Time to transcend the noise, build yourself & solve important problems in the world. Stop overanalyzing & start with my free "Why Am I Stuck" assessment below
@martin_valchev_@RyanHoliday Have you ever tried combining a couple of these alongside a journaling practice? For example, a solo walk in nature + journaling...
It can amplify the positive effects in my experience
It all depends really...
I would say that that answer flows from having clarity on your transcendent purpose (a deep why grounded in service of others).
Other things to consider: the hard work is good, but it should be sustainable (particularly for your health), or you will just be spending retirement with health issues.
@BuildWithDTH@garyvee That's awesome man. Sounds like you may have a transcendent purpose...
That is the sort of thing that can fuel you through some of the most difficult roads along the journey you're on.
Keep it up!
@raminaol9ykas@garyvee Well said. Journaling is such a critical (and multi-dimensional) weapon in these cases.
The "swiss army knife" of personal development tools
@lynoronchain@garyvee Well said... though consistency has to come from somewhere too. From my experience, it flows from clarity on your transcendent purpose (a deep why grounded in service of others)...
That is an unrelenting fuel!
Stumbling upon this now but it is such an important question...
My best answer (not perfect) is that if you don't have a clear transcendent purpose, it is hard to distinguish. With this clarity, you can cultivate the right network of people to give useful feedback, but it doesn't take you off course towards the ultimate outcome (even if it changes the route a bit)
@8020Alex@garyvee This one is gold too... honestly, maybe the best "personal development" book ever written. It is a staple in my book club conversations
For sure...
Part of it too is "who is defining this"?
You, or the outside.
Someone's delusion is another's conviction...
The key to reconcile this is straightforward: do the work to cultivate your transcendent purpose. With that foundation, deep conviction thrives
@Codie_Sanchez There’s a thin line between delusion and conviction.
You probably don’t need to ignore reality. But you do need belief strong enough to keep going when the odds look bad.