For readers from the States, I wish you a happy Thanksgiving! A few months ago, I was thinking about all the individuals who have helped shape the course of my life and the person I am today. I’ve been extremely fortunate to have the guidance of some brilliant minds and to surround myself with motivated, creative, innovative people.
They say your character and your achievements are influenced most by the people you surround yourself with. There have even been studies that show your income bracket is likely to be equal to the average of that of your five closest friends. So who are you surrounding yourself with?
Today I wanted to share my gratitude to my many teachers, mentors, role models, and friends who have influenced my life and given me their support. It’s important to acknowledge those who help foster your abilities and empower you to pursue the life you want.
Alec Hodgins
A French Canadian who taught English in France for years and then migrated to the US to teach French! I was lucky to be in his class for three years in high school. Alec was the most influential teacher I ever had in school, always advocating the unconventional path. He was the one who inspired my fascination with world cultures, languages, and travel. My first travel abroad was on a class trip with him to Cannes & Paris, France, and he first got me drooling over photos of Thailand when he took his wife and son there in 2000.
Lesson learned: You don’t have to color inside the lines all the time.
Alan Haynes
My photography teacher in high school, again for three years. In another life, I was a professional photographer (now it’s mostly a hobby, but I have a travel photo site coming soon). Alan connected me with my very first job, working in a darkroom, and showed me that it was possible to earn a great living if you split your time as an artist and as a teacher, to pass on your craft to the next generation.
Lesson learned: It’s okay to pursue your creative passion professionally.
Nicole Pefley
I met Nicole in middle school and our paths have intertwined ever since. She’s been a two-time Coachellian with me, we have a shared love for travel, French, music, and other assorted weird experiences. After high school, she lived in Paris for many months, and then spent a year studying in Brazil, so she was a great example for me to follow when I chose to live abroad for a while. Recently, she’s followed in Alec Hodgins footsteps and began teaching French at our old high school.
Lesson learned: We’ve both found you really can be a drifter for a few years after school, explore your interests, and eventually land on your feet.
Ramit Sethi
I’ve mentioned Ramit a few times recently. He was the first big blogger I reached out to when I started building my online presence in 2006, and I found out we’re from the same town! He’s a perfect role model for gen-y bloggers and entrepreneurs—he’s a year older than me, a graduate of Stanford University, and a successful tech startup co-founder. He’s worked with bigshots like Seth Godin and eBay founder Pierre Omidyar, and now he’s a New York Times bestselling author!
Lesson learned: Nobody’s going to give you handout. But there’s no harm in asking for what you want.
Jeffrey Skoll
Jeff Skoll was the first president of eBay and founder of movie production company Participant Media (responsible for bringing An Inconvenient Truth to the world). He’s been an active voice at Stanford’s Center for Social Innovation, and took his wealth from his success at eBay to become a philanthropist and support innovative entrepreneurship and social change with the Skoll Foundation. I’ve never spoken to Jeff, but he has always served as a great social entrepreneur role model for me.
Lesson learned: You can make a damn good living and make a difference at the same time.
Warren Buffett
The “Oracle of Omaha” is known around the world as one of the world’s most talented investors and money managers, the CEO of Berkshire Hathaway and the richest person in the world (up until 2008, worth about $62 billion). Buffett started out with the money he earned as a newspaper boy to buy his first assets, and despite his now immense fortune, he still lives in a home he purchased for $50K in the 1950s and embraces a frugal lifestyle. In 2006, I had the opportunity to meet him briefly, just weeks after his announcement that he’d be giving away 85 percent of his fortune to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Lesson learned: If the wealthiest investor & philanthropist in the world grew his business from just a few dollars from his paper route, you can too.
Rajesh Setty
I connected with Raj through his blog Life Beyond Code in my early days of blogging. As a serial entrepreneur, he tends to be involved as a co-founder, investor, or board member in about eight companies at any given time. He shares his wealth of business experience and motivational wisdom through his blog, Twitter, speaking engagements, and his books, and he was a huge influence on me when I first started my freelance side business which later grew into Thrilling Heroics Consulting.
Lesson learned: Business isn’t about a product, it’s about the people you work with, the relationships you build, and the dedication you show to your customer.
Timothy Ferriss
My interest in coming to Southeast Asia was fueled by reading Tim Ferriss’ inspiring NYT Bestseller The 4 Hour Workweek. Ferriss noted that Thailand and Argentina were two of the world’s best remaining destinations where Americans can easily stretch their dollar, and that if you spend the time to build a business that you can run from anywhere, you can easily leverage the idea of geo-arbitrage—earning in a strong currency while you live somewhere with a low cost-of-living. Though I’ve never met Tim, his ideas and experiments have certainly influenced a lot of my business decisions since reading his book!
Lesson learned: You don’t have to wait until retirement to create the lifestyle of your dreams. Also, nobody ever said you have to follow the rules.
Jacqueline Novogratz
Founder & CEO of Acumen Fund, a nonprofit venture fund that invests philanthropic capital and trains the next generation of business leaders in South Asia and East Africa to build thriving businesses focused on delivering affordable healthcare, water, housing and energy to the poor. She delivers a few incredibly pursuasive TED Talks and is a shining example of some of the social entrepreneurs that are trying to lead social progress for the developing world. (Side note: Jacqueline is married to TED’s founder Chris Anderson, another inspirational figure who has proven that that ideas can change the world. I’m excited to bring Chris’ vision to Thailand in Febraury with TEDx BKK!)
Lesson learned: Entrepreneurial approaches can be applied to solve the problems of global poverty.
Matt Mullenweg
At just 25-years-old, Matt Mullenweg has developed a company that is changing the way businesses interact with their clients online. His company created the WordPress blog platform, which makes it easy for anyone to get started publishing online, and which is what I have built my two businesses around—Thrilling Heroics Consulting and FreelanceWP—to help make online publishing more accessible to everyone and help innovators and changemakers spread their message to the world. Matt is a huge advocate of open-source development, which is making great software more quickly and easily possible, and transforming how we think about ownership.
Lesson learned: Share your best ideas with the world freely to empower the largest possible community, and it will come back to you many-fold.
Paul Dickey
Paul joined E*Trade after high school and became senior internal auditor, working around the world and overseeing a team of employees with advanced degrees. We met in college when he returned to get his own Bachelor’s degree, lived together for nearly a year, and traveled to Spain together with friends. Paul led a campaign to implement leadership studies at Sac State, was president of several student organizations, and together we attended many entrepreneurship conferences, organized monthly Saturday art walks in Sacramento, launched the U.S.’ fourth university Toastmasters chapter, and networked with tons of other entrepreneurs. He’s got a few business plans laid out, a submission with the patent office, and real estate property.
Lesson learned: Set your life goals and manage your time appropriately, and you can maximize your involvement in different entrepreneurial opportunities to guarantee your success.
Chris Guillebeau
After Tim Ferriss, Chris Guillebeau has perhaps been the most influential writer encouraging the masses to think differently and pursue unconventional, remarkable lifestyles. Chris is on a mission to travel to every country in the world (he’s already visited 122), and since starting his blog The Art of Nonconformity a little under 2 years ago, he has managed to create a full-time income for himself just from his writing projects. He even has great tips on how to travel to rogue states and “off-limits” places like Iraq, Afghanistan, Burma, Libya, Syria, Zimbabwe, Cuba, Iran, Sudan, and North Korea. I got the chance to meet him on his way through Bangkok in February, and have often been inspired by his thoughts on entrepreneurship, success, and changing the world.
Lesson learned: You really can go anywhere you want, and create your own wealth along the way.
Dwight Turner
Dwight and I met briefly in college. When I learned he had taught for a year in Thailand, we became fast friends and eventually both ended up back in Bangkok together. Dwight’s In Search Of Sanuk is a grassroots charity organization that makes it easy for anyone to contribute their time or donations to make a difference for orphans and refugees here in Thailand. He housed me when I first moved out here, has supported me through a lot of the challenges of getting used to expat/entrepreneur life, and together we’ve done a lot of traveling, volunteering, and bringing cool people from different walks of life together for the monthly Bangkok Tweetup, charity mixers, and other social events.
Lesson learned: It’s easier than you might think to mobilize a community to create social change.
Vanessa Rubin
An incredible young woman I was lucky to meet this year here in Bangkok—Vanessa is an aid worker who has spent nearly a decade working on humanitarian projects (frequently as a food & hunger advisor) in places like Nepal, Burkina Faso, Sierra Leone, & Bangladesh—she’s full of life, an avid rock climber, and earlier this year she was filmed for the BBC’s TV series Extreme Dreams on an expedition to scale Mount Chimborazo in Ecuador. She came to Thailand to review progress made by Care International since the 2004 tsunami.
Lesson learned: Always reach for new heights and seek ways to improve the lives of others, but never neglect yourself either.
Larry McKibben
My dad has been the biggest supporter of my unconventional entrepreneur & digital nomad lifestyle. Though I’ve made plenty of mistakes along the way, he has often been the one to encourage me and give me the pep-talk I need. Although he didn’t finish his college degree the first time around, he has had an extremely successful twenty-year career in retail sales and training and quickly worked his way to earning an envy-inducing salary. He’s always been dedicated to his family and a great example of a hard worker.
Lesson learned: With enough dedication, you don’t have to let perceived barriers-to-entry prevent you from being successful.
So who are the teachers that had the most impact on you? Who are your mentors? What supportive friends and role models are you thankful for?
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Thank you for visiting!
I started ThrillingHeroics.com to encourage folks to pursue an unorthodox, exciting lifestyle & career, and I'm recruiting true believers. If you like what you read here, please consider subscribing by email or RSS, or add me on Twitter to follow along with my misadventures as I try to sidestep the corporate rat race, build a successful business, and travel around the world!








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Twitter Updates
27 November 2009 at 1:41 am
Really fantastic list, Cody.
I think you’ll find that you are on many people’s list, as well (mine included!), even if we all didn’t write a blog about it!
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27 November 2009 at 8:15 am
These are some of the people that helped with my online presence. And yes, I follow yours as well even if I don’t blog about it.
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27 November 2009 at 8:47 am
Excellent list, Cody. Mentors have such a pivotal role in shaping our lives… the ones we pick to emulate have such powerful influence. You’re lucky to have such a supportive Dad, a well.
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27 November 2009 at 10:51 am
Great list Cody. I know it was tough to write only a paragraph about the people on this list. Thanks for including me, even though we’re only at the beginning of our journey together. I should also thank you for introducing me this crowd of strong, inspirational people. Congrats on your first year in Thailand. More adventures are coming. Happy Thanksgiving
-Dwight
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27 November 2009 at 4:41 pm
Wow Cody!
Awesome post! This is one of my favs by far! I have heard of most of these people. Warren Buffet and Tim Ferris are two of my personal biggest influences and I really look up to what they have achieved
Happy thanksgiving to you if you celebrate it
Cheers!
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28 November 2009 at 12:47 am
“Wow, Cody” – I’m truly touched by such high recognition amongst your list of All-Stars! You’ve always been a great friend, supporter, and mentor to me as well. I feel privileged for our friendship, and lucky that I met you! You really are living the dream!
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28 November 2009 at 2:13 am
cool post
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29 November 2009 at 2:22 am
Thanks, Cody! I appreciate you putting me on the list with these other great people. Looking forward to seeing you again in Thailand in 2010.
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29 November 2009 at 7:07 am
Great list, Cody. I will definitely check out some of these guys and gals I haven’t yet heard of! I’ll start off by thanking you for introducing us to so many good posts, ideas, and people on your blog. Cheers and keep up the great work.
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1 December 2009 at 2:08 am
Quality post. Many of these I have never heard of.
I will check them out for sure.
- MPM
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2 December 2009 at 12:15 am
Impressive and challenging. I’ve had a really hard time with any sort of mentor or heroes in my life. I’m not exactly sure why. I’ve always been one to think I need to rise up by myself…but as I’ve seen again and again since starting my life design project, it’s experience with other people that really propels success…whether through simply conversation, or networking contacts, or successful people dipping down and lending a hand.
Having said that…here are some names that come to mind as real life mentors to me…most you won’t know…Dan Fredericks, Tim Westergrin, Dominick Mationi, Tim Ferriss, Dave Walsh, CS Lewis, Bruce Lee, Dean Karnazes, Gary Vaynerchuck
Good list, thanks for provoking thought Cody! I never think to write posts like this…
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