He further states in the Fortune article, «When one postpones an idea, he actually abandons it and nothing is less desirable than to take up a project today that one should have taken up yesterday... to do five years later what it would have been smart to do five years earlier is almost a
sure recipe for frustration and failure.»
Focusing on things you can't control is
a recipe for frustration.
Placing a toy too far away from baby too soon is
a recipe for frustration.
Trying to tighten bolts on a muddy or wet frame is
a recipe for frustration; so make sure everything's clean and shiny before getting the wrenches out.
On the other hand, setting unrealistic or pointless achievement goals (for instance, «Watch this 30 - minute - long video 10 times»), is
a recipe for frustration.
That's
a recipe for frustration and burnout.»
To restate the cliché, «one size fits all» is
a recipe for frustration, if not social and political warfare, at least in a heterogeneous country like ours.
Value investing works, but applying a value strategy without some kind of momentum filter is
a recipe for frustration because cheap stocks can stay cheap for a long time in the absence of a catalyst.
Finding a dog you want and then trying to get that dog from the specific rescue group listing it is
a recipe for frustration.
It's
a recipe for frustration on your part and confusion on his.
Both of those approaches are
a recipe for frustration (trust us here, we've fallen into both of these traps).
Relentlessly being charged by a poison - spewing dino - wyvern while you're dazed from his cheap stun is
a recipe for frustration.
Expecting to be able to have a coherent heart to heart with your partner when your child / children are awake is
a recipe for frustration.