A Latin Party For a Gringo Who Never Knew What Happened

It was his third visit to Colombia. But he will never forget this one: it was his best and wildest birthday.

Mateo turned 33. He’s from the U.S. and, fortunate enough, married to a Latina. At the party, he was the only one wearing the yellow jersey of the national soccer team. Everybody else wore white sports clothes.

As family members and friends arrived, they all greeted and congratulated Mateo. He doesn’t speak Spanish, except for a few words: “Hola,” “gracias,” and a few dish names. That’s enough to avoid starving while abroad.

Without saying a word but with a big smile, Mateo was the one serving snacks. He carried a tray of chips, cheese slices, and guava pastries.

A smile, handshake, and hug work in any language and in almost any culture.

Lesson: What connects us is greater than what divides us. We’re all humans after all.

Lesson: Learn greetings and dish names first.

The soccer game…

“All men line up,” a girl dressed as a referee shouted.

It was time for the first party game. Mateo was blindfolded and placed in front of a small gate. There were white lines drawn in the pavement, simulating a small soccer field. Did I tell you the party was out in a street? Two cars blocked either side.

Guests, also blindfolded, had to score a goal. Mateo was the gatekeeper. The first two guests made everyone laugh after missing the ball and kicking the air.

I lined up at the end. While waiting my turn, I met an ex-classmate from high school. He’s married to the referee, Mateo’s wife’s cousin.

“Soccer is not my thing,” I told my long-time ex-classmate. “I know. You’re into books,” he said. And he wasn’t wrong.

Lesson: As Colombians say, the world fits into a napkin.

Lesson: Find what you enjoyed as a kid. Or ask someone. Or let a classmate tell you.

The crazy hour…

After a couple more games, someone started to smuggle horns and whistles. “Don’t let Mateo see them.”

Then the music stopped. A different track started: “Horaaa Locaaaaa.” “Crazy hour,” literally. That’s when things get crazy and out of control in every party, for 15 minutes or so.

Everybody started to blow horns and whistles. I had a tricolor horn, yellow-blue-red like the national flag. Mateo was brought to the center of a dancing crowd.

Nobody judged his poor dancing skills. Neither did I. Just like soccer, not my thing. Every time Mateo sat, exhausted, someone pulled him back to the dance.

With beers, things got out of control as expected. A drunk uncle climbed on a chair, took his t-shirt off, and swinging it like a cowboy’s lasso. The dance stopped when uncle cowboy fell down. Laughter drowned out the music for a few seconds. He must still be taking painkillers, wondering why his back hurts if he doesn’t remember any fall.

“You’re now part of the family,” another drunk uncle told me and my sister after the cowboy show.

A couple of chairs away from me, an introvert 10-year-old boy was sitting with his arms crossed. He was quiet, observing every detail and every dancer. He probably wondered why he was born into that family and dreaded the parties ahead. When he grows up, I bet he will be a psychologist, anthropologist, or writer.

Lesson: Children and the drunks always tell the truth.

Lesson: Friendship can be as strong as family.

Lesson: You don’t have to join the crowd to participate and enjoy.

The piñata…

This was a 33-year celebration. But it had a round piñata with dark pentagons, just like a soccer ball.

Mateo was blindfolded again. Like a 5-year-old, with a stick in his hand, he had to break the piñata. The classic piñata song played in the background.

A bunch of adults and kids jumped to pick whatever was on the piñata. Drained of social energy, I kept sitting next to the 10-year-old observer.

After the party, the street was a mess: Full of empty bottles, used yellow napkins, and shiny confetti from the piñata.

It was time to clean. Most guests had already left, so Mateo and his wife grabbed a broom and black plastic bags. Poor Mateo had to clean a mess he didn’t make.

Lesson: Leave every place, at least, as clean as you found it.

Lesson: Make helping the hosts clean part of the party.

I bet Mateo hadn’t been blindfolded as many times in his life. He never smiled or danced that much before. He never felt like a celebrity with people asking him for a photo. Even after cleaning the street and understanding only a few words, it was his best birthday ever.

10 Lessons I Learned from Derek Sivers' Useful But Not True

I’ve been stalking Derek Sivers.

OK, I’m not a psycho. Stalking writers is part of my reading strategy.

I already read Anything You Want. Binge-watching Derek’s interviews taught me about his succint writing style and his trick for better sentences.

This time, I finished Useful But Not True. Here’s what I learned:

#1. Perspectives are like timezones. They feel absolutely true, but that’s only for you.

#2. Rules are someone’s perspective. Like kids, you can play with the rules. The floor is lava…until red tiles save you.

#3. Someone’s “can’t” or “don’t” is their own perspective. They’re projecting their own can’ts and don’ts onto you.

#4. Your brain loves to come up with stories and explanations—and believe them. Your beliefs are like a picture hung upside down. Only reframing shows it was hanging the wrong way.

#5. You can’t choose your first thought, but you can always choose the next one.

#6. There’s no best choice. It’s the best one because that was the one you chose.

#7. You are your actions. Pretending is still being and doing. At a party, pretending to be social makes you social.

#8. Religion is about action. Every religion claims to be the true one. They’re useful, but not necessarily 100% true for everyone.

#9. Always test first. This reminds me of Kevin Kelly’s idea of prototyping your life.

#10. Always take the first step. That helps you change your perspective. “Start momentum.”

7 Random But Interesting Ideas I've Found Recently

After a rabbit hole of Derek Sivers’s interviews and books

#1. How to choose which project to start next. Consider me/others/time.

  • Is it something that interests you?
  • Something others will find helpful?
  • Is there a deadline?

#2. For multipotentialites:

“You can do anything, but you can’t do everything. You have to decide. If you don’t decide, you get nothing.”

#3. Perspectives are like timezones. They feel 100% true for you. But most people have a different one.

#4. The more you consume, the less you create. Chances are you don’t need more information. For the rest of the year, stop consuming content and start creating.

From Gabriela Nguyen’s TED talk

#5. Don’t simply ban social media. Create an environment so you don’t need them. For my 7-day experiment, that was with leaving books around.

#6. Build social capital in the real world.

From somewhere else

#7. Have a place to write down your ideas without judgment. Someone calls it, an Idearoum. For me, it’s an idea pad for my 10-idea lists. For others, it’s a Future file or folder.

Friday Links: 5-min AI summary, private keys leaked, and QR fun

Hey there.

Here are 4 links I thought were worth sharing this week:

#1. Quick coding tip: Never push keys or passwords to public GitHub, especially if you’re a cybersecurity agency.

#2. If trying to keep up with AI news is daunting, here’s a 5-minute recap of the last 6 months of AI landscape (5min).

#3. Your network is your net worth, right? But networking doesn’t have to be complicated. Here’s the best way to network (3min).

#4. Looking for a fun, quick weekend experiment? What about hand-drawing QR codes (3min)


And in case you missed it, I wrote on my blog about a weekly practice to reduce my screen time (4min) and I answered a “post interview” from a fellow coder (7min), if you want to know the man behind the keyboard.


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Keep coding smartly,

Cesar

The Real Danger of Sharing Your Ideas

“If this works, it’s going to be huge.”

I’ve heard at least a couple of versions of that line in the last two months. A friend with an app idea in the EdTech space. Another friend with an idea in healthcare insurance. None of them had a single client or line of code written.

Sharing an idea before executing it releases the same chemical soup in your brain as accomplishing something. It feels like you’ve already done it. Except it’s all in your head.

The real danger isn’t getting your idea stolen. Ideas without execution are cheap. It’s sabotaging yourself by feeling rewarded without doing anything.

Do good work and only then tell people about it.