How to Make a 100 List: Stacy Taniguchi's Rules for Making a List to Thrive
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Make Your 100 List


At age 16 Stacy Taniguchi started his 100 list—100 things he wanted to do in this life (read about it here). Thanks to that list, he would climb the highest peaks, build his own house, coach Olympians, fly planes, and, eventually, study and teach at BYU.

Now the Marriott School professor is a sought-after expert on, well, living. His research delves into self-actualization, specifically in wilderness settings, and he speaks far and wide on how to thrive—and how to make a 100 list of your own.

Want to make a 100 list? Here are Taniguchi’s rules—plus a numbered template to print out and get you started.

This 100-list form ready to fill out, numbered to 100. Readers can download and print it to begin a 100 list of their own.
To print out this template, click here.

100-List Rules

Decide to Thrive. “It is a choice,” says Taniguchi. “You have to decide whether you want to endure or thrive in this life, and if you want to thrive, then you have got to prioritize it.”

Know Your Governing Values. “What I don’t want you to put down on your list is, ‘I want to try everything,’” says Taniguchi. “Put things on your list that bring you closer to your values.” Equally important: “Don’t put anything on your list that is in conflict with your values.”

Choose Wisely. It’s not easy to come up with 100 goals—it took Taniguchi years. “Usually people stall out around 20 or 30,” he says. “Then it gets harder to think through.” A question he often gets: Can the list be retrospective? “Absolutely.” Meaningful things you’ve already accomplished—add them.

You Can’t Take Anything Off. “If it was important to you at one point, then it meant something to you,” he says. He tells the story of a client he led up Denali who, diagnosed with terminal cancer months before the trip, about cancelled. Taniguchi got him to the top. “It didn’t prevent him from dying, but it changed his life.” The guy came home from Denali, got re-engaged and married, finished his last cases at work—he went out living. “Even if, 20 years from now, you look back and go, ‘I don’t know if I really want to do that one thing on my list anymore,’ it may be the one experience that was what Denali was for him.”

Better Yourself, Uplift Others. With each accomplishment you want to add, Taniguchi says you should ask two questions: “Will this make me a better person?” and “Will this help me uplift and have a positive effect on others?” “If you take the time to better yourself, to challenge yourself, you are going to be a better instrument in [God’s] hands.”

Take Some Risks. Add things that will stretch you, make you feel a touch awkward, whether it’s feeling like a stranger in a foreign land or trying to learn something new or tackling a fear. Those vulnerable moments will give you glimpses of your sublime nature, says Taniguchi.

A photo of Stacy Taniguchi running in a marathon. His hair is styled in a perm, reflecting the style of the day.
1 of 10: One thing on Taniguchi’s 100 list: run a marathon. That led to several more marathons. Photo courtesy Stacy Taniguchi.
Jared Taniguchi and his dad, Stacy Taniguchi, pose arm in arm with their comrades on the top of Denali, the tallest peak in North America.
2 of 10: Stacy Taniguchi and his son Jared (the pair at left) grin on the summit of Denali. Summiting with Dad was a goal on Jared’s own 100 list. Photo courtesy Stacy Taniguchi.
Stacy Taniguchi stands before Corona Arch.
3 of 10: In past years, Stacy Taniguchi has taken BYU students rappelling off of Moab’s Corona Arch, seen in the background. Photo by Bradley Slade.
A photograph of one of the base camps on Everest in which Stacy Taniguchi camped and acclimated during his summit attempt.
4 of 10: Taniguchi spent weeks on the mountain, acclimating at each new base camp. Photo courtesy Stacy Taniguchi.
A photo of Stacy Taniguchi's home in Anchorage, Alaska.
5 of 10: Stacy Taniguchi fulfilled his 100 list wish to build his own home outside of Anchorage, Alaska. Photo courtesy Stacy Taniguchi.
Stacy Taniguchi and another climber are pictured on the ridge line of Denali.
6 of 10: Taniguchi and another climber walking the ridgeline of Denali. Photo courtesy Stacy Taniguchi.
Stacy Taniguchi is pictured rappelling from Morning Glory Arch
7 of 10: Taniguchi rappels from Morning Glory Arch. Photo by Bradley Slade.
Stacy Taniguchi stands on Aconcagua.
8 of 10: Also on his list: summiting the world’s highest peaks. Here Taniguchi stands on Aconcagua, the highest in South America. Photo courtesy Stacy Taniguchi.
Stacy Taniguchi stands atop Denali with four Boy Scouts. They hold a vinyl sign up with their Scout post number and troop name.
9 of 10: Stacy Taniguchi (top right) led the first Boy Scout troop to the top of Denali. Photo courtesy Stacy Taniguchi.
A climber crosses a ladder set across a giant crevasse on Everest.
10 of 10: Injured on his Everest descent, Stacy Taniguchi had to crawl across the ladder crevasse crossings. Photo courtesy Stacy Taniguchi.

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