5 Quotes & Sayings By Eric C Sinoway

Born in New York City, Eric C. Sinoway began working in the publishing industry at age 15. He is a graduate of University of Michigan, where he was an editor for the Daily, the student newspaper. His writing has appeared in numerous national magazines including Time, Cosmopolitan, GQ, Instinct, Men's Health, Details, Glamour, Esquire and Muscle & Fitness Read more

He has also contributed to many books including The 50 Greatest Self-Help Books of All Time by Neil Strauss and The Best American Sportswriting by John Feinstein. Sinoway currently serves as president of Sinoway Inc., which is a full-service marketing and public relations agency based in New York City.

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He continued with a laugh, "And for highly motivated people, there are few more frustrating situations than realizing that the goals you've set will require a shift in the basic laws of time and space. Eric C. Sinoway
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You cannot pursue all your goals simultaneously or satisfy all your desires at once. And it's an emotional drain to think you can. Instead, you must focus on long-term fulfillment rather than short-term success and, at various points in your life, think carefully about your priorities. Eric C. Sinoway
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Any decision can be easier if you think carefully about your goals; the dimensions of yourself that are most important to you; your needs and wants; the specific costs and benefits associated with your choices; the commensurability of those choices; and whether certain goals should be sequenced instead of pursued simultaneously to give you a better chance of success. Instead of striving for work—life balance, or even worrying about juggling on the balance beam, use this framework to pursue your life’s work–holistically seeking both success and satisfaction. Eric C. Sinoway
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Juggling and balancing effectively required that we make clear, legacy-driven choices about what we're trying to keep in the air and how we sequence our movements down the beam. Because the ultimate grade in life is not based on how far and fast we've walked the beam or how many things we’ve juggled–it’s based on how much we've enjoyed the exercise. Eric C. Sinoway