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Rabbi Lord Sacks

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Rabbi Lord Sacks,

Rabbi sacks

Opinion

Lord Sacks' advice for young dreamers

Rabbi Sacks contributed a chapter to a book of advice for young people, 'A Few Wise Words' which is published next week. This is an edited extract.

November 12, 2020 11:50
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2 min read

 One of the most practical things you can ever do is dream. I’m constantly puzzled by the fact that people can take a month or even a year planning a holiday, but they don’t even take one day to plan a life. The most important thing you can do when planning your life is to dream.

Explore the world of possibilities and see which one really speaks to you, that’s the first thing. The second is to be persistent. This is a quality you may not believe you have, but persistence is something that you will eventually discover you do have because, surely to goodness, when you are inspired by a dream and you follow it, you are also going to fail many times along the way!

From an early age, my great dream was to write a book. I tried so hard and devoted every spare minute I had from the age of 20 until 40 to this, but I consistently failed, failed and failed again! I used to have this enormous filing cabinet full of books I had started and never finished...And so for 20 years I had tried and failed, and then, as I was approaching my 40th birthday, I happened by pure chance to be reading George Bernard Shaw’s preface to Plays, Pleasant and Unpleasant, in which he says, “If you are going to write a book, write it by the time you’re 40.” I remember thinking, “He’s talking to me and he’s not even alive!” It was for me one of those life-changing moments. I realised that I had to do it now or never, and it was at the age of 40 that I completed my first book. I have written pretty much a book every year since, and that is really down to sheer persistence.

If you have a dream and you are persistent, you have the ability to do great things, and you will.