Loved or Admired: How do You Want to be Remembered?



Patrick Bet-David describes the difference between being loved, respected, and admired. Which of the three matters most to you? In this video, you will find out what you should be striving for.

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Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller Your Next Five Moves

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38 thoughts on “Loved or Admired: How do You Want to be Remembered?”

  1. I feel like wanting to be remembered is just a symptom of the fear of death and I find it narcissistic. I don't care whether I am remembered or not, I just want to go to bed at night knowing that although I am a sinner and am not perfect; I am not a monster doing evil on purpose, that is enough for me.

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  2. i dont care. i just want to do the right thing in my time here and enjoy the miracles of god. Life is the only miracle of god. and the human brain is the best of all of his creation .

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  3. At the age of 28? Lmao, did he really say that? At 28, i had been working hard for 8+ years already, owned my first apartment+two cars, one a piece of Renault shit i will never forget. Anyway, keep selling friend.

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  4. Love it. Always instilling power in others. You are definitely doing gods work. Blessings pat. And continue to do what u do.. Because what u do is more powerful than what govermental oficials.. presidents. And religious leaders do for our world and future. A man.

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  5. Wanting and doing things in life where your main motivation is admiration for others sounds like a life that is at best controlled by others opinions and at worst a psychological prison where other peoples’ opinions of you are the prison guards.

    Leaving a legacy and wanting to be remembered is traced back to our species fear of knowing we will one day die. Because of this, we unconsciously strive for an everlasting life: legacy, having kids, to be admired, wanting generational wealth, etc. If you’re truly happy and have not hurt anyone else in the pursuit or maintenance of your happiness then you win at life.

    If you’ve read this far into this comment, I recommend reading “The Denial of Death” by Ernest Becker. Or at least YouTube it.

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