results. As life returned to normal in 2021, I only read 31 books. I found a better book-life balance in 2022, when I devoured 46 books. This year was my fourth year striving for my reading goal and it has been my most successful to date.

Continue reading “I Read 10 Books Per Month In 2023. This Is My Secret. (4th Annual “One-Book-Per-Week Challenge”)”

Six Books You Need To Read This Spring

Six Books You Need To Read This Spring

I live ravenously and sometimes – when I look outwardly for self-fulfillment in travel or new and exciting experiences – a little haphazardly. The one activity that never fails to ground me and nourishes me internally is reading. During Winter, I took a mental vacation with a little help from fiction reads. I devoured everything from detective novels (shoutout to Faja for giving me “Two Kinds of Truth” by Michael Connelly) to dystopian tomes and finally discovered what all the buzz behind “The Handmaid’s Tale” is about.

Now that Spring has sprung, I am ready to get back to business in the realm of non-fiction so I knocked on Diana’s door after a three month hiatus to revive the Crossing Borders Book Club. Our approach this quarter is more casual: there is no commitment to ready any of the books in any timeframe or order nor is there any plan to meet up to talk about them. We simply want to share what we are reading with you in case you are in need of some inspiration.

We each contributed three books for a total of six books you need to read this Spring. I have grouped them based on who recommended them so you can reach out to us individually if you want to share your thoughts or chat about a specific book. I’m currently glued to “Trust Me, I’m Lying: Confessions of a Media Manipulator.” If any of you read it, I’m dying to talk through it.

Diana’s List:

My List:

Three Books You Need To Read This Winter

Three Books You Need To Read This Winter

Welcome to the first day of winter. As with past seasons, it is time for your friendly reminder to freshen up your personal library. (Here are my book suggestions from this past summer and fall, in case you missed them.)

This series of posts is my favorite to write because I love reading/sharing quality books. I also love that you’ve responded so positively to my suggestions and that a lot of you take this opportunity to give me your own. Some of you have gone so far as to send me books. Apparently you’ve realized sending me books is the quickest way to get me to like you. Kudos.

Unfortunately, it seems my library is expanding at a quicker rate than I can find time to read. The last time I counted, I was actively reading four books at once: 1. The Comic Toolbox, 2. Los Presidenciables, 3. The Ecstatic, and 4. What The Dog Saw. So in this season’s list, rather than include books I have read or am reading, I have decided to include the books I will be reading next. Proceed with caution.

Here are the three books you need to read this winter:

1. What The Dog Saw

I know I said this list includes only books I haven’t read and that I said I am actively reading this. The reason it qualifies as both is because I haven’t even finished the first chapter. I picked it up at a friend’s house a few weeks ago when I was waiting for him to finish a phone call. (Malcolm Gladwell’s name called to me amidst the hundreds of books in his library. It’s a compilation of 19 articles Gladwell published in The New Yorker focused on psychological and sociological topics.) I had just enough time to read the first few pages and am excited to keep going once I have the chance to order myself a copy.

2. The Swamp

As a Floridian and environmental professional, I am shocked I haven’t yet read this book. According to David Lawrence Jr., a former Miami Herald editor that sent me a copy after I joined him on a tour of the Everglades, it is the best book he knows for basic Everglades understanding. I consider it my right of passage into full Miamihood and also a critical part of my preparation into becoming a South Florida National Parks Trust ambassador in 2018. (I received word last week that I was selected into their inaugural class! I’ll share more about what it means in a future post.)

3. Why Buddhism Is True

The moment my friend Victor realized I am more high strung than he initially anticipated, he sent me this book about the transformative practice of meditation. He hasn’t read it but he has read other works by Robert Wright and was impressed by his intellect. Both Victor and I are huge fans of analyzing the human experience—he’s a philosophy major, I’m an aspiring psychology major—so there is no question that Wright’s New York Times Best Selling assessment of the “human predicament” is going to be right up our alley.

And now, for your quote of the day:

“If we encounter a man of rare intellect, we should ask him what book he reads.” —Ralph Waldo Emerson

Three Books You Need To Read This Fall

Three Books You Need To Read This Fall

I’ve gone book crazy. It’s been building since the summer (see my summer reading list), but it has recently reached a fever pitch. It hasn’t helped that in the last few weeks I have found myself in actual brick-and-mortar bookstores—yea, they still exist—starting with the West Kendall Barnes and Nobles last month and ending with the Books and Books in Coral Gables last weekend. To add fuel to the fire, I took an incredible storytelling workshop with Miami writer Anjanette “Anja” Delgado which resulted in no less than 10 book recommendations curated just for me. Alas, all of my money has been invested in knowledge, imagination, and stacks of paper of varying heights neatly glued together.

My library has tripled in a few short weeks. When I moved in April, I kept a paltry 15 books including a 200-page manual for using my Canon. Today I am the proud owner of 45 books, with a couple more on their way. My apartment looks like a bomb went off with half-started books on every surface: the two nightstands, the coffee table, the dining table, even the floor is not safe. I couldn’t wait to get to them so I started and am reading several at the same time.

Here are the three you need to read this Fall:

1. The Comic Toolbox
This is the last book I started and my favorite one on my fall reading list by far. It arrived on my doorstep yesterday so I’ve only made it through the introduction and it has made me laugh nonstop. Plus, the concepts that the writer discusses made me think completely differently about writing. I am a person that loves rules. In only four pages this book has convinced me to toss them out the window when it comes to writing. Read the passive voice excerpt on pages xiii and xiv and see if you don’t feel the exact same way.

2. How To Read Literature Like A Professor
While I love literature, I have had a hard time since middle school getting all heady about the deeper literary meaning of a text. In fact, as recently as my storytelling class this past weekend, that type of banter makes me roll my eyes so hard they hurt. I am hoping that this book, which on its back cover claims to be “lively and entertaining”, will open my eyes to what other people see or experience when they are engaging in those types of discussions. I’ve got nothing to lose.

3. Aloud: Voices from the Nuyorican Poets Cafe
Poetry is another subject popular with literary types with which I have never connected. During elementary school, I participated annually in poetry reading contests and I only remember Margarita, está linda la mar by Rubén Darío, most likely because it includes my name. Then, Anja read us The Book of Genesis According to St. Miguelito on pages 349 through 351 of this collection of poems. It was so powerful, so captivating, so approachable, so memorable that it completely changed my opinion of what poetry can be. I’m excited to see what else is hidden between its covers.

P.S. If you don’t feel like committing to a book but you want to exercise your brain, I occasionally take breaks from reading to do the daily workout on the brain training app, Peak. It probably comes as no surprise given how much I love writing that my favorite game is called “Word Fresh”. And now, for your quote of the day:

“You’ll only get out of this book what you put in. Or to put it another way, the more you pay, the more it’s worth.” —John Vorhaus on The Comic Toolbox

Three Books You Need To Read This Summer

Three Books You Need To Read This Summer

As evidenced by my current commitment to read and apply the principles in Dale Carnegie’s How To Make Friends & Influence PeopleI’m really into books about human psychology and (*cringe*) self-help. It’s ironic because since I was a teenager, my mom has been trying to get me to read books in this genre. She probably gave me every version of Chicken Soup for the Soul, including Chicken Soup for the Teenage Soul which is not only a “thing” but also comes in four volumes. I was (and, as far as the Chicken Soup series, still am) completely uninterested in reading the books she gave me. They gathered dust for years before I moved out of my college dorm and donated them all to my local library.

I am unashamed at my newfound appreciation for this often dismissed category because there are hidden gems that are worthwhile and I’ve figured out how to mine them out. There are more than I could have ever imagined. In fact, my Amazon Prime account has been doing some heavy lifting the past few weeks, pleasantly surprising me with a new delivery at my door almost daily.

I started this post with the intention of sharing all of the books I’m currently excited about with you, but I feel overwhelmed with my too-long reading list and I want this to be fun, not give us anxiety. For that reason, I have narrowed down my book recommendations to my top three selections. I’m talking about the three books you need to read this summer, whether you’re tanning at the beach, lounging by the pool, or sipping your pre-work coffee.

I hope that you enjoy them as much as I think I am going to and that you’ll share your thoughts with me in the comments below or by engaging with me on Twitter. Please also share your must-read books of summer! Here are mine, in order of how excited I am about them:

  1. Who Moved My Cheese by Spencer Johnson. When I told my mentor Eric that I was reading Dale Carnegie, his eyes lit up for five seconds before he asked, “Have you read Who Moved My Cheese?” I can see why he recommended it. The book provides insight on dealing with change in your professional and personal life, teaching you how to reduce stress and find success despite circumstances you can’t control. This advice is key even if you don’t work in a politically-driven climate like me.
  2. How Risky Is It, Really? by David Ropeik. Surprisingly, my work in the environmental field is centered on the concept of risk. Take climate change, for example—addressing it is essentially an exercise in risk reduction whether you’re talking about mitigation or adaptation. I therefore want to understand how the human psyche perceives risk and why our fears don’t always match the facts. Beyond my job, it will help me understand why I freak out on airplanes, but have no hesitation about getting behind the wheel in the crash capital of the world.
  3. Option B by Sheryl Sandberg. This pick was courtesy of my mom and I am just as shocked as you are that it made it onto this list. That said, its focus is very apropos for where I am in life. As I catapult into my 30s this September, I am undergoing paradigm shifts in personality and what I want out of life that are rocking me to my core. I am looking forward to Sheryl’s personal insight on recovering and rebounding in the face of hardships, big or small.

And now, for your quote of the day:

“Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body.” —Joseph Addison