Worry about courage.
Worry about cleanliness.
Worry about efficiency.
Worry about horsemanship.
Don't worry about popular opinion.
Don't worry about doll.
Don't worry about the past.
Don't worry about the future.
Don't worry about growing up.
Don't worry about anyone getting ahead of you.
Don't worry about triumph.
Don't worry about failure unless it comes through your own fault.
Don't worry about mosquitoes.
Don't worry about flies.
Don't worry about insects in general.
Don't worry about parents.
Don't worry about boys.
Don't worry about disappointments.
Don't worry about pleasures.
Don't worry about satisfactions.
Think about: What am I really aiming at?
- F.Scott Fitzgerald, Letters to His Daughter, ed. Andrew Turnbull (New York: Scribner, 1965).
These lines of advice are listed in a letter dated August 8, 1933. In the introduction to this book, Frances Scott "Scottie" Fitzgerald concludes that had she followed his advice and had he not been his father, she could have been an extraordinary woman.
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Image of Fitzgerald with daughter Scottie from the book The People's Almanac presents The Book of Lists (Bantam Edition, 1978) by David Wallechinsky, Irving Wallace and Amy Wallace
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