"The best effect of fine persons is felt after we have left their presence."
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Moving to the other side of the planet  probably wouldn't change who your trusted advisors were, I know it hasn't for me. They are the people who have been with us, sometimes since  kindergarten, who know who we really are. If you find someone like that,  even just one, they are worth holding onto.
Yet, somehow we  forget to hold onto them. Now that technology has sped up our lives it's tempting for us to  be doing something, anything, ever second. It’s easy to forget what's most important to us. We fight so many little  fires during the day - filling up our time with urgent things that  aren’t that important - that we put off that letter we wanted to write  back to our friend, or that conversation we've been meaning to have.
In  Stephen Covey's famous book, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, he  uses a great example. If you have a jar, he says, and two groups of  rocks – one group big and one group small – how would you go about  filling the jar? If you put the small rocks in first, the big rocks  won’t all fit in later. But if you put the big rocks in first, the small  rocks will fall all around them and both can fill the jar. The analogy  to our lives focuses on priorities – if we put first things first then  all of the more urgent things fall into place around the more important  things.
I would argue that your advisors,  the people who inspire you, encourage you and support you, are big rocks  you should always put in your life first. The technology that has sped  up our lives has also given us an unique opportunity to contact others in more  ways than ever before. Finding the time to Skype together, talk on the  phone, meet in person or write letters will pay you back tremendously.  You can start today by just making the time for one big rock - one call,  one meeting or one letter - and see what a difference it makes.

