This is some REALLY good advice. And I’d like to contribute to Cassius’ section on anxiety, perfectionism and procrastination: Go on a diet and you’ll regret it, eat junk food and you’ll also regret it. What I’m trying to say, is improving your life is hard. And scary. It’s difficult to say, if staying perfectly the same, is as undesirable. But nevertheless, engaging in something new, or hard is superior. Because, even in the event you fail. It results in you obtaining knowledge. Try to frame failure as gathering data, or knowledge about yourself. Success on the other hand, results in a material gain. Alongside whatever enjoyment and pride you might obtain from success. Continuing with the analogy of dieting, consuming too few calories may result in you loosing your restraint and gorging on food in order to quell you hunger. This is bad, although since you tried to loose weight, you have the benefit of gaining knowledge of what doesn’t work. And what not to do. Not trying simply results in you learning nothing. Embrace failure, realise both options are bad and I promise that you will procrastinate way less. INACTION LEADS TO NOTHING.
I know if I didn't have a good sit down and seriously tackle everything that was **different** about me, I'd have certainly never came to the conclusions I've reached about who I was. However harrowing and terrible the revelations were, the moment of finding out you're a part of a neurodivergent minority is the worst part about it, everything that comes after is on the upward trajectory, at least in terms of peace of mind (and maybe even things getting to eventually work out overall, too, if you can get the assistance you need)
wow nice job walking on a mine at 3:52 idiot
It’s easy to get lost in the anxiety fields.
This is some REALLY good advice. And I’d like to contribute to Cassius’ section on anxiety, perfectionism and procrastination:
Go on a diet and you’ll regret it, eat junk food and you’ll also regret it.
What I’m trying to say, is improving your life is hard. And scary.
It’s difficult to say, if staying perfectly the same, is as undesirable. But nevertheless, engaging in something new, or hard is superior. Because, even in the event you fail. It results in you obtaining knowledge. Try to frame failure as gathering data, or knowledge about yourself.
Success on the other hand, results in a material gain. Alongside whatever enjoyment and pride you might obtain from success.
Continuing with the analogy of dieting, consuming too few calories may result in you loosing your restraint and gorging on food in order to quell you hunger. This is bad, although since you tried to loose weight, you have the benefit of gaining knowledge of what doesn’t work. And what not to do. Not trying simply results in you learning nothing.
Embrace failure, realise both options are bad and I promise that you will procrastinate way less.
INACTION LEADS TO NOTHING.
It seems like every revelation I have that I am not **the baseline human being**, I see the beginnings of another materializing in the fog.
neurodivergenceisms is a great word thank you
I know if I didn't have a good sit down and seriously tackle everything that was **different** about me, I'd have certainly never came to the conclusions I've reached about who I was. However harrowing and terrible the revelations were, the moment of finding out you're a part of a neurodivergent minority is the worst part about it, everything that comes after is on the upward trajectory, at least in terms of peace of mind (and maybe even things getting to eventually work out overall, too, if you can get the assistance you need)
Excited for the Warhammer video. Good explanation. Needed this.
thank you
That was swell.
Good vijeo