Tag: Buddha
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Musings
When “whatever works” gets consistently re-interpreted into “whatever feels good”… Then it doesn’t work, and it stops feeling good.
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Musings
Who doesn’t love that short burst of training montage, where the monotony is small and the struggle is dramatic? That’s an easy thing to love; the movie industry has it down to a science. It’s much harder—and infinitely more rewarding—to fall in love with the real thing.
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Musings
After a base level of discipline has been established, it seems that “not quitting” is no longer the primary concern. The major determinant to success, at that point, seems to be quitting everything that’s holding me back.
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Musings
The best approaches, it seems, demand no loyalty to their outward strictures; they encourage me to do what it takes to be fulfilled. The accountability lies in the results.
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Musings
Sometimes, the world feels like a completely preposterous, utterly ridiculous lie. And ironically, that’s one of the truest things that has ever crossed my mind.
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Musings
Personally, I’ve found that one of the most effective ways to view phenomena is as pure information; not as insults or compliments, not as tragedies or glory. This way, I don’t take things so personally. The “I” fades away as I focus on what’s being said to me, and the proper way to respond to…
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Musings
I don’t see my limits as enemies or demons; I see them as clues. When I stop raging against them and simply use them as indicators as to how to form my strategy (which may sometimes entail brute-forcing my way through them, and may sometimes entail finding a way around them), they are no longer…
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Musings
By continually formulating the soundest strategy possible and executing it to the best of one’s ability, one cuts through all machismo associated with quitting/persevering, as well as the egoic consideration of self-worth. I believe that by diligently executing your best strategy, you are—by definition—persevering, as well as embodying the worthiest version of yourself. There’s no…
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Musings
My attention is drawn by people who embody quotes, rather than spew them. I listen closely to what they have to say. Unfortunately, they’re usually too busy doing stuff to offer up a statement.
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Musings
Principles are simple, but contexts aren’t. Recognizing context-driven variables is a superpower in and of itself. Channeling principles so they address those variables in a functional manner… I believe at that point you start to embody wisdom, rather than spending long, frustrating hours trying to puzzle it out.
