Jan-Luca Kedrowski (@jlkedrowski) 's Twitter Profile
Jan-Luca Kedrowski

@jlkedrowski

Sharing what I've learned as a reminder to myself.

ID: 1685643994280206336

calendar_today30-07-2023 13:30:32

2,2K Tweet

2,2K Followers

60 Following

Jan-Luca Kedrowski (@jlkedrowski) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Helping others discover what’s good for them is more powerful than telling them. The value of an idea grows when you find it yourself.

Jan-Luca Kedrowski (@jlkedrowski) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Ego is the illusion that others care about you as much as you care about yourself. They don’t. They’re too busy believing everyone is focused on them.

Jan-Luca Kedrowski (@jlkedrowski) 's Twitter Profile Photo

One of the most powerful things a leader can say is: I don’t know. What do you think? Teach me how to do this. It shows humility and invites others to share their ideas and expertise. Everybody wants to help you more when you admit that you need it.

Jan-Luca Kedrowski (@jlkedrowski) 's Twitter Profile Photo

To succeed, focus on two things: curiosity and consistency. Stay curious—always seek to learn and explore. And keep showing up, day after day. Do this, and success becomes inevitable.

Jan-Luca Kedrowski (@jlkedrowski) 's Twitter Profile Photo

End your day with a brain dump. Take a piece of paper and write down everything on your mind. Filter out what’s useful and make a list. This simple exercise clears your mind, allowing your brain to relax. Your brain is meant for creating ideas, not holding onto them.

Jan-Luca Kedrowski (@jlkedrowski) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Discipline leads freedom. By sticking to routines you build habits that give you control over your actions. This frees you from the pull of instant gratification. True freedom isn’t doing whatever you want; it’s having the ability to consistently do what you know is right.

Jan-Luca Kedrowski (@jlkedrowski) 's Twitter Profile Photo

When giving advice, talk less. The simpler and clearer your message, the better. Too much detail or too many examples don’t add value; they dilute your main point. Advice is only useful if the core idea sticks after the conversation.

Jan-Luca Kedrowski (@jlkedrowski) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Anything that triggers an emotional reaction in you has control over you. Ignore it. Block it. Let it go. It’s not about agreeing or disagreeing with others. But when something controls us, we lose our freedom to choose. Our happiness slips out of our hands.

Jan-Luca Kedrowski (@jlkedrowski) 's Twitter Profile Photo

In a world with no room for average, offering dozens of mediocre products gets you nowhere. But one great product? Everyone pays attention. Simplify for your customer—become known for that one thing.

Jan-Luca Kedrowski (@jlkedrowski) 's Twitter Profile Photo

When people say "I don’t know’" what they often mean is "I don’t want to share this with you" It’s about boundaries, not uncertainty.

Jan-Luca Kedrowski (@jlkedrowski) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Mastery is the best goal. The rich can’t buy it. The impatient can’t rush it. The privileged can’t inherit it. And nobody can steal it. You can only earn it through hard work. Mastery is the ultimate status.

Jan-Luca Kedrowski (@jlkedrowski) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Taking time for yourself at the end of the day helps you see what energizes you and what drains you, what lifts you up and what pulls you down. Your inner voice never lies—you just need the courage to trust it over what you’ve been taught. Everything either brings you

Jan-Luca Kedrowski (@jlkedrowski) 's Twitter Profile Photo

You’re not serving others by avoiding tough conversations or only giving them half the truth because you’re afraid of hurting their feelings.

Jan-Luca Kedrowski (@jlkedrowski) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Honesty without tact is cruelty. If I speak my mind, I’m responsible for ensuring there’s tact, care, softness, and affirmation in what I say—because not everyone rolls the way I do. Radical honesty? That’s just being an asshole.

Jan-Luca Kedrowski (@jlkedrowski) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The happiest people aren’t those who achieve the most. They’re the ones who get lost in what they do, absorbed in a state of flow.