What’s the best advice you’ve ever received?

December 7, 2007

Advice is Rated-R. It happens between consenting adults. Here’s the proof: At some point in our lives, our parents stop commanding us (”Jimmy, clean up your room right now!”) and start advising us (”Jimmy, don’t you think it would be a great idea to clean up your room today?”). The time when commands give way to advice is about the time we start becoming adults. So advice signifies respect—respect for the autonomy of the person receiving the advice.

Advice also signifies caring. We don’t give advice if we don’t care about the person we’re advising, or the project they’re involved with. Parents advise children. Friends advise each other. We might advise a stranger, and it would be an act of altruism—showing that we care, even though we have no relationship.

Faith traditions, both religious and philosophical, usually have a body of collected advice. The more elevated term is wisdom. The Chinese have Confucius. Jews and Christians have the Books of Proverbs and Ecclesiastes in the Bible.

What makes good advice good? It’s not just in what is said, but also who says it, and who receives it. What’s the best advice, the greatest wisdom, you ever received? What was it about the content of what was said that made it good? What was it about the person giving the advice? And what was it about you that made the advice so good at that moment?

 
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Always give people the benefit of the doubt (and assume they had good intentions).

Danielle
October 8, 2009

Be humble.

(Still working on it.)

Benjamin
October 8, 2009

Dreams do come true, but they more often than not require a little elbow grease.

Ryan
October 8, 2009

You better be happy in this life ‘coz you’ll be a long time dead.

Lucy
October 8, 2009

I believe it was Mark Twain who said: “20 years from now, you will be more disappointed by the things you didn’t do than by the ones you did.” There are situations in which this mind-set would be inappropriate. But when a decision comes down to a personal struggle of self-consciousness, the application of this quote seems to be quite fitting.

Sam N.
October 8, 2009

Regarding my chosen profession: “If you can see yourself being happy doing anything else, do that.”
Although this seems like a pretty negative statement, it’s really given me the freedom to pursue other interests, instead of being tunnel-visioned and focused to the exclusion of everything else.

Anne
October 8, 2009

Choose your battles

Courtney
October 8, 2009

The Public is merely a multiplied “me.”

Ralph Fire-Eagle
October 8, 2009

How to spell ‘received’ correctly

Elsie
UK
May 2, 2010

Well done for this site taking the best advice

Elsie
UK
May 8, 2010
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