Older4me Berker A Good Advice Exclusive [Real]
always involves the younger person’s consent. If you feel shamed, belittled, or paralyzed after a conversation, that person is not a Berker. They are an intruder. Real mentorship lifts you up, even when it stings. Case Study: The $10,000 Berker Moment Let us make this concrete. "Laura," a 28-year-old graphic designer (name changed for privacy), was considering quitting her stable job to start a risky apparel brand. She consulted five friends her age. All said, "Follow your passion."
Then she found a Berker—a retired 67-year-old retail executive. His exclusive advice was shocking: "Don't quit. But don't ignore the idea either. Spend $200 and one weekend building a single prototype. Sell it to 10 strangers before you quit your job." older4me berker a good advice exclusive
Here is your exclusive takeaway: This week, find one person at least 20 years older than you. Ask them one real question. Then shut up and listen. Do not defend yourself. Do not explain. Just absorb. always involves the younger person’s consent
Laura followed that exclusive advice. The prototype failed. But she learned more in that weekend than in a year of dreaming. She realized she hated sales. The Berker saved her from burning her savings and her resume. Two years later, she thanks him for "the good advice that felt bad at the time." Real mentorship lifts you up, even when it stings