@matt__yao I think it depends on where you live etc and how attached you are to it. I have found not keeping it in my house and having to leave to get it (in my case, get in a car) makes me less likely to drink most days.
Learning how to balance periods of rapid information intake with those of low input. Fun to figure out when / where I feel the most desire to create some sort of output
@emmannhill I think slow traveling allows you to focus in on what you really want to see in a place rather than doing all of the touristy things. Allows for more natural connections (ones that usually make the experience)
Just gave 100 pages of writing/poems to a friend to edit and read. Mixture of release (no longer mine to fully hold), but also nerves. Feels easier to have strangers read it than my childhood best friend.
Directly contradicts my actual personal POV that work can be a source of joy. I just don't know what that "joy" looks like to me at work (maybe bc I'm using other people's definitions to try and define it).
Really wish I I was less influenced by the Western POV of work -- a HEAVY focus on productivity (ticking things off to-do lists), titles (other people's opinions) and making things stretch out to fill unnecessary time.
@RebeccaMadison_ Idk if I'd actually hug a complete stranger, but I like the idea in theory!! I'd have to see other people go up first, but what a cool (very needed) idea.