“The world is a fine place and worth the fighting for and I hate very much to leave it.”
As you probably know Ernest Hemingway was a writer, journalist and Nobel Prize Winner. Some of his most famous stories include “The Old Man and The Sea” and “The Sun Also Rises”.
He also participated in both World Wars and worked as a correspondent during for instance the Spanish Civil War.
Now, here are 9 of my favourite words of wisdom from Ernest Hemingway.
1. Listen.
“I like to listen. I have learned a great deal from listening carefully. Most people never listen.”
Learning to really listen to someone rather just waiting for our turn to talk can be a difficult skill to develop. Often we may have much on our mind that we want to say and so listening falls by the wayside.
How can you become a better listener? Here are three tips:
- Forget about yourself. Focus your attention outward instead of inward in a conversation. Place the mental focus on the person you are talking and listening to instead of yourself. Placing the focus outside of yourself makes you less self-centred and your need to hog the spotlight decreases.
- Stay present. This will help you to decrease the bad habit of thinking about the future and what you should say next while trying to listen. If you are present and really there while listening then that will also come through in your body language, which gives the person talking a vibe and feeling that you are really listening to what s/he has to say.
- Be open. Keep your mind open to the possibility that whatever the person is about to say will actually be interesting. If you have already made up your mind that he or she will say something boring then it will be hard to pay attention.
Also, if you really listen then that alone will often provide you naturally with a better and more genuine answer than the clever response thought up while trying to listen simultaneously.
2. Take the first step.
“The best way to find out if you can trust somebody is to trust them.”
The thing is if two people or more are waiting for someone else to take the first step then that step may never be taken. Or you may at least have to wait for a very long time.
If you after some time realize that, like in this example, you couldn’t trust the person then at least you have learned that.
By not taking the first step you’ll perhaps never know. So instead of waiting around and trying to figure things out just take first steps of different kinds in interactions. Be proactive.
3. Keep your eyes on where you are going.
“Never mistake motion for action.”
It’s very easy to get lost in busy work. You may spend much time in your in-box or filing and organizing things. But at the end of the day or week, what have you accomplished?
Just because you’re moving doesn’t mean that you are moving in the direction you really want to go.
To do that you have to do the things that you know are really important and in alignment with your goals. And not getting lost in busy work.
So, improve your effectiveness and productivity.
But, more importantly, never lose your view of your big picture. And take the action and do the things you need to do to get yourself where you want to go.
4. Just do.
“The shortest answer is doing the thing.”
How do you get things done? You take action and do them.
You may need to do some planning, but don’t get lost in that stage or in over thinking things. Planning or thinking won’t get you any results in real-life if you don’t take action too.
So take action and just try something.
Maybe you’ll succeed. Maybe you’ll fail, but if you do then failure can always teach you a bunch of things.
The worst thing is not failure, it’s to just sit on your hands and do nothing.
Developing a “just do it” habit – where you learn to do what you know you want to do despite how you feel or what your thoughts are telling you at the moment – can be difficult.
But it’s rewarding not only because you’ll get actual results and – sooner or later – success. It also builds real confidence in yourself, in your capabilities and in your own personal power to achieve what you want in life.
5. Do. Fail. Learn. Do.
“The first draft of anything is shit.”
So you have to keep your eyes on where you are going and do the right things to get yourself there. However, you will not always get what you want on your first try.
No worries though, if you have the right attitude.
What attitude is that?
The attitude of the much younger you.
The kid who learned to walk and ride a bike. A younger you that doesn’t put so much value into a failure. But instead just gets up after falling down, learns a lesson or two from what happened and then tries again.
And again.
By cultivating that way of thinking about failure – instead of the more usual, more grown up one where you may think that the world will come to an end just because you failed – you can over time achieve some pretty awesome things.
6. Find strength through your tough times.
“The world breaks everyone, and afterward, some are strong at the broken places.”
This is a really interesting point.
Because it’s really easy to let yourself fall into a frame of mind where you think that no-one has had it worse than you and that this and this happened and that’s why you are like you are. And of course, some people have had a much worse time than others.
But I think it’s easy to let yourself fall into a kind of victim thinking where you let your troubles in the past act as reasons why you can’t do something now. But one must remember: that is the past.
And people’s problems are rarely as unique as we may think. Everyone has had bad stuff happen to them. People may not talk about it and you may assume that it’s just you that has have these bad experiences.
But as Hemingway says, everyone has been broken in a kind of way throughout their life. It’s kinda unavoidable.
But the question is what you do now.
Do you let those old things hold you back and allow them help the ego to build an even stronger victim identity?
Or can you let them go and live in the present – as the person you are now rather than who you were – with plans for the future?
Everyone has to handle such a thing in their own way. But it is up to just one person to decide on how handle it. And that’s you.
7. Don’t get hung up on the small things in life.
“The man who has begun to live more seriously within begins to live more simply without.”
When you start to take life more seriously you may realize that you can let a whole lot of things just go.
You don’t have the patience, time or energy to worry about the small and petty things anymore. You don’t get wrapped up in things that are totally unimportant.
You start simplifying your life because you realize that your time isn’t unlimited. You remove a lot of the less important things to have more time and energy for the really exciting and important stuff.
Have a look at what’s really important in your life. If you are unsure about if it’s really important, try asking yourself:
Will this matter 5 years from now?
Then simplify, simplify, simplify. You may be surprised at how much kinda unimportant important stuff that there is in your mind and life.
You may also feel lighter after having done some decluttering because you are no longer bogged down by boatloads of stuff that you have now realized is pretty irrelevant.
8. Don’t let your imagination hold you back.
“Cowardice … is almost always simply a lack of ability to suspend the functioning of the imagination.”
Your imagination can really play tricks on you. By thinking about something over and over you and your imagination can come up the most elaborate and horrifying ways things can go wrong.
But if/when you finally take action and do what you wanted to do it may be a little anticlimactic.
Even if you fail and things don’t work out the way you hoped for you may think to yourself:
Is this it?!
There are no monsters under your bed. And the monsters and disaster scenarios you construct in your mind rarely come into life.
Now, some situations may actually be quite scary and create a lot of pressure within.
The best way that I have found to deal with those situations is to reconnect with the present. When you are present you are just focused on what is happening right now. As Hemingway says, you are suspending the functioning of your imagination because your mind is no longer lost in possible future scenarios.
Check out Eckhart Tolle’s books The Power of Now and A New Earth plus this article of mine for tips on how develop the habit of being able to step into the now. It can allow you to find a stillness and peace within despite calamity outside of you.
9. Don’t judge.
“The writer’s job is not to judge, but to seek to understand.”
I think this is not just a great piece of advice for writers but for anyone really. Seeking to understand rather than judging is hard but is something that can help you and the people around you a great deal.
And this also goes back to the first tip, the one about listening. To be a good listener you must have the intent to understand the other person rather than judging him/her.
Instead of going into interactions or just life with a bunch of judgments that you apply on everything and everyone try acceptance. This is not easy if you are used to making judgments about everything.
And the thing is, by making a judgment you can often strengthen you ego. You get a small ego boost and you feel good for a while. But just like with caffeine this wears off pretty quickly and you soon need to judge again to feel good.
Accepting may not feel so appealing or “normal” but I have found that when I just accept things I feel a relief and stillness inside. You just feel good. I’m still working on this though.
Accepting someone’s opinion doesn’t mean that you surrender and let them “win”. Nor does it mean that you need to just sit back and cannot take any action.
You can accept and still take action to change something if that is what you’d like to do. Accepting just means that you let that person think and feels as s/he likes without judging it. When you just accept and let your judgments rest it’s easier to really understand each other and connect.
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Thanks for sharing these great thoughts from a great man!
1. I totally agree with No. 1.
2. I agree to an extent. Taking the first step is admirable as long as the issue is not an important one. To trust a untested person with too much at the outset, I fear would be foolish. I’ve personally been burned too many times to walk too closely to that fire so willingly anymore. But, then again, it’s my nature. I seem to fall prey to people’s hard luck stories again and again.
3. So true! I try to focus on my list of high-value activities and let the low-value ones take care of themselves.
4. Also very true. The big things you want to have done in your life just sit there. They never go away. Even if you tell yourself you don’t really want to do that after all. They haunt you. Best to try and find out if you really want it or not. For years, I thought about becoming a writer. It was like an albatross around my neck that I couldn’t take off until I finally tried it. Now, I’m written my ebook and what a relief it was to cut that dead bird from my neck! In the process, I found out I really liked it, and the whole experience gave me the courage to quit my career as a lawyer for good!
5. Again, very true. I had tried many times in the past to write the same few books and screenplays, only getting off a few chapters or scenes at the most before I ran out of steam each time. I might finish them still, after a whole lot more edits and rewrites. Each time they a whole lot better.
6. Ah, a great quote. It seems we spend the first half of our adult lives trying to get over whatever happened to us in our childhood and, only in the second half of our adult lives are we able to even know who we are, what we really want, and all that we are capable of. To be strong at my broken places is my whole goal now as I reach out to others who might be facing similar challenges to the ones I faced when I was younger.
7. Yes. I’m reminded of the story of the millionaire who made a bet with a very ambitious but poor man. The rich man wagered all his fortune that the poor man couldn’t live in a cave without any human interaction for 15 years. The poor man seeing no better way to become that wealthy in his lifetime, took the bet. Provisions and whatever reading material he desired were delivered to him without any verbal communications. At first, he requested comic books and magazines, because he had never been much of a reader. Then, over time, he switched, in turn, to pulp fiction, literature, the classics, textbooks in all subjects, foreign language books, then finally religious and philosophy tomes in their original languages. One day before the final day of the 15 years bet had passed, he silently walked out of the cave back into the world, no longer desiring the man’s riches, for he had found his own.
8. We are often our own worst enemies.
9. By far the hardest one for me. But I work on it constantly.
Thanks for another amazing post, Henrik!
Hi,
Was very inspired.
Thanks!
You are amazing! A friend of mine just forwarded me your blog link because she said it “screamed Heather”. It totally does! Can I add your link to my blog? You can view it here: http://www.heatherstrang.com/blog/writing/
I’m a writer, coach and deep self-development enthusiast. I also happen to adore Hemingway.
Thank you for being – I love your blog.
Sending you much love & blessings,
Heather :)
I love Hemingway’s no BS philosophy. To be honest, it’s such a change of pace from what I typically read. I have a feeling Hemingway would tell us that life owes us nothing and if we’re too scared to make a serious attempt at making our dreams come true, then we don’t deserve them anyway. Of all these, though, #7 is my favorite. When you trust in your own abilities, your outer trappings become far less relevant.
Hemingway was a great writer and one of those rare people with a mind that truly works. Thanks for this distillation of his wisdom.
One more thing about judging that I think is important to note is that as it hinders understanding, it also disconnects you from reality. If we are to accept other people it sets us on the path to understanding them and thus puts us in a better position to see people and events as they are instead of how we’d like them to be.
Remarkable!
I have just come upon your site and you have in the brief few postings that I have participated in, you’ve listed some very inspiring commentary/lists from two cultural icons of which I had never read before.
The first was Bruce Lee’s list and now Ernest Hemingway. As an avid observer in reading what others are inspired to list as their order of importance I found Ernest Hemingway’s to be one of the most grounded. Although he doesn’t revert to the all encompassing spiritual motivations that we all are at times inspired to voice, he has a simplicity which has magnificent clarity to it.
And this from a man who’s own troubled path provided no solace, so ironic, and sad. His own journey speaks of the frailty that we all have within even when our best words are offered to others for their own meaning in walking this fundamentally mysterious path called Life.
I also find that you can tell how much you’re judging yourself by how much you judge others – and vice versa.
Great quotes – thanks for sharing. I particularly like #3 – “Never mistake motion for action.” Brilliant. It reminds me of another saying: just because we’re doing things right, doesn’t mean we’re doing the right things.
“The Sun Also Rises”
If ever there was a positive statement…
“The man who has begun to live more seriously within begins to live more simply without.â€
The times are ripe for applying this one. Global warming and high gas prices are causing people to re-examine their priorities and scale back on ‘stuff’ and up the living responsibly meter.
Thanks for this post. I especially enjoy, “The first draft of anything is shit.†Coming from Hemmingway that’s a great reminder.
“The world is a fine place and worth the fighting for and I hate very much to leave it.  said the manic-depressive alcoholic suicide case. These are all very droll sentiments, but ceci n’est pas une pipe– what do you believe, the text or the picture?
“The world is a fine place and worth the fighting for and I hate very much to leave it.â€
didn’t hemingway kill himself?!
A fine writer, but a guru? i don’t think so.
Hemingway didn’t fight in either world war. During world war I he was an ambulance driver, but managed to get wounded h one night hanging out at the front. During WWII he was a part-time correspondent but spent most of his time fishing off the coast of Cuba claiming he was searching for Nazi subs to cheat on the gas rationing laws.