Take risks!

Recently, I’ve spent a lot of energy reflecting on my time in college. It has been a truly explorative experience in the best and worst sense of the word.

Fun. Freedom. Joy. Loneliness. Stress. Mistakes. Growth.

I’ll be graduating in a couple of months, and it could not be more bittersweet.

“Happiness hit her like a bullet in the back.”

  • 📈 Take risks! Live your life, chase your dreams, ride off into the sunset on a unicorn, yadda yadda yadda.

  • 💼 Work on your workplace etiquette: Better safe than sorry. Employers aren’t too thrilled with how college grads behave.

  • 📸 Snapshot of this week’s clippings: Global inequality research wins Nobel prize. Grab a Slurpee before it’s too late. Don’t feed raccoons.

LIFE STUFF

Why it’s important to take risks

We take risks all the time. Risks are baked into our lifestyle.

  • Hitting snooze on your alarm for the third time? Risk ✅

  • Putting off that assignment until two hours before it’s due? Risk ✅

  • Skipping class even though you have an exam for it next week? Risk ✅

  • Parking on campus for a few minutes to unload even though you don’t have a parking pass? Risk ✅

  • Setting a timer for a 30-minute nap and hoping it doesn’t turn into a 3-hour one? Risk ✅

Perhaps these aren’t the risks we should be taking if we want to live out a cookie-cutter version of what it means to be productive and “on top of things.” These risks seem to be rooted in procrastination, convenience, or a little wishful thinking. Typically, we take these risks on without a second thought.

And yet, when faced with the choice between sticking to what’s familiar or daring to pursue the authentic and unknown, we often hesitate.

The other day, I wondered: If people chased the life they actually wanted to live, like truly chase after it on every level, would they be happier? Is stepping outside of your comfort zone and possibly breaking apart from the status quo for a chance at higher fulfillment worth the risk?

The right kind of risk starts with imagination.

It’s not just about weighing the pros and cons of two choices or rationally thinking through the decision to see which would option would yield a more positive outcome.

Risk-taking as a way to build a better life begins with intentionally imagining all of the possibilities out there that wait to be actualized by you.

And no, it doesn’t have to be some sort of life-altering, earth-shattering, ground-breaking alternate reality that you try to achieve. The point is that we can use our imagination to envision a version of any piece of our reality to be better than it currently is, even if that difference is only a fraction.

When we use this approach to risk-taking, we’re not only taking risks that could change our lives—we’re expanding our sense of what we are capable of and using it as an opportunity for growth and change.

Maybe this why we’re better at taking risks as children, because we begin to lose that imagination as we grow up. The reality that we live in has little room for it as adults.

What’s important to remember, however, is that not taking those risks, not daring to be imaginative, not willing to step away from a convenient alternative for a shot at a reality that’s even the slightest bit more fulfilling for you is, in and of itself, a risk.

CHECK THIS OUT

College grads need to up their game in workplace etiquette

How prepared are you for entering the workforce post-graduation? According to a survey conducted by Intelligent, 81% of business leaders believe that college graduates would benefit from workplace etiquette training.

Here are the largest grievances against college grads:

  • Issues with taking constructive criticism

  • Cell phone usage

  • Difficulty with conflict resolution

These problems are trickier to spot in a remote setting but are on full display in a physical office where new hires have to interact in-person with other employees and higher-ups.

As a response, many employers are opting to provide proper workplace etiquette training for their company. Doing so offers a full transparency of the behavioral expectations jobs have for employees. The goal is to prevent any kind of miscommunication when it comes to establishing workplace norms and culture.

College students—take notes.

🌏 You might hear about this in class: Economists win Nobel Memorial Prize (roughly a $1 million cash reward) for their research on global inequality.

😢 Goodbye Slurpees: 7-Eleven plans to close hundreds of locations in the U.S. by the end of the year.

🪧 Career Fair protests: Pro-Palestinian students at Harvey Mudd College organized a rally to “shut down War Profiteers” on campus at the Career Fair.

🦝 Never seen this many at once: Woman calls 911 after 100 raccoons descended upon her yard at one time in broad daylight.

🏠 Hurricane Helene: Take a look at FEMA assistance information, or click here to help people affected by Helene.

yo what

‘SUP

we just got back from fall break and I low key actually feel really rejuvenated. here’s your reminder that taking a break is ok. 🫶