Jun 22
Life is a Toll Road

Eveyone Pays the Toll on The Road of Life
Life is a toll road and everyone pays the toll in one way or another. What this means is, in life, everything you do has its price. Every action or choice you make throughout your existence has consequences or results that have a direct impact on who you are and the outcome of your life. The choices you make determine how you pay the toll on the road of life.
Let me give you a few examples.
Two Types of Lifestyle Choices and How Each Pays the Toll
The “Couch Potato”
Take the stereotypical “couch potato.” This person has a sedentary job, comes home with fast food, and watches the television until it’s time to go to bed. They’re overweight, get no exercise and they have no motivation, drive or ambition.
This type of person pays their toll in several ways:
- They squander their time. The time we’re allotted to spend on this earth is finite. We cannot buy, barter or steal any more time. Once it is used, we can’t get it back. The best we can do is to make the most of every moment. The couch potato wastes all of their time, never realizing its true value.
- In addition, the person that lives this type of lifestyle pays the toll through poor heath. As I mentioned in my previous post, The Warrior’s Way of Life, one in three Americans are obese. Another study by the National Institute of Health shows that 65% of adults in this country are obese. The list of associated health risks with obesity is long and many of them are life threatening. According to the CDC, an estimated 300,000 premature deaths a year can be attributed to obesity. Some of the risks of obesity are listed below. Click on this link to Anne Collins’ website for more details on these health risks:
- Heart Disease
- Stroke
- Type 2 Diabetes
- Cancer
- Fatty Liver Disease
- Chronic Venous Insufficiency
- Deep Vein Thrombosis
- Arthritis
- Increased Health Risks for Expectant Mother and Baby
- Gallbladder Diseas
- Premature Death
- Low self esteem and depression are another way that this type of person can pay the toll. American society places a high emphasis on physical appearance. Many obese people feel isolated and have a more difficult time advancing in their careers. Scientists have also found that excessive weight causes a chemical and hormonal imbalance that can lead to depression.
The “Go-Getter”
Now let’s look at the individual at the other end of the spectrum. The Stereotypical “go-getter”. This person typically is physically fit, has a high paying job or owns a successful business, drives a nice car and owns a big house. Most people believe that this type of person is “living the life” and typically has everything handed to them on a silver platter. They don’t believe that this person has ever paid a toll in their life.
Let me show you how they do:
- Just like the couch potato, the go-getter also pays the toll with their time. However, they use their time very differently than the couch potato. The go-getter invests their time into education and personal development. This person is generally the “A” student in school, they went to an Ivy League or tier one college, and continue to read, improve and educate themselves after college. Many work 12-15 hours per day! They are usually out of bed by 5:00 a.m. to workout because it’s the only time that fits their busy schedule.
- Another way the go-getter pays the toll is through hard work and self discipline. They are continually setting goals and taking action to achieve them. They generally have the endurance to persevere where most would give up and quit. As their name suggests, the go-getter realizes that success is never given away, it is earned. Instead of waiting for good things in life to come to them, they go out and get them.
You Can Choose How to Pay the Toll
Both of the individuals in these examples have paid the toll in very different ways. The couch potato may have benefited from relaxation early on but was forced to pay the toll after with the price of poor health, low self esteem and an uneventful life. The second paid the toll up front through hard work and discipline and enjoyed success, health and prosperity later. Nevertheless, both paid the toll.
“Life is a toll road and everyone pays the toll. However, you can choose how to you would like to pay!”
Personal Action Exercises
- Take a look everyday at the choices you make in life. Decide if this is how you want to pays your toll. If it isn’t, resolve to make the necessary changes to pay the toll on your terms.
- From this day forward, decide exactly what it is you want from your life. Write down your goals and dreams and then decide how much they’re worth to you to achieve them. Then decide how you’ll pay the toll to get them.
If you liked this blog post, please leave a comment. Thank you.





January 3rd, 2010 at 1:58 PM
I would choose a go-getter anytime though! I once read a quote about success that said “What do you want and what are you willing to give up for it”. “Work hard like most people don’t, so you can enjoy what most people dont.”
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January 8th, 2010 at 12:55 AM
Gotta be a mover and a shaker in this life if you want anything of value. The good news is you don’t have much competition if you decide you are a mover and a shaker.
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Marcus Thompson
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January 10th, 2010 at 11:10 PM
I have to disagree. All of the things in this world that are of TRUE value to a warrior that lives the Bushido code are not obtained by being a mover or a shaker. The point I was making in this post was that both people in my examples pay a toll in life. However, each person paid a toll in very different ways. In addition, the focus was for readers to decide for themselves about how they wanted to live their own lives and what tolls they were wiling to pay to achieve them.
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July 10th, 2010 at 8:33 PM
It’s also important to remember that sometimes people don’t necessarily choose to be in one group or another—they might have years of habits and family background to break out of first. I think people definitely choose to change, but it’s also important to take into account that it can sometimes be more difficult said than done.
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