I liked this book and since we are all going to die someday, I was curious how someone in their last months would view life and how we can learn from this for our own lives.
His diagnosis of brain cancer come rather suddenly and his book is his documentation of how he grappled with this fact, prepared for his upcoming death and learned different life lessons.
For me, I found the life lessons he learned during this time to be good for a person to ponder. Here are some of the lessons:
1. Live in the Present Moment: Most people live in the future, always working toward that "someday" when they will be able to retire, enjoy life and be happy but, as he found out, "someday" may never come so we must enjoy each moment of each day as best as we are able. He wrote the following:
"It was hard not to lament that one of the big reasons we'd sacrificed so much time together,
across so many years, as I traveled the world and worked ungodly hours - namely so that
on the other side of it we could enjoy a prosperous retirement together...but that dream
was gone now. Same with all my other personal goals for 2006, 2007, and every year after that"
pg. 7
Conversely, some people live in the past and let the hurts and disappointments of the past keep them bitter in the present and thereby rob them of the joy of the Present Moment.
So my lesson from Gene on this would be: Let go of the past - the hurts and pains - because you cannot change it now and, by holding onto it, you are destroying the beauty of today. As for the future, plan for it but remember that you are only guaranteed right now - not tomorrow or the next day but only the Present Moment so enjoy it right now - relish it and bask in it. It takes practice, according to Gene, to focus on the present but, to do so, makes life more rewarding.
2. Give people grace: These are my words, not his, but a short-handed way to express how he learned not to evaluate everything based on "competency" or "proficiency". Not everyone can always be on "top of their game" and each person has their own issues they are dealing with so try and be more gracious with people's shortcomings. Gene said, on page 68, "my tolerance for people - that is, my tolerance for imperfection - expanded"
3. You can't control everything: Relax, the things you can control (yourself), control...the things you cannot control (most everything), don't get upset over. (see pg. 70)
4. Commitment: Gene commented on how commitment is measured in the business world by how much of your time you are willing to give up or dedicate to your work. Thus, Commitment to Company = giving your most non-renewable resource to the company: TIME (specifically, your time which you cannot ever get back). But Gene came to see commitment, not as how much time you give up but how much energy one puts into a task or how much "presence" they give to the task at hand. Here is what he said:
" i had come to wonder about the true nature of commitment. In fact, it is not about time. It's not about
reliability and predictability. Commitment is about depth. It's about effort. It's about
passion...commitment is best measured not by the time one is willing to give up but, more accurately, by
the energy one wants to put in, by how present one is." pg. 78
"Before my illness, I ad considered commitment king among virtues. After I was diagnosed, I came to
consider consciousness king among virtues." pg. 91
5. We should prepare for our death just like we try and prepare for our financial security in retirement: Gene seemed to realize that most people live their lives in an unconscious quest for money - more and more of it - and never give thought to the ultimate destination we will all have to traverse - death. Although he was guilty of this himself, he realized the non-balance of it. He wrote this:
"They had no real motivation or clear timeline to stop what they were busy at, to step back, to ask what
exactly they were doing with their life...some people out there...understand that you start putting money
away now, so that it can grow to be sufficient for later in life, when you need it. Why wouldn't you start
doing that now with something at least as important as your money - your soul?" pg. 133
Those were the main lessons I saw in my reading.
Overall, it is a quick and worthwhile read and helps you to think about what is important in life now and also the fact that you should think about the ultimate transition and how to prepare for it since we will all reach that destination some day.