- cross-posted to:
- eudaimonia@lemmy.dbzer0.com
- cross-posted to:
- eudaimonia@lemmy.dbzer0.com
Found here, where the image also has the text as an ALT image description. https://chaos.social/@saxnot/112349120606446433
Found here, where the image also has the text as an ALT image description. https://chaos.social/@saxnot/112349120606446433
I think what it comes down to is some people have a fundamentally different way of thinking about it. Myself included. Setting my intention on something far in the future doesn’t necessarily mean I actually intend on achieving it. In fact, I’m almost 100% sure that I won’t. Given enough time, I’ll be a completely different person. Holding myself to what the younger version of me decided is foolish.
If I end up not being able to financially support a business I started, but I successfully provided for myself with it for years and learned a lot, it’s still valuable. If I spend 20 years in a relationship that ends, but it leads to greater self-understanding and helps me build better relationships in the future, it was worth it. It’s conceivable that a person could live an entire life doing things that you would classify as failures. But also feel completely satisfied and happy with it. So that suggests it might be a flawed perspective, no?