Whether you just turned 30 or are pushing 40, continue reading in order to discover how to make the most out of your 30’s and how to set yourself up for a lifetime of success!
- Focus on your career
The best way to ensure a successful future is to focus on your career in your 30’s, so that you’ll be in a position to retire early. After all, who wants to be working a nine to five, office job in their sixties? In your 30’s, it’s well worth sitting down and thinking about strategies to climb up your career ladder. As an example, would further study help you obtain a higher position in your company? Or would it pay to work on your networking skills?
2. Take every minute of your paid vacation:
Whilst in your 20’s you may have chosen to forgo some of the paid vacation, you were entitled to, in your 30’s you’re far better off making the most out of every minute of your paid leave. In your thirties you may find yourself stressed out by your job and may find that taking some well deserved vacations, will help you return to work feeling relaxed and rejuvenated. So if you want a promotion or raise, do yourself a favor and book yourself an overseas vacation or two per year.
3. Have a real wedding, with a real band:
If you’re not already married to the love of your life, you may be interested in the idea of settling down with a beautiful, supportive woman. If you’re lucky enough to find a woman, who you can envisage spending the rest of your life with, make sure to propose with a real wedding band. As ideally you should only get married once, it’s not worth skimping on your wedding day or your fiancés wedding ring. After all the memories you share with your wife on your wedding day, you’ll share for a lifetime.
4. Realize that no one has really figured out this shit:
When you were a teenager, you probably assumed that men in their thirties had adulthood and their lives, well and truly sorted. Now you’re in your thirties, you’ve probably come to the realization that there’s a lot that you still have to accomplish. Rest assured, that you’re not the only one your age, who hasn’t worked out a definitive life plan.