(I wrote this a while ago, but it feels, I dunno, more timely now).
It can be hard in this post-apocalyptic world of ours to stay focussed on what’s important: you and the better you inside you just waiting to get out of you — like the giant tapeworms which helped bring down our civilisation.
People don’t change. (Unless they’re infected with tapeworms or the zombie virus, or if they’ve been injected with a nanite swarm by our robot enemies). Most people still look for secrets, amazing tricks and life hacks that will make everything better right away.
Unfortunately, there are no “overnight successes”, not even last night’s successful overnight raid on the rival scavenger camp, which had been hoarding all of those tins of premium dog food. We got the dog food, but let’s never forget we had to leave old Vernon behind to slow down the human-tapeworm hybrids chasing us.
Vernon was slow. He didn’t adapt. Not to the end of the world as we knew it. Not to the bullets I put into his leg as we fled the scavenger camp. And certainly not to the challenge of all those tapeworm people burrowing in through every orifice.
But think of all the incredible, adaptable people you truly admire in our post-apocalyptic world today. They didn’t succeed because of one power move. They succeeded because they followed my Top Five Amazing Self-Improvement Hacks That You Need to Action Today.
So stop aiming for radical personal change.
A magic bullet cannot save you.
But five well-aimed conventional bullets into a slow-poke like Vernon almost certainly can.
I’m not saying it’s easy. But there is no more chance of escaping the hard work of self-improvement than there is of escaping the robot slave mines of Area 7. So, stop looking for “quick hacks” that bring faster results. The only hacking that works since our computers went dark is the sort involving machetes and the undead, and of course, my Top Five Amazing Self Improvement Hacks That You Need to Action Today.
1. Think of your time as money.
OK. We stopped using money after the banks collapsed, but we do barter and we only have a finite amount of things to barter with. Time is finite. It’s more important than ever to learn when to delegate a task rather than do it yourself. Do you really need to sharpen all the stakes guarding the zig-zag road into the strategic hamlet? Is dragging a heavy rock to the trebuchet commanding the riverine approaches the best use of your time? Probably not, now that Vernon’s comely young hand-fasted woman is single again and that big old yurt of hers can get cold and lonely on a nuclear winter’s night.
2. Improvise, adapt, and overcome.
When those tapeworm-human hybrids sprang their ambush, I improvised a distraction for them. I adapted to the situation the same way that Vernon will soon adapt to his new life as a giant flesh-eating nematode.
And I will overcome his woman’s objections to sharing her yurt and bed roll with the guy who, let’s face it, murdered her husband by offering up a dinner of delicious dog food that Vernon’s unavoidable murder made possible. I improvised, adapted, and will overcome. You can too.
3. Schedule your energy.
It can be difficult to filter out the noise and actually achieve what we set out to do, every day. Rather than trying to avoid distractions completely, we should schedule around our energy instead. Plan to do, say, an hour’s work hammering and grinding salvaged teaspoons into arrowheads, followed by five minutes of rest. Read the Facebook on the hamlet bulletin board to catch up on who’s had their face cut off by the Inquisition lately. Check your mail – if the postman still lives. But just be aware of and prioritise around your times of maximum productivity and avoid the infamous afternoon slump when more than one sleepyhead has found themselves waking up in the communal cook pot.
4. Networking.
Did you know that over one hundred per cent of people still find their jobs through networking? You can safely bet that successful hamlet elders didn’t get to the top by living in a bubble. Not since the last domed city collapsed. Now more than ever, networking is a necessity.
So how do you pull it off?
It doesn’t involve throwing yourself at everyone you meet. Truly effective networking involves being your authentic, fabulous self and becoming your own best cheerleader since we’ve already eaten the rest of the cheerleaders.
Looking to grab up that sweet, sweet gig as the village herbalist? Think you’ve got what it takes to replace the blacksmith one day? You could spend all your time chewing bark and grass or begging for an ironmongery apprenticeship. Or you could just make friends in the Assassin’s Guild. In the modern world, it’s not who you know. It’s who they’re willing to kill in return for a couple of tins of stolen dog food.
5. Get started early.
One thing that hasn’t changed even as everything else has? Successful people get an early start on their success. That crucial hour before dawn, when most people are still hiding from the vampires, you could be up cutting a deal with our vampire overlords to guarantee your position as hamlet chieftain in return for guaranteeing them a regular supply of human blood going forward.
6. Always under-promise and over-deliver.
I promised Five Amazing Self Improvement Hacks, but I’m going to give you Six.
Eliminate ANTS.
Not the giant, man-eating fire ants which have proven all but impossible to eliminate, but the other, even deadlier ANTS: Automatic Negative Thoughts.
Negative thoughts happen to everyone, but the worst thing you can do is let them bring your day down. Focus on learning how you can change your perspective and realise your most fantastic self even as the world dies screaming all around us — it’s well worth the effort.
Don’t think, Omigod, these human nematodes are going to catch up with us.
Think, Omigod these human nematodes are my chance to finally get into Vernon’s hand-fasted woman’s hand-stitched britches. Huzzah!
Staying optimistic keeps me almost as excited as those well-stuffed britches. And by staying optimistic and excited, your day will always be worth it, no matter how few you have left.
Thanks JB. I needed this today.
Change the old bit about running from the bear to brain eatin mutants... I don’t have to be faster than the zombies, I just have to be faster than you. Or smarter than Vernon