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Steve Jobs Said: Your Time Is Limited Do Not Waste Your Life

In 2005, Apple co-founder Steve Jobs was asked to address the 2005 graduates of Stanford University.  A year earlier, Jobs was diagnosed with Pancreatic Cancer.  Jobs told those in the…

Apple CEO Steve Jobs Delivers Opening Keynote At Macworld

Apple CEO Steve Jobs delivers a keynote address at the 2005 Macworld Expo January 11, 2005 in San Francisco, California.

Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

In 2005, Apple co-founder Steve Jobs was asked to address the 2005 graduates of Stanford University.  A year earlier, Jobs was diagnosed with Pancreatic Cancer.  Jobs told those in the audience that at the time, he had no idea what a pancreas was.  Jobs medical team told him to go home, get his affairs in order and say his goodbyes.  Jobs was told that he had only three to six months to live.  Miraculously, Jobs lived until October of 2011.

During the commencement speech, Jobs told the graduates "no one wants to die. Even people who want to go to Heaven don't want to die to get there and yet death is the destination we all share. No one has ever escaped it.  Death clears out the old to make way for the new.  Right now, the new is you.  But someday not too long from now, you will gradually become the old and will be cleared away. Sorry to be so dramatic, but it's quite true.

Your time is limited.  So don't waste it living someone else's life.  Don't be trapped by dogma, which is living with the results of other people's thinking. Don't let the noise of others opinions drown out your own innervoice.  And most importantly, have the courage to follow your own heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become.  Everything else is secondary."

As I close, I am reminded of one additional life hack Steve Jobs shared with the Stanford graduates. Jobs said "find what you love." The old saying "do what you love and you will never have to work another day in your life" is so true. Think about this. What made Steve Jobs happy? Computers. From the design to writing the code to actually building the components. Check this out. In ten short years, Steve Jobs and his friend Steve Wozniak went from a garage-based computer company to an incredible $2 billion Apple Computers company.

Go get 'em tiger! God don't make no junk. You, yes you are awesome! Now go be awesome!

- Don Chase's Kick Butt Tip of the Day is a daily motivational feature designed to give you the inspiration you need to power through your day. Check out all the Kick Butt Tips here.

Kelly Clarkson’s Best Kellyoke Performances Of 2024 (So Far)

It seems that Kelly Clarkson's Kellyoke performances get better and better with each passing year. The daily segment on her talk show features the powerhouse singer playing a live rendition of popular songs spanning all genres and decades.

2023 Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony, Kelly Clarkson's Best Kellyoke Performances Of 2024 (So Far)

(Photo by Arturo Holmes/Getty Images)

Kelly Clarkson's Best Kellyoke's

From Christina Aguilera to Chris Stapleton to Måneskin, you don’t know what song she will put her own spin on next. Since we started doing this list ranking her best Kellyoke performances back in 2022, some of our favorite covers that year include a Jennifer Lopez ballad rendition of "Waiting For Tonight," Billie Eilish's "Happier Than Ever," Anita Bell's disco track "Ring My Bell," Adele's "Rumor Has It," and even Radiohead's "Exit Music (For A Film)."

In 2023, Clarkson kept fans on her toes with even more breathtaking covers. Our picks of the standout Kellyoke's from 2023 include Taylor Swift's version of "Better Man," Destiny's Child's 2001 hit song, "Survivor," Cher's "Strong Enough," Daniel Bedingfield's pop anthem "Gotta Get Through This," and Chris Stapleton's "Tennessee Whiskey."

Clarkson previously released an album of six of her covers from 2022 after “singing over 500” on The Kelly Clarkson Show, which she said was “near-impossible” to choose. The Kellyoke album was released in June of 2022 and features the following songs:

    Her latest album was 2022's Chemistry. When announcing her 10th studio album ahead of its release, the singer-songwriter said she didn’t want “everybody” to think that her emotions could just be simplified as angry or sad. She explained in a video shared on X (formerly Twitter), “This album is definitely the arc of an entire relationship, and a whole relationship shouldn’t be just brought down to one thing. So there’s the good, the bad, the ugly thing kinda going on in it."

    With hundreds of Kellyoke performances under her belt and the number growing by the day, we conducted a list of her best performances of 2024 so far.

    Take a look below at Kelly Clarkson's best Kellyoke performances of 2024:

    'Wide Awake' By Katy Perry

    Kelly Clarkson's March 19 Kellyoke cover of Katy Perry's "Wide Awake" was so good, Perry herself commented on the social post: "ok dang I can never sing that again." One fan hilariously offered Perry their condolences: “so sorry my sister Katy. what’s done is done.” Clarkson’s covers are so good, they sometimes sound better than the original, and this one is no exception. Clarkson tackled Perry's 2012 hit track in the style of a ballad, with a piano accompaniment.

    'Good Vibrations' By Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch

    Taking things to a sultry level, Kelly's cover of Marky Marky's 1991 hit, "Good Vibrations," gave us some serious chills! Though we weren't even born yet when the original dropped, we remember hearing this on the radio growing up in the '90s. Kelly's rendition breathes a completely new life into the hit. If we weren't familiar with the original, we wouldn't have even known it was a cover the way she sang it.

    'Fighter' By Christina Aguilera

    Kelly retained the edginess and rawness of Aguilera's original version of 2002's "Fighter," even with the electric guitars. Clarkson changed up how she sang the song's bridge and let her vocal chops loose, garnering applause and cheers from the crowds. This moment confirmed that she could go toe-to-toe with Aguilera's range.

    'Used To Be Young' By Miley Cyrus

    This isn't Kelly's first Miley cover, and we're sure it won't be her last. During this Kellyoke segment, the host chose Miley's track from 2023's Endless Summer Vacation. The song, which is all about the naivety and mistakes we made when we were younger, was given new life the way Kelly belted out the track.

    'Get On Your Feet' By Gloria Estefan

    With no studio audience while taping this performance, Clarkson hyped the song up a nonexistent crowd. Crowd or not, Clarkson clearly had a ball covering this Estefan hit from 1989. The brass section and her backup singers bring so much depth to Kelly's fun cover, where she does, in fact, ask the nonexistent crowd to join her and get on their feet.

    'Ain't Nobody' By Chaka Khan

    In another dance '80s throwback, Kelly tackles Chaka Khan's iconic 1983 hit, "Ain't Nobody." During half of the performance, Kelly sings the song pretty much like the original. After a minute though, she lets her voice ring high as she sings the chorus for the third time and does her personal spin on it and belts it out.

    'What Was I Made For?' By Billie Eilish

    Taking on Billie Eilish's Grammy-winning smash from the Barbie soundtrack, Kelly looked stunning in a red dress while singing the melancholy track. With a piano accompaniment, Clarkson retained the sadness in her rendition, then changed the mood of it completely when she belts out "someday." We're sure Billie can appreciate the change-up, as we did, and hope Kelly does more covers of her songs in the future.