How to Ruin Your Life By 30: Nine Surprisingly Everyday Mistakes You Might Be Making Right Now
By Steve Farrar
3.5/5
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About this ebook
We all have an internal alarm clock that goes off when we're about to make a bad decision... Some of us spend our 20's hitting the snooze button.
By taking a look at 9 common, everyday mistakes, which most of us have an opportunity to make on a regular basis, Steve Farrar speaks with wisdom and wit in this short book that serves as a wake up call we should all take.
From starting our 20's on the wrong foot to neglecting our own gifts and strengths, and from isolating ourselves from real community to ignoring God's purpose for our lives, How to Ruin Your Life by 30 will help navigate these treacherous waters we call adulthood.
No matter where you are at: preparing for, recovering from, or in the midst of your 20's... this short book will help.
Steve Farrar
Dr. Steve Farrar is the founder and chairman of Men's Leadership Ministries and author of the bestselling book Point Man: How a Man Can Lead His Family, as well as fifteen other books.
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Reviews for How to Ruin Your Life By 30
12 ratings3 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5It's also fine to skip the book and just focus on the last chapter. Basically:
Read a chapter of Proverbs every day. Also, find someone to do this with you so you can discuss what you read and encourage each other. - Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5It is 2021 and there is Religion dogmas in this book. No truth. No thanks
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5I think this short, little book contains some great ideas, but it still falls short of the mark. Steve Farrar offers a lot of valuable advice such as how to find your true purpose in life, how to follow the laws of cause and effect, trust God, etc. But I think his message will only truly be appreciated by the most conservative Christians. The advice is well meaning but not always attainable or well advised. A few of the things I had problems with are as follows:1. The author makes it clear that divorce is never ever an option. Which I agree, in most cases divorce isn't an option. People need to take their vows seriously and work through their problems. But he fails to mention abuse or other severe cases when divorce is necessary. Putting forth ultimatums is never good. In rare cases divorce is justifiable and encouraged.2. He considers homosexuality a "sexual immorality." Now I know most Christians frown upon gays, but I thought the teaching was, that being a homosexual was not a sin, only ACTING on homosexuality was a sin (not that I agree with that, I'm just repeating). The author makes no clarification and just calls out the gays. Not cool.3. Farrar is borderline sexist/ very traditional in regards to gender roles. He states multiple times that women need to be comfortable in their femininity, allow their husbands to provide and lead, become mothers, AND not to dress cheap. There is nothing shaming boys from ogling pretty girls but there is a whole section on what women should wear. Again, not cool.4. Finally, dating non-Christians is not worth your time?!? Really?! I thought for sure he would at least say, "convert your significant other" or something, but instead he says, "Don't give any consideration to the possibility that you might lead them toward the Lord. God doesn't need you to do His work in their life." Harsh man, harsh.Overall, an interesting read, but maybe I'm just to liberal in my love for the Lord and humanity.I received this book for free from Moody Publishing in return for my honest, unbiased opinion.
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Book preview
How to Ruin Your Life By 30 - Steve Farrar
CHAPTER 1
If you want to ruin your life by 30, then …
OVERLOOK THE LAW OF CAUSE AND EFFECT
AT EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE, Jane Lucretia D’Esterre was talented and beautiful. As she stood on the bank of a beautiful, deep lake in Scotland, she pondered plunging into the depths and taking her life. She had lost all hope.
The year was 1815, and her husband, John, had just been killed in a duel. He left her penniless, in a new country, completely by herself, with two babies to care for. Her family was in France, and she was without any kind of support: emotional, spiritual, or financial.
As she gazed into the depths of the lake and pondered the pain and brokenness of her life, she looked up and saw a young man on the other side of the lake plowing furrows on the hillside. He was completely focused on his work. He was not aware of her gaze as he guided the plow behind the horse with a single-minded purpose.
In her moment of despair, she was so impressed with the young plowman’s focus and concentration on doing his work well, that his example and concentration pulled her out of her despair. Suddenly, she was infused with hope. Then the light went on in her head. She knew what she was supposed to do. She had received a timely dose of wisdom.
Jane acted. She decided to move straight ahead as the young plowman was doing. She, too, had a meaningful task to fulfill. Her children needed her. They had lost one parent already—they didn’t need to experience the loss of another.
When she looked at the young man’s example, she was given wisdom. Or to put it another way, Jane was given a wise heart. And when her heart became wise, it then became brave to do the right and hard thing.
A few weeks after this experience at the lake, Jane came to faith in Christ. A few years later she married Captain John Grattan Guinness, who was the youngest son of the famous brewer, Arthur Guinness.
Os Guinness tells this story in his excellent book The Call. Os is a gifted Christian author who has influenced many toward the kingdom of God. Jane D’Esterre was Os Guinness’s great-great-grandmother. Os comments on the significance of the events that took place in Jane’s life when she was just eighteen:
If it had not been for the duel, our side of the family would not have come into being. If it had not been for the plowman, the tragedy of the dueling husband would have been followed by the tragedy of the duelist’s widow….
My great-great-grandmother was unusual for several reasons—including the fact that she conscientiously prayed for her descendants down through a dozen generations. Ours is a heritage of faith, for which I, for one, am deeply grateful.¹
When eighteen-year-old Jane was gazing into the deep, dark depths of the lake and pondering death, she couldn’t see five generations ahead and see Os Guinness or any of her other descendants. All she could see was that her life was finished. But it wasn’t finished. By looking at a purposeful young man plowing on a hill, she realized there was hope.
She could take the path of the lake or she could take the life of moving ahead, in spite of her mind-numbing emotional pain.
She had no idea that Christ would call her to forgiveness and purpose in just a matter of weeks. She couldn’t imagine that she would have another husband who would love her and her children. All she knew at that moment was that she could choose death or life.
She had a choice to make, and that choice would carry consequences.
That concept is known as cause and effect.
With the wrong choice she could have ruined her life and her future. With the wrong choice she would have ruined the childhood of her young children.
But she made the right choice as an eighteen-year-old. And her family is still grateful today that she did, nearly two hundred years later.
The choices you are making in your life are just as significant.
THE FIRST TWENTY YEARS
In the first twenty years of your life, your parents make the major decisions for you.
From twenty on out, you will be making the decisions. The quality of your decisions will determine what your life will look like at thirty. So from here on, the ball is in your court.
You are no longer a kid. You are an adult. And it will be the choices that you make over the next few years that will make you or break you by thirty.
And thirty will be here before you know it. If you don’t believe that, just ask someone who’s there.
So when do you actually become an adult?
That’s kind of hard to nail down because it happens in phases. As far as the law is concerned, eighteen is a very real marker of adulthood. But the big one is twenty-one. At the age of twenty-one, you have officially entered into the world of adulthood. And you are a full-fledged member, whether you feel like it or not.
My three kids are no longer kids. They have all passed their twenty-first birthdays and are officially adults.
Thirty will be here before you know it. … Just ask someone who’s there.
One night at dinner, Josh, then twenty-two and a senior in college, was giving me some feedback on what he had read. We were talking about the fact that it is a huge transition to go from the teenage years into early adulthood. As I was listening to his feedback, I held up my hand and said, Wait a minute, this is pretty good stuff. Let me get a pen and write it down.
You don’t need to write it down, Dad. I already did.
When did you do that, last night?
No, I wrote it down about a year ago. I’ve been giving a lot of thought to this.
So here’s what Josh wrote. I asked him to update it for this chapter. See if it doesn’t resonate with you and your personal walk into adulthood:
A WIDE-EYED DRIVER TAKES THE WHEEL
In American culture, it is the first rite of passage into adulthood.
It is the one day every youth looks forward to with more anticipation, more excitement, and more sleeplessness than any other day in life: the day of the driver’s license. For a sixteen-year-old, the driver’s license is the ticket to a gratifying new world of freedom. By sixteen, the enjoyment of toys without horsepower and rides to the mall from Mom are entirely dissolved, and life has nearly lost its ability to entertain. But to sit in the driver’s seat, to hear the car door slam shut, to be left entirely alone, and to feel the surge of power with a push of the pedal—this is the pinnacle of maturity’s benefits. The excitement that a new driver feels is an incredible rush, one that he or she can never imagine losing.
But, as we all know, the loss of the thrill of driving is an inevitable occurrence. The roads, once the remedy to all that was boring, eventually become merely roads and nothing more. Then a very strange thing begins to occur. While driving, you are suddenly jolted out of a state of complete distraction to realize you have not focused on the road in what seems to be several minutes. These moments are personal mysteries, attesting to the power of the wandering mind and, I should add, the grace of God. One day you’re driving wide-eyed, hugging every turn with intent, and engaging every on-ramp with alertness. The next, you’re nearly running into the median, looking up to realize that time has flown by and you were lost in a thought.
Life is like driving on a long road trip. You are moving down the highway of life at a very fast clip.
AND THEN YOU’RE THIRTY!
One day you will look up, perhaps after being detained by a very long thought, and realize that you are thirty. Life in the twenties is characterized by a continual introduction of new places, new people, and new experiences. Every day is met with a higher level of intent and alertness. But as days pass by like the white lines on the highway, the speed of life increases with every year. Thirty will be here before you know it.
But the coming of age and growing old is not what this book is concerned with. There is nothing wrong with wrinkles, and there is nothing shameful about slowing down; age is not the enemy. This book is concerned with the coming of consequences—whether good or bad.
Deeply ingrained into the fabric of all creation is a law that every action must have a reaction. There are no exceptions to the rule. Every choice in life—every thought, word, and action—brings a return of circumstances with it. You will reach the age of thirty only by traveling the road through eighteen, twenty-one, and twenty-five. And the choices in life during those quickly passing years will entirely determine the person you will be at thirty.
GET A GRIP!
This is a scary thought, and it should be.
This is also a thought that may seem too obvious and simple to even bring up. Doesn’t everyone grasp this concept of cause and effect? Apparently not.
There is not a single person who would answer yes, if asked the question, Do you want your life to be miserable when you are older? Yet the majority of young people engage in decisions every day that are leading to that very end. This is evidence of a great