Theory 2 Action Podcast

MM#325--The Slight Edge of Success: Cultivating Daily Habits for a Flourishing Life

May 09, 2024
MM#325--The Slight Edge of Success: Cultivating Daily Habits for a Flourishing Life
Theory 2 Action Podcast
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Theory 2 Action Podcast
MM#325--The Slight Edge of Success: Cultivating Daily Habits for a Flourishing Life
May 09, 2024

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Discover the subtle but transformative principles that can revolutionize your journey towards success. As your host David Kaiser, I've woven together the ancient wisdom found in Ecclesiastes with the contemporary insights of Jeff Olson's 'The Slight Edge' to guide you through the vital stages of planting, cultivating, and harvesting a life of prosperity.


Key Points from the Episode:

  • In this episode, I dismantle the myth of the 'big break' and expose the truth behind what many perceive as luck. 
  • Listen in as I explain why the consistent, everyday actions are the true seeds of opportunity, and how they can quietly lead to remarkable achievement.
  • Step away from the lure of the 'lottery ticket' mentality and join me as we explore why daily dedication and habitual excellence are the real game changers. Sharing anecdotes and practical wisdom, I challenge the cultural fascination with serendipity and highlight the power of preparedness. 
  • Let's shift our focus to the incremental efforts that not only prepare us for success but also create the very opportunities we seek. 

This episode is a powerful reminder that the slight edge of perseverance is both timely and timeless for anyone eager to lead a purposeful and flourishing life.

Other resources:


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Because we care what you think about what we think and our website, please email David@teammojoacademy.com, or if you want to leave us a quick FREE, painless voicemail, we would appreciate that as well.

Show Notes Transcript

We would love YOUR feedback--Send us a Text Message

Discover the subtle but transformative principles that can revolutionize your journey towards success. As your host David Kaiser, I've woven together the ancient wisdom found in Ecclesiastes with the contemporary insights of Jeff Olson's 'The Slight Edge' to guide you through the vital stages of planting, cultivating, and harvesting a life of prosperity.


Key Points from the Episode:

  • In this episode, I dismantle the myth of the 'big break' and expose the truth behind what many perceive as luck. 
  • Listen in as I explain why the consistent, everyday actions are the true seeds of opportunity, and how they can quietly lead to remarkable achievement.
  • Step away from the lure of the 'lottery ticket' mentality and join me as we explore why daily dedication and habitual excellence are the real game changers. Sharing anecdotes and practical wisdom, I challenge the cultural fascination with serendipity and highlight the power of preparedness. 
  • Let's shift our focus to the incremental efforts that not only prepare us for success but also create the very opportunities we seek. 

This episode is a powerful reminder that the slight edge of perseverance is both timely and timeless for anyone eager to lead a purposeful and flourishing life.

Other resources:


More goodness
Get your FREE Academy Review here!

Get our top book recommendations list

Get new podcast episodes dropped into your email box easily


Want to leave a review? Click here, and if we earned a five-star review from you **high five and knuckle bumps**, we appreciate it greatly, thank you so much!

Because we care what you think about what we think and our website, please email David@teammojoacademy.com, or if you want to leave us a quick FREE, painless voicemail, we would appreciate that as well.

Speaker 1:

Welcome to the Theory to Action podcast, where we examine the timeless treasures of wisdom from the great books in less time, to help you take action immediately and ultimately to create and lead a flourishing life. Now here's your host, david Kaiser.

Speaker 2:

Hello, I am David and welcome back to another Mojo Minute. We talked last time about the need to understand the planting, the cultivating and the harvesting phases of life. To everything there is a season, says the great book of Ecclesiastes. Says the great book of Ecclesiastes. Last time, when we were pulling nuggets of wisdom, we pulled some from my first love of books, the Slight Edge by Jeff Olson. I first read this book back in April 2009, and I have enjoyed it several times over since then. In today's nugget ofdom, let's talk about preparedness and the constancy of preparedness. In fact, let's grab our first pull quote right now to dig into this nugget. Let's go back to the Slight Edge by Jeff Olson because it's so good.

Speaker 2:

Successful people have already grasped the truth that lottery players have not. Success is not a random accident. Life is not a lottery. There's a popular expression you've probably heard it luck is preparedness meeting opportunity. It's a handy idea, but it's not quite accurate. People who live by the slight edge understand how luck really works. It's not preparedness meeting opportunity, it's preparedness period, preparedness created by doing those simple, little constructive, positive actions. Over and over Luck is when that constancy of preparedness eventually creates opportunity.

Speaker 2:

The one reason the slight edge is so widely ignored, unnoticed and undervalued is that our culture tends to worship the idea of the big break. We celebrate that dramatic discovery, the big break through that catapults the hero into a new place. In other words, we buy lottery tickets. In other words, we buy lottery tickets, the Big Break. We celebrate it as a culture, don't we? We even have a show titled the Big Break to further confuse the television watching masses. Everyone needs a big break, the Big Break. The hero on the journey finds the big break. But does that really happen in the real world?

Speaker 2:

Do most successful people have a big break? Or, as I might suggest, were they preparing most of their lives for the big break? Does the college athlete have a big break when they're drafted into a professional sport, or was that a lot of preparation, a lot of hard work, sweat, rolling, athletic workouts and mental discipline throughout his or her life and upbringing? Is that preparation or a big break? Does the first-time business owner just fall into the business as the owner? Most times, I would suggest. Having called on many business owners over my lifetime, most have worked hard, most have prepared, most have spent a lot of time in preparation, so when the opportunity came, they were ready to take over the business. Before then they were studying, learning, reading, asking good questions, trying to better themselves as a person in the process. So preparedness, then, is a necessary step. Most successful people don't have a big break.

Speaker 2:

Most successful people live by what Olson calls the slight edge, those simple, little constructive, positive actions done repeatedly, day after day, after monotonous day. And I love how Olson frames this. What does he say? Or how does he say it? I mean, here it is. Luck is when the constancy of preparedness eventually creates opportunity. Ah, that is so good. That is so true.

Speaker 2:

In a culture that worships the big break like the lottery ticket, let us not worship the big breaker. Buy lottery tickets. I mean, you can buy lottery tickets if you want. There's nothing sinful about buying lottery tickets. Well, as long as you're not spending money you don't have, and buying lottery tickets with the money that you should be paying the mortgage on the house, that's gravely sinful. You will have jeopardized your soul on that one. But double check yourself and steer clear of that.

Speaker 2:

But let's go back to the book for one last quote to drive home this point the truth of breakthroughs and lucky breaks is that, yes, they do happen, but they don't happen out of thin air. They're grown like a crop, planted, cultivated and ultimately harvest. The problem is, as I mentioned in the last chapter, that in our culture we are trained to think we can skip over the middle step and leap directly from plant to harvest. We even have a term for it. We call it a quantum leap. It's a complete and other myth. Ah, such good nuggets of wisdom. There's no quantum leaps, there's no lottery tickets, there's no skipping the usual steps into growing into a successful person. Steps into growing into a successful person. Your steps to be successful are grown slowly, they're planted, then they're cultivated and then they're ultimately harvest, and they're called the virtues.

Speaker 2:

Let's cultivate all the virtues. There's four of them. The main four are prudence, temperance, justice and fortitude. These main four virtues, known as cardinal virtues. These virtues form that foundational framework for ethical behavior. They came from both classical philosophy and, ultimately, christian theology. We learn first this concept of virtues from the Greek philosopher Plato in his work the Republic, but then they were later expanded on by his student Aristotle in the Nicomachean Ethics, ultimately being incorporated into Christian moral theology as the best way and the essential way, the vital way, to live a virtuous life, Live a virtuous life, and we learned this from the great philosophers, some of which we touched on in our Philosophy 101 series, mainly St Augustine and St Thomas Aquinas, but St Ambrose was a good one on teaching the virtues too.

Speaker 2:

But we would all do well to learn the virtues, to practice the virtues and to live a virtuous life. So in today's Mojo Minute, let's do just that. Let's not be confused by the lottery tickets or the big breaks or all the distractions that life throws at us. The cardinal virtues, as they are commonly referred to, are the fast track to building a good life. They're called cardinal because cardo means hinge in Latin, meaning these are the prime movers in moving the soul and the body towards an exceptionally good life. All the other minor virtues fall under these big four, and again, the big four are prudence, justice, fortitude and temperance. Let's learn, plant, cultivate and ultimately spend a lifetime harvesting these virtues in our life. Because when we do, when we do, my friends, we will be living a flourishing life. I guarantee it.

Speaker 1:

Thank you for joining us. We hope you enjoyed this Theory to Action podcast. Be sure to check out our show page at teammojoacademycom, where we have everything we discussed in this podcast, as well as other great resources. Until next time, keep getting your mojo on, thank you.