Heartache is love working hard to stay connected to someone or something. It’s not a loss of love, it’s love expressing itself through through time and space.
When your heart aches, it’s because it loves so much. The intensity is proof of how deeply you care.
What if heartache isn’t something to fix, but something to be in awe of?
Heartache is love working hard to stay connected to someone or something. It’s not a loss of love, it’s love expressing itself through through time and space.
When your heart aches, it’s because it loves so much. The intensity is proof of how deeply you care.
What if heartache isn’t something to fix, but something to be in awe of?
The most powerful changes of your life are the little tiny things you choose to create every day.
Have the courage to really serve others and yourself today based on what you’re learning, and the little choices will flow into an extraordinary evolution.
There are two types of mistakes: mistakes of ambition and mistakes of sloth.
The first is the result of a decision to act—to do something. This type of mistake is made with incomplete information, as it’s impossible to have all the facts beforehand. This is to be encouraged. Fortune favors the bold.
The second is the result of a decision of sloth—to not do something—wherein we refuse to change a bad situation out of fear despite having all the facts.
This is how learning experiences become terminal punishments, bad relationships become bad marriages, and poor job choices become lifelong prison sentences.
We are conditioned over the course of our lifetimes to believe that in order to overachieve we must also overdo.
As a result, we make things harder for ourselves than they need to be.
Two questions to think about.
If we were making a movie about your life, what would the key scenes so far be?
And if people were watching up to this point, what would the audience be screaming at the screen telling you to do with your life?
Perfectionists spend too much time on little differences at the margins at the expense of the important things. There are typically just five to ten important factors to consider when making a decision. It is important to understand these really well, though the marginal gains of studying even the important things past a certain point are limited.
#principleoftheday
We are all used to our own kind of hard. Maybe it’s the intensity of physical training. Maybe it’s enduring the suffering that comes from staying small and resisting our potential.
The good news? If you’ve adapted to one kind of hard, you can adapt to another.
What if the new thing isn’t harder than what you’re currently used to—just unfamiliar?
Nothing grows without vulnerability.
Feeling exposed isn’t weakness—it’s a sign that transformation is possible.
What if vulnerability isn’t a warning, but a doorway to your growth?